US Internal Revenue Service: Pal
US Internal Revenue Service: Pal
US Internal Revenue Service: Pal
NOTE: This guide is current through the publication date. Since changes
may have occurred after the publication date that would affect the accuracy
of this document, no guarantees are made concerning the technical
accuracy after the publication date.
www.irs.gov
Training 3149-115 (02-2005)
Catalog Number 83479V
Passive Activity Loss Audit Technique Guide
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
A Quick Look Inside!
Chapter 1: Overview
In a Nutshell……………………………………………………………………3-1
Passive Income....................................................................................... 3-1
Supporting Law ....................................................................................... 3-3
Self-Rental Income ................................................................................. 3-3
Leased Land ........................................................................................... 3-4
Land held for Investment ........................................................................ 3-4
Supporting Law ....................................................................................... 3-5
Summary ................................................................................................ 3-5
Exhibit 3.1: Passive Income………………………………………………….3-7
Exhibit 3.2: Self-Rented Property - Income Recharaterization…………...3-10
Exhibit 3.3: Passive Income Decision Tree..………………………………..3-12
Chapter 5: Dispositions
Overview................................................................................................. 6-1
Material Participation for Corporations.................................................... 6-1
Personal Service Corporation ................................................................. 6-2
Audit Considerations PSCs..................................................................... 6-2
Audit Considerations on Closely held C Corporations ............................ 6-4
Supporting Law ....................................................................................... 6-4
Trusts In a Nutshell ................................................................................. 6-5
Trusts Rental Issues .............................................................................. .6-6
Supporting Law ....................................................................................... 6-7
Trusts Material Participation ................................................................... 6-7
Supporting Law ....................................................................................... 6-8
Trusts Dispositions, Distributions and Gift ......................................…….6-9
Supporting Law………………………………………………………………...6-10
Limited Liability Companies (LLCs) Nutshell………………………………..6-10
Material Participation for LLCs………………………………………………..6-11
Self-Charged Interest In a Nutshell…………………………………………..6-11
Summary………………………………………………………………………..6-12
Exhibit 6.1: C Corporations: Passive Activity Issues……………………….6-15
Exhibit 6.2: Trusts: Passive Loss Issues..…………………………………..6-20
Exhibit 6.3: LLCs: Passive Activity Issues…………………………………..6-20
Exhibit 6-4: Self-Charged Interest……………………………………………6-21
Chapter 9: Credits
The Audit Technique Guide (ATG) on Passive Activity Losses (PAL) has been
significantly revised to reflect an issue-based format. Additionally, it has been
updated to encompass current emerging issues, changes to Form 8582, Passive
Activity Loss Limitation, and recent case law. The guide was developed to
provide Revenue Agents and Tax Compliance Officers with technical information
and tools to examine issues relating to both income and losses from passive
activities.
This text provides specific guidance on potential audit issues along with
summaries of the applicable Internal Revenue Code (IRC) and Federal Tax
Regulations (Regulations) and highlights of common errors. We have attempted
to write this ATG in plain layman’s language, addressing issues which may be
encountered on an audit. The text is not all encompassing and does not cover
every exception. The IRC § 469, the related Regulations, and case law may
have to be researched.
Included in the ATG are many job aids, designed to be used by examiners: a
summary of court cases, checksheets for common issues, and decision trees.
Examiners are reminded that the checksheets have been provided to assist the
examiner, but are not all encompassing. The IRC § 469 and the related
Regulations may have to be researched. In some instances, line numbers on
various forms have been referenced. The examiner is reminded that line
numbers may change from year to year. The job aids can be located at the end
of each chapter. A summary of court cases and rulings can be located in the first
exhibit in Chapter 1.
While certain provisions of the IRC § 469 are explained, the primary focus of this
text is not an in-depth explanation of the law or Form 8582, but rather a guide to
current and emerging audit issues. Regulations for activities (grouping rules for
related entities), real estate professionals and self-charged interest have been
finalized. However, the majority of the IRC § 469 regulations remain in
temporary format. Temporary Regulations carry the same weight of authority as
final regulations. Regulations have not yet been issued on dispositions and on
trusts.
• What time does and does not count in the hourly tests – Chapter 4
Checksheets, decision trees and other job aids at end of each chapter.
Chapter 1: Overview
Introduction
Prior to 1986, a taxpayer could generally deduct losses in full from rental
activities and trades or businesses regardless of his or her participation. This
gave rise to significant numbers of tax shelters that allowed taxpayers to deduct
non-economic losses against wages and investment income. The Tax Reform
Act of 1986, added IRC § 469, which limits the taxpayer’s ability to deduct losses
from businesses in which he or she does not materially participate and from
rental activities.
The passive activity loss rules are applied at the individual level and extend
beyond tax shelters to virtually every business or rental activity whether reported
on Schedule C, Profit or Loss From Business (Sole Proprietorship); Schedule F,
Profit Loss From Farming; or Schedule E, Supplemental Income and Loss, as
well as to flow through income and losses from partnerships, S Corporations, and
trusts.
The passive loss limitations also apply in full to personal service corporations.
The IRC § 469 also applies to closely held C Corporations, but has a limited
applications.
The following is a brief overview. If an issue arises in any specific area, see the
referenced chapters for in-depth discussions.
What is Passive?
Income and losses from the following activities are generally passive [2]:
1-1
3. Sole proprietorship or farm in which the taxpayer does not materially
participate (i.e. does not regularly work)
4. Limited partnership interest, with some exceptions [3]
5. Partnership, S c, and limited liability company business in which the
materially participates.
Activity Rules
• The term “activity” under IRC § 469 does not necessarily mean a single
business or separate entity owned by the taxpayer. Depending on the
grouping decision made at the time the activity was acquired or in 1994
when the regulations were finalized, a taxpayer can treat several
businesses as one single activity if they form an appropriate economic
unit. Or, there could be two or more distinct activities within a single entity.
For example, there could be a rental activity and a business activity
within the same partnership.
[4]
• Because material participation is determined for each activity, the way
the taxpayer’s business and rental operations are combined or divided into
“activities” is very important.
• Businesses forming an appropriate economic unit may be grouped into
one single activity based on the following criteria[5]:
1. Similarities/differences in types of activities
2. Extent of common control
3. Extent of common ownership
4. Geographic location of the activities
5. Interdependence between activities
Exceptions:
The general rule in IRC § 469 provides that passive losses can offset only
passive income. There are, ho wever, exceptions:
1-2
Beginning in 1994, a real estate professional may be able to deduct all current
rental real estate losses regardless of how high his MAGI might be[8]. To deduct
losses without limit, the taxpayer must spend more than half of his time in real
property businesses and work more tha n 750 hours a year and materially
participate in each separate rental real estate activity. Again, see Chapter 2.
Participation Rules
Active participation[11] relates only to rental real estate activities and is a less
stringent standard than material participation. If the taxpayer makes
management decisions, he generally can deduct up to $25,000 in losses against
non-passive income, subject to the $150,000 MAGI limitation. See exhibit at end
of Chapter 2 .
Neither the material participation standard nor the active participation standard
generally applies to long-term equipment rentals. Equipment leasing losses are
generally passive regardless of the level of participation[12]. Thus, equipment
leasing losses are generally not deductible unless the taxpayer has passive
income from other sources.
1-3
FORM 8582
Passive losses and income are most commonly found on Schedule E. The
computational form used to limit these losses is Form 8582, Passive Activity Loss
Limitations, with line 16 being the sum of passive losses allowed for the current
year (line 11 for tax years before 2002).[13] See exhibit at the end of this chapter
for more help. The following breaks down Form 8582 for 2002 and later years:
Part I of Form 8582 simply breaks down all passive activities in which the
taxpayer is involved into three categories:
Part II is the calculation for allowable losses from rental real estate with active
participation on line 1. See MAGI computation in Chapter 2.
Part III calculates the total allowable passive activity losses for the entire return.
Line 16 (bottom line) allows losses up to total passive income, plus any allowable
rental real estate losses and the commercial revitalization deduction up to
$25,000.
Beginning in tax year 2002, Form 8582 contains line changes due to the
commercial revitalization deduction enacted in 2000. If the taxpayer enters his
passive business losses o n Form 8582 line 2b as he did in past years, he will
incorrectly be permitted the $25,000 offset. In 2002, if he properly enters his
losses on line 3b, no loss will be allowed in the absence of passive income.
FORM 8582
1-4
Resources
Summary
[1]
The LLC will file as either Partnerships, C Corporations, or are disregarded, in
which case, the activity is reported on an individual’s Form 1040 Schedule C.
See IRC § 301.7701-3(a). For the sake of simplicity in this text, where we use
“partnership”, included are multi-member LLCs taxed as partnerships. When we
use “sole proprietorship”, we also mean single-owner LLCs.
1-5
[2]
See IRC § 469(c)(2). There are e xceptions discussed later in the text in Reg.
§ 1.469-1T(e)(3).
[3]
See Chapter 4 and Reg. >§ 1.469-5T(e).
[4]
IRC § 469(h)(1)
[5]
Reg. § 1.469-4(c)
[6]
IRC § 469(g)
[7]
If married filing separately and living apart from spouse at all times during the
tax year, up to $12,500 in rental real estate losses may be deducted if MAGI is
less than $50,000. See IRC § 469(i).
[8]
IRC § 469(c)(7) and Reg. 1.469-9
[9]
IRC § 69(b)
[10]
Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)
[11]
IRC §469(i)(6)
[12]
IRC § 469(c)(2)&(4)
[13]
Generally, FORM 8582 should be attached to the return. See the instructions
for FORM 8582 for exceptions. Publication 925, Passive Activity and At-Risk
Rules also provides good information.
[14]
“Business” means a non-rental business activity throughout the text.
1-6
Exhibit 1.1: IRC § 469 – CITATIONS Case Law and Rulings
• Barniskis, T.C. Memo 1999-256 à Jointly held condo was passive activity;
losses nondeductible. Excepted from rental definition. Taxpayer failed to
show material participation.
• Chapin, T.C. Memo 1996-56 à The taxpayer failed requirement for regular
and continuous participation to materially participate in condo.
• Madler, T.C. Memo 1998-112 à No material or active participation in
condo.
• Mordkin, T.C. Memo 1996-187 à Board chairman did not materially
1-7
Credits
nonprofit organization.
Equipment Leases
• Kelly, T.C. Memo 2000-32 à Airplane leased to flight school was a rental.
Fact that it was subleased hourly was not relevant.
• Kenville , 97-2 USTC ¶ 50,936 à Airplane chartered in two ways (a) charter
activity #1 met exception to a rental as extraordinary personal services
were provided; (b) charter activity #2 did not meet exception to a rental for
“ nonexclusive use exception to a rental”.
• Schetzer, T.C. Memo 1999-252 à No $25,000 offset for an auto rental;
definition of a rental activity.
• Vezey, No. F96-0055-CV, 1988 U.S. District Court of Alaska à Rental
could not be grouped with a closely held C Corporation.
• Welch, T.C. Memo 1998-310 à Taxpayer leased his tools on average for
less than 30 days and provided significant services. Thus, standard was
material participation.
o TAM 9722007
o TAM 9343010
o TAM 199949036
Income
1-8
• Sandy Lake Road LP, T.C. Memo 1997-295 à Rollback taxes and
attorney's fees related to the determination of such taxes are incurred "in
connection with" property from which portfolio income is derived, and are
therefore expenses allocable to portfolio income.
• Seits, T.C. Memo 1994-522 à Sale of coop apartment - not passive
income.
• Schaefer, 105 TC No. 16 à Income from a covenant not to compete is not
passive.
• Shannon, T.C. Memo 1993-554 à Discharge of indebtedness not passive
income as debt originated in farm where taxpayer materially participated.
• Wiseman, T.C. Memo 1995-203 à Activity issue, recharacterization
income-land non-passive.
o PLR 200010004
o PLR 199924020
o FSA 200002015
o FSA 1999-1202
Corporations.
Corporations.
1-9
o FSA 200102018
• Harris, T.C. Memo 1998-332 à Mini-storage units are rentals; thus losses
are limited under IRC § 469.
• Kosonen, T.C. Memo 2000-107 à Taxpayer did not file a proper election to
group his rentals as a real estate professional.
• Mowafi, T.C. Memo 2001-111 à The taxpayer, a full-time manager of
research for a large corporation, did not meet either half-personal services
test or 750 hour test.
• Paleveda, T.C. Memo 1997-416 à Relief provisions for real estate
Rental v. Business
1-10
Self-Charged Items
• Hillman, 114 TC No. 6 19893-97 Feb. 29, 2000, David H. Hillman, et ux. v.
IRS; 87 AFTR2d Par. 2001-803; No. 00-1915 (17 Apr 2001) à On appeal,
Government sustained. S Corporation shareholder cannot treat
management fees as a self-charged item, i.e. passive income.
o TAM 96240070
Self-Employment Tax
• Norwood, T.C. Memo 2000-84 à The fact that the taxpayer’s interest in a
partnership was passive did not exempt him from self-employment tax,
because he was a general partner in a partnership.
o TAM 9750001
Self-Rented Property
• Estate of Robert Quick, 110 TC 172 à Passive losses are an affected item,
governed by the partnership TEFRA statute.
1-11
Legislative History
1-12
Exhibit 1.2: FORM 8582 – Line by Line Comments (Tax year 2003 and
subsequent years)
1a Net rental real estate income, but no interest, dividends, gains on stocks &
1c Prior year rental real estate losses from last year’s Form 8582 W/S 6.
2c Sum of 2a and 2b
3a Net income/gain from all other passive activities, but no interest, dividends,
and Form 1120S, U.S. Income Tax Return for an S Corporation, businesses in
which Taxpayer does not materially participate, and many vacation condos.
3c Prior year losses from all other passive activities form last year’s Form 8582
W/S 5.
1-13
Passive losses are allowed only to the extent of passive income (line 15) and
in two places: Rental losses on the front of Schedule E and Form 1065 & Form
Passive losses from trusts are also reflected on the back of Schedule E.
Losses which are disallowed for the current year are not reflected on the face of
1-14
• Net rental income from a business where the taxpayer works is generally
not passive income. If that income is on Form 8582 line 1a, there is an
adjustment. When a dollar in passive income is removed from Form 8582,
a dollar in passive losses is generally disallowed. Passive losses are
allowed only up to passive income. See Reg. § 1.469-2(f)(6).
• Net rental income is from leased land is not passive income. If that
income is on Form 8582 line 1a, there is an adjustment. See Reg. §
1.469-2T(f)(3).
• Unless the taxpayer is a real estate professional (Schedule E line 43),
rental losses are generally limited to $25,000 and completely phased
out when MAGI is more than $150,000. Even if the taxpayer is a real
estate professional, rental losses are still passive and belong on Form
8582 unless the taxpayer materially participates in the rental.
1-15
1-16
Rentals generally are passive activities and are subject to the passive loss
disallowance rules. See IRC § 469(c)(2). A loss from a passive activity is not
currently deductible unless one of the following applies:
income);
Audit issues, exclusions, and exceptions are discussed later in this chapter. For
Rental Income issues, see Chapter 3.
Issues
• The $25,000 rental real estate allowance under IRC § 469(i)(8) allows
individuals to offset losses from rental real estate without necessarily
having passive income.
• Six exceptions exist to the definition of “rental” (Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(3)(ii)).
Certain activities normally thought of as “rentals” are specifically treated as
non-rental businesses under this section.
• A real estate professional is permitted treat a rental activity like any other
business, i.e. the taxpayer must materially participate to treat it as non-
passive.
• Equipment rentals normally are passive whether or not the taxpayer
materially participates and do not come under the rules for active
participation or material participation. Because equipment leases do not
involve rental real estate, they are not able to use even the special
$25,000 offset under IRC § 469(i).[1]
• Short-term vacation rentals are often treated as businesses, subject to the
material participation standard.
A taxpayer may deduct up to $25,000 in rental real estate losses as long as the
taxpayer actively participates and MAGI is less than $100,000.
Exception: the amount allowed for married taxpayers filing separately is either
$12,500 (if they did not live together) or zero (if they did live together during the
year). See active participation checksheet at end of chapter.
2-1
Sub-Issues
• The activity must consist of rental real estate (not an equipment lease).
• The taxpayer must have “actively participated” in the rental.
• The MAGI must be less than $100,000 in order to obtain the full $25,000
benefit.
Issue Identification
• The Form 8582, Part II, will show the amount of the special allowance that
was calculated by the taxpayer.
• Look for rental or non-rental losses deducted without completing Form
8582 including those generated by partnership and S- Corporations.
• A taxpayer whose rental activity consists of a net lease. Under a net lease,
the tenant pays most of the expenses.
Examination Techniques:
The full $25,000 allowance is available for taxpayers whose MAGI is less than
$100,000. For every $2 a taxpayer’s MAGI exceeds $100,000, the allowance is
reduced by $1.
2-2
Examination Techniques:
• Look for taxpayers who are not real estate professionals (no entry on
Schedule E line 43), but deducted rental real estate losses in excess of
$25,000.
• Watch for returns with an AGI over $150,000 and rental losses were
deducted. If the taxpayer is not a real estate professional, the $25,000
offset is usually not available. In the absence of passive income or a
disposition, losses are not deductible.
• Ask for the taxpayer’s calculation of MAGI. Make sure that all addbacks
are included, including losses deducted as non-passive by a real estate
professional. See Reg. § 1.469-9(j).
There are six exceptions to the definition of rental. Under Reg. § 1.469-
1T(e)(3)(ii), six types of activities normally defined as rentals, are treated as non-
rental activities, i.e. as businesses, in most cases. As a result, the active
participation standard and the $25,000 allowance do not apply. If the activity falls
outside the rental definition, it is passive or non-passive based on whether the
taxpayer materially participates. Following are the six exceptions:
2-3
5. The taxpayer customarily makes the rental property available during
defined business hours for nonexclusive use by various customers.
Example: golf courses, health clubs and spas.
6. The taxpayer provides the property for use in a non-rental activity of his
own partnership, S Corporation, or joint venture. The key word here is
“provides,” not “rents.” For example: a partner contributes property in
exchange for an ownership interest. This non-leasing transaction
with the partnership is not a rental. Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(3)(vii) states:
“Thus, if a partner contributes the use of property to a partnership,
none of the partner’s distributive share of partnership income is
income from a rental activity…”
Examination Techniques:
Beginning in 1994, a real estate professional may treat rental real estate
activities as non-passive if the taxpayer materially participates in the rental
activities.[2] The material participation requirement applies separately to each
rental activity (unless the taxpayer made a timely election to group all his rentals
as a single activity). These rules apply to individual taxpayers and closely held C
Corporations. See checksheet and interview questions at end of chapter.
Issues
Exception: A real estate professional may file a written election to group all
rental real estate activities as one activity. As a practical matter, most elections
were filed in 1995. However, the taxpayer may file the election in any year, and it
will bind future years from that point.[4]
2-4
Issue Identification
• Check to see if all Schedule E rental real estate losses have been
• Development or redevelopment
• Construction or reconstruction
• Acquisition or conversion
• Rental
• Management or operation
• Leasing
• Brokerage
The taxpayer must meet each of the following two time requirements:
One spouse alone must meet both tests. In addition, services performed as an
employee do not count unless the employee is at least a 5 percent owner.
Finally, before rental losses are deductible without being limited by the passive
losses rules, the taxpayer must materially participate in each rental.[7]
Examination Techniques:
2-5
A real estate professional may deduct rental real estate losses only to the extent
he or she materially participates in each rental activity. Unless the taxpayer
elected to group his rentals as a single activity, each rental is treated as a
separate activity. Under the material participation rules, the time of both spouses
is counted.[8] The material participation test[9] then applies separately to each
individual rental real estate activity. If the taxpayer materially participates in an
activity, net income or loss from that activity is non-passive. If the taxpayer does
not materially participate, despite being a real estate professional, the rental is
passive and losses (or income) go on Form 8582.
A taxpayer, who does most of the work in a rental, meets Test 2 for material
participation in Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)(2). However, if there is on-site management,
it may be difficult for the taxpayer to materially participate because:
Examination Techniques:
• During the initial interview, question the taxpayer regarding time spent in
all activities (personal, business, civic, family, hobbies, etc).
• Request and closely examine the taxpayer’s documentation of time
utilized for material participation in each activity. See the log-Chapter 5.
• Look for time spent by others in the activity. Indicators: commissions,
management fees, expenses for cleaning, maintenance, repairs, etc.
2-6
A real estate professional may make an election to group all rental real estate
activities as one single activity. In order to make a valid election, Treasury
Regulation § 1.469-9(g) requires a taxpayer to file a written statement and attach
it to an original return. This election cannot be made on an amended return or
during an audit!
Examination Techniques:
As a general rule, equipment rentals are defined as passive activities under IRC
§ 469(c)(2). Income and losses should be entered on Form 8582, line 3 (All
Other Passive Activities). Rental activities are passive whether or not the
taxpayer materially participates[10]. Material participation is generally irrelevant if
the activity is a rental activity. Unless a taxpayer meets one of the six
exceptions [11] to the rental definition, neither the active participation standard nor
the material participation standard apply. As a result, the $25,000 allowance for
rental real estate activities cannot be used for equipment rentals. See equipment
rental checksheet at end of chapter.
2-7
Issues
• Since the activity does not involve rental real estate, the active
Issue Identification
Form 1065 & Form 1120S. Business Code/NAICS Code 532400 is used for
commercial and industrial machinery and equipment rental and leasing.
Examination Techniques:
2-8
Exceptions:
Many condos, vacation cottages, time-shares, hotels, motels, and bed and
breakfasts have an average rental period of seven days or less. As a result,
these activities are not defined as rentals [12], but instead are treated as
businesses. Net losses from these activities are passive unless the taxpayer
materially participates. Because many of these activities have a management
company and may not be near to the taxpayer’s residence, materially
participating [13] may be difficult. See checksheet at end of chapter.
Sub-Issues
Issue Identification
2-9
• 100 hours and more than anyone else[15]: The taxpayer must not only
prove he worked more than 100 hours, but more than anyone else. He
must be ready to provide evidence of the participation of others.
Additionally, there is no provision in IRC § 469 to divide employee time by
each unit.
[16]
• Substantially all : It will be very difficult for the taxpayer to meet this test
for any condo-type activity that either has a management firm or is located
away from the taxpayer’s residence with someone who manages the
activity.
[17]
• Facts and circumstances : This test cannot be used if anyone besides
the taxpayer is paid to manage the activity. An on-site management
agency disqualifies the taxpayer from using this test.
Examination Techniques:
If a taxpayer or family members use a vacation property for more than 14 days or
10 percent of the property’s rental time, the personal use limitations of IRC §
280A apply and IRC § 469 is no longer applicable. The IRC § 280A severely
limits losses. See
Examination Techniques:
2-10
IRC § 469(j)(7) Interest
Summary
• Up to $25,000 in rental real estate losses are allowed for taxpayers with
MAGI of $100,000 or less[18].
• The MAGI is adjusted gross income computed without any passive losses
and several other minor modifiers. When MAGI exceeds $150,000, rental
losses are generally not permitted unless the taxpayer is a real estate
professional.
• A taxpayer who spends the majority of his time on real property
businesses and rentals may deduct his rental real estate losses, if he
materially participates in the rental.[19]
• Equipment rentals are generally passive activities. Losses are
• Many vacation rentals fall outside the rental definition[20] and are treated
as businesses. If there is on-site management, it may be difficult for the
taxpayer to meet the material participation standard.
[1]
IRC § 469(c)(2)&(4)
[2]
IRC § 469(c)(7)
[3]
Reg. § 1.469-9(e)(1)
[4]
Reg. § 1.469-9(g)
[5]
The majority of time he or she spends performing personal services in trade or
businesses must be in real property trades or businesses. IRC § 469(c)(7)(B).
[6]
IRC Section § 469(c)(7)(B)
[7]
If the taxpayer elected to group his rentals as a single activity under the
provisions of Reg. § 1.469-9(g), then he must prove material participation in the
grouped rental activity .
[8]
IRC § 469(h)(5), Reg. § 1.469-5T(f)(3) and Reg. § 1.469-1T(j)
[9]
Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)
[10]
IRC § 469(c)(2)&(4)
2-11
[11]
Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(3)(ii)
[12]
Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(3)(ii)(A)
[13]
Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)
[14]
IRC § 469(j)(10)
[15]
Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)(3)
[16]
Reg. § 1.469- 5T(a)(2)
[17]
Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)(7) & (b)(2)
[18]
IRC § 469(i)
[19]
IRC § 469(c)(7) and Reg. 1.469-9(e)(1)
[20]
Reg. §1.469-1T(e)(3)(ii)(A)
2-12
Exhibit 2.1: Rental Decision Tree
Note: Losses are nondeductible unless offset by passive income. Refer to IRC
469(a) and 469(d).
Decision Tree
Exceptions
• If no, losses are reported on Form 8582 line 1b or 3b and are not
2-13
Exhibit 2.2: Modified Adjuste d Gross Income Computation
Modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) for FORM 8582 line 7 is determined by
computing:
AGI without:
If there are capital gains/losses from passive activities, use method above.
2-14
Passive Business Loss (Excess passive losses after netting with passive
income)
REMINDERS:
You can tell if the taxpayer is a real estate professional via the last line on the
back of Schedule E.
DISPOSITIONS:
If there is an overall loss after considering current and suspended losses against
gain on disposition, the loss is non-passive. See IRC § 469(g). Thus, it enters
into the modified AGI computation, and will reduce income, just as another non-
passive loss would. Stated differently, both the income and the losses enter into
the MAGI computation.
If there is an overall gain after considering current and suspended losses against
gain on disposition, neither the gain nor the losses should be considered in
2-15
computing MAGI. The reason is because the net gain constitutes passive
income under Reg. §1.469-2T(c)(2).
2-16
Passive loss limitations for rental real estate generally apply to:
ISSUE: Does the taxpayer actively participate and does he qualify for the
$25,000 special allowance under IRC § 469(i)?
____ Have rental real estate losses been limited to $25,000 (or up to passive
income from another passive activity)? If not, limit losses to $25,000, and
continue on to verify active participation. If yes, continue on to verify active
participation.
____ Is MAGI more than $150,000? MAGI is simply AGI computed without
rental losses and any other passive losses and some minor modifiers. If AGI is
more than $150,000, MAGI is almost always more than $150,000. If AGI plus
the rental losses is more than $150,000, MAGI is more than $150,000.
____ Is the taxpayer a limited partner (and not also a general partner)? See
IRC § 469(i)(6)(B). Note: Since many investors in low income housing are
limited partners, losses will not qualify for the active participation standard and
should be on line 3b. Therefore, no $25,000 offset is available. While LIHC are
excepted from the active participation requirement, no such exception exists for
LIH losses.
_____ Does the taxpayer own less than 10 percent? See Schedule K-1.
_____ Are losses from an activity other than real estate? Equipment,
computers, boats, vehicles, etc. Leases of personal property are generally
passive regardless of the level of participation See IRC § 469(c)(2)&(4).
If answers to any of the last 3 questions are answered YES, Taxpayer does not
qualify for $25,000 offset. Loss should be moved to Line 3 of FORM 8582 and
recomputed. In effect, the loss will be disallowed (unless there is passive income
from another activity reported on F1040). If all answers above are NO, verify the
taxpayer is actively participating (making management decisions relative to
tenants, terms, repairs) via a statement or oral testimony. To be actively
participating, the taxpayer must be making management decisions in a bona fide
sense, not merely ratifying an on-site manager's decisions.
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CONCLUSION: The taxpayer is/is not actively participating. Ref. IRC § 469(i),
Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(3).
2-18
LAW: Under IRC § 469(c)(7) & Reg. 1.469-9, if the taxpayer spends the majority
of his time in real property businesses, meeting the 1/2 personal services and
750-hour tests, rental real estate losses are no longer per se passive. If the
taxpayer materially participates in each rental real estate activity, losses are fully
deductible. If not, even though the taxpayer is a real estate professional, losses
are passive and deductible only up to $25,000 (if MAGI is less than $100,000).
The IRC § 469(c)(7) does not trigger carryover losses from prior years.
_____ Verify that one spouse alone meets BOTH of the following tests.
FIRST TEST: Are more than half of personal services in all businesses (T/B)
for the year performed in real property T/B and rental real estate?
SECOND TEST: Does taxpayer spend more than 750 hours in real property
businesses and rentals in which he materially participates?
_____ If answer is NO to either of above two tests, IRC § 469(c)(7) does not
apply, and losses are generally limited to $25,000.
CONCLUSION:
1. Per IRC § 469(c)(7), the followi ng rental real estate activities have been
determined to be non-passive and current (but not carryover) losses are
fully deductible: ______________ Current losses are entered on
Schedule E, but not on FORM 8582.
2. Taxpayer is a real estate professional, b ut did not materially participate in
the following real estate activities: _____________ He does, however,
actively participate, making management decisions. Losses are entered
on FORM 8582 line 1a.
3. Taxpayer does not actively participate in the following rental real estate
activities: ______________. Limited partners and Taxpayers who own
2-19
2-20
_____ Describe the work you perform as a real estate professional. Check
occupations by signatures and W-2s.
_____ Does the spouse claiming to be the real estate professional work full-time
or part-time? If the taxpayer has a full-time job working 2080 hours a year in a
non-real property business, he must work 2081 on his real property businesses
to meet half-personal services test!
_____ What percentage of each real property business(es) do you own? Unless
taxpayer owns 5 percent or more, time is not counted. See IRC §
469(c)(7)(D)(ii). If, for example, the taxpayer works full-time for a construction
company, but does not own any of the company, he is not a real estate
professional.
Time does not count for purposes of the 750 hour test and the half personal
services test – unless the taxpayer materially participates in the activity. One
spouse ALONE must meet the 750 hour test.
_____ Who performs the services, husband or wife? Hours by husband? Hours
by wife?
_____ Approximately how many hours did you spend working on your rentals in
the year under exam? Ask the taxpayer for supporting documentation
(appointment books, diaries, calendars, logs, etc.) You may want to give
taxpayer a log to be completed for each rental – and for each year under exam.
Material participation is a year by year determination. Rentals are generally not
time intensive.
_____ If non-working spouse claims to be the real estate professional, ask what
other commitments he/she may have. Is the spouse a student? Is the spouse
providing full-time care to young children?
_____ Who monitors the rentals? Who collects the rent? Who does the repairs?
_____ Do you have a real estate agent or manager or employee responsible for
any of the rentals? Ask for each rental property. Check Schedule E properties
for large commissions or management fees. Also check for large labor expense -
2-21
possibly a hired contractor spent more time than taxpayer. If there is paid
management, it is a strong indicator taxpayer did not materially participate.
_____ Is anyone besides you involving with managing or overseeing any the
properties? Does a relative or friend manage/monitor the property for free?
_____ Does a tenant receives free/reduced rent for managing the rentals – or for
caring for the properties?
2-22
_____ Determine the average period of customer use. Days rented divided
by number of customers for the year. Customer use = Each period during
which a customer has a continuous or recurring right to use the property
(whether or not he actually uses it). Does the taxpayer have preferential rights to
use the property? If so, the period of customer use is generally the entire year.
If the average period of customer use is more than 7 days, activity is generally a
rental activity (IRC § 469(c)(2)&(4) and Reg. § l.469-lT(e)(3)(i)), and losses are
allowable only up to passive income from other activities. If customer use is less
than 7 days, the activity is still passive unless the taxpayer materially participates
(IRC § 469(h) and Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)).
_____ Secure lease and any other agreements. What is lease period? Does
taxpayer have a recurring right to use the equipment? Does lease stipulate
payments are for use of the equipment? OR are payments primarily for
taxpayer’s services in driving and/or maintaining the equipment? A rental is
defined as the lease of tangible property where amounts paid are principally for
use of the property (Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(3)(b)) - as opposed to a service intensive
activity where rental of property is incidental to services received. Service
intensive activities are generally treated as businesses.
2-23
2-24
ISSUE: Should the activity be treated as a rental real estate activity qualifying for
the $25,000 offset, OR should it be treated like a business in which taxpayer
must materially participate (Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)). Condos rented on average
seven days or less are treated as businesses.
_____ Did the taxpayer or related parties spend more than 14 personal days
at the property OR 10 percent of the days rented at fair rental value? In other
words, are deductions limited under IRC § 280A(c)(5)? If so, the passive loss
rules do not apply. See IRC § 469(j)(10). Losses are limited to income from the
activity under IRC § 280A. In other words, expenses may not be deducted
beyond gross rents under IRC § 280A. Qualified residence interest and taxes
that exceed gross income may be deducted on Schedule A as itemized
deductions.
The activity is not deemed a rental and does not qualify for the $25,000 offset if:
If neither of the above apply, the taxpayer qualifies for the $25,000 offset, if
active. If either of the above exceptions apply, the activity is not a rental activity.
It is treated as a business , and the far more stringent material participation
standard applies.
QUESTIONS to ask if rental period requirement is not met, and the taxpayer
must materially participate:
_____ How many hours a month does the taxpayer spend working on
activity? Ask taxpayer to provide documentation of hours worked for the years
under examination. The initial interview is the best time to secure a statement
2-25
_____ Does taxpayer and/or spouse work more than 500 hours a year on
activities related to the vacation rental? Reading reports and otherwise
monitoring the condo in a non-managerial capacity does not constitute material
participation.
_____ Does the taxpayer work at least 100 hours and no one works more?
_____ Does taxpayer have several passive businesses with losses in which
he participates 100-500 hours, and the total participation in these activities
exceeds 500 hours?
_____ Did taxpayer materially participate for any 5 out of the last 10 years?
2-26
2-27
Because passive losses generally can offset only income from passive activities,
some taxpayers have attempted to “create” passive income in order to trigger
passive losses. In other words, non-passive income may have been improperly
classified as passive and entered on Form 8582 in order to trigger deductibility of
otherwise nondeductible passive losses. Therefore, a common issue is whether
income on Form 8582 lines 1a or 3a is truly passive. For every dollar of passive
income removed from Form 8582, there is frequently an adjustment to allowable
passive losses of a dollar. Passive losses are generally deductible only to the
extent of passive income.
Passive Income
Passive income can only be generated by a passive activity. Just because the
taxpayer did not work for the income does not mean it is passive. There are only
two sources for passive income:
While the followi ng may seem passive, generally none are passive income:
3-1
Issue Identification:
Examination Techniques:
• Review Form 8582 lines 1a and 3a. Verify income is reported somewhere
on the return (Schedule E, D, C, F, etc.). The Form 8582 is computational
only, figuring the allowable passive loss. It does not report income. If
there is income on Form 8582, which is not reflected elsewhere on the
return, you have unreported income!
• Scan Schedules B, Fiscal Year Supplemental Schedule of Income and
Retirement Income Credit, Schedule D, and Schedule K-1 to verify that
passive income does not include interest, dividends, royalties or stock and
bond sales.
• Verify the income is not from a partnership that is a trader in stocks, bonds
and other securities. Traders fall completely outside the passive activity
rules (Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(6)). Schedule K-1 line 1 income from a trader in
stocks and bonds is non-passive, even if the taxpayer is a limited partner!
• For activities claimed as passive on Form 8582, verify that income is not
from a business in which the taxpayer materially participates. You may
want to use one of the search engines on the internet to see what is said
about the level of activity of the taxpayer.
• Verify that income is not from a business which is related to another
activity in which the taxpayer materially participates. If so, possibly, the
two businesses should be grouped as a single activity under Reg. § 1.469-
4(f). See Chapter 9.
• Verify that passive income is not from the rental of a building or equipment
to a business where the taxpayer works. Reg. § 1.469-2(f)(6)
recharacterizes so-called “self-rental” income as non-passive.
• Verify that passive income is not from the rental or sale of land or other
nondepreciable property. See Reg. § 1.469-2T(f)(3).
• Verify that compensation for the performance of personal services is not
classified as passive income. This includes W-2 wages, Form 1099-Misc
commissions, retirement income and guaranteed payments.
3-2
Documents to Request:
• The Form 8582 worksheets break down the income items on Form 8582.
Worksheet 1, 2 and 3 reveal which entities are generating income.
Worksheet 5 (6 beginning in 2002) indicates which schedule an allowed
passive loss is reflected on.
• Schedule K-1s and other documents supporting amounts reflected on
Form 8582.
Supporting Law:
• IRC § 469(c) Passive income can only be generated by a rental activity or
a business in which the taxpayer does not materially participate.
• Reg. § 1.469-2T(c) Income is passive if and only if the income is from a
passive activity.
• Reg. § 1.469-2T(c)(2) Gain on the sale of a passive activity is passive
income, if it was a passive activity in the year of disposition.
• IRC § 469(e)(1)A) and Reg. 1.469-2T(c)(3) Portfolio income is non-
passive.
• IRC § 469(e)(1)(A)(ii) and Reg. 1.469-2T(c)(3)(C)&(D) Gain on the sale
of stocks and bonds is non-passive.
• Reg. § 1.469-2T(f)(3) Net income from lease or sale of land is non-
passive.
• Reg. § 1.469-2(f)(6) Income from rental real estate, equipment or other
property leased to a business where the taxpayer works is non-passive.
• Carlstedt TC Memo 1997-331 The taxpayers failed to sustain their
burden of proving they did not materially participate in an S Corporation.
• Seits TC Memo 1994-522 Gain from the sale of an apartment was
Self-Rental Income
• Peruse Schedule E for any property with net income and few expenses,
indicating that the property might be under a net lease. Income from
property leased to an entity where the taxpayer works is often structured
as a net lease.
3-3
Examination Techniques:
Ask to see the lease for the year under examination. If the lease was signed
after 1988, income is non-passive
Leased Land
Income from leased land (ground rents) is non-passive and should not be on
Form 8582 line 1a. Reg. § 1.469-2T(f)(3) recharacterizes income from leased
property where less than 30 percent of the unadjusted basis is depreciable as
non-passive.
Examples: fields leased to a farmer, mobile home parks, land leased for
billboards, lots leased to sell Christmas tree, land leased for cell towers and
campgrounds.
Property (land, for example) held for investment is non-passive under IRC §
469(e)(1)(A)(ii)(II).
Issue identification:
3-4
Examination Techniques:
Supporting Law
• IRC § 469(c): Passive income can only be generated by a rental activity
or a business in which the taxpayer does not materially participate.
• Reg. § 1.469-2T(c): Income is passive if and only if the income is from a
passive activity.
• Reg. § 1.469-2T(c)(2): Gain on the sale of a passive asset or activity is
passive income if it was a passive activity in the year of disposition.
• IRC § 469(e)(1) and Reg. § 1.469-2T(c)(3): Portfolio income is non-
passive.
• IRC § 469(e)(1)(A)(ii) and Reg. § 1.469-2T(c)(3)(C)&(D): Gain on the
sale of stocks and bonds is non-passive.
• Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(6): Traders in stocks, bonds and other securities are
not passive activities.
• Reg. § 1.469-2T(f)(3): Net income from lease or sale of land is non-
passive.
• Reg. § 1.469-2(f)(6): Income from property leased to a business where
the taxpayer works is non-passive.
• Carlstedt T.C. Memo 1997-331: The taxpayers failed to sustain their
burden of proving they did not materially participate in an S- Corporation.
• Seits T.C. Memo 1994-522: Gain from the sale of an apartment was
investment income, not passive income.
Summary
• Passive income has only two sources: net rental income and income from
a business in which the taxpayer does not materially participate.
• Interest, dividends, royalties, annuities and gains on stocks and bonds are
not passive income.
• Net rental income from property leased to a business where the taxpayer
materially participates is non-passive and should not be reflect on Form
8582.
• Income from land, whether leased land or property held for investment, is
non-passive. Stated differently, net income (but not net loss) from the
leasing of nondepreciable property (such as land) is treated as non-
passive.
3-5
[1]
IRC § 469(e)(1)
[2]
PLR 8943055
[3]
IRC § 469(e)(3)
[4]
Reg. § 1.469-2(e)(2)(ii)
[5]
IRC § 469(c)(1)
[6]
IRC § 469(f)(1)
[7]
Reg. § 1.469-11(c)(2)
[8]
Thomas P. Krukowski, 114 T.C. No. 25 US Tax Court
3-6
Exhibit 3.1: Passive Income
_____ Verify that income is not flowing from a partnership or LLC which a
trader or stocks, bonds or other securities. An activity involving trading of
stocks and bonds is not a passive activity. Thus, income would be non-passive
and should not be reflected on Form 8582. See Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(6).
_____ Verify that income is not from leased of land or other non
depreciable property.
Example: leased field, parking lot, ground rents for trailers or mobile homes,
leased land for cell towers. See Reg. § 1.469-2T(f)(3).
_____ Verify that income on Form 8582 line 1a or 3a is not from the sale of
land. Investment income is not passive income. See IRC § 469(e)(1)(A)(ii)(II).
Passive income must be generated by a passive activity.
_____ Verify that income is not from an activity in which taxpayer materially
participates. See Reg. 1.469-5T(a). Review the worksheets of Form 8582 to
see if income is coming from an in-state activity - an indicator that the taxpayer is
3-7
possibly materially participating. Even if the taxpayer does nothing, in the current
year, if losses/income were non-passive in any 5 of the prior 10 years, income is
non-passive in the current year. Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)(5). Also if the activity is a
personal service activity (doctors, attorneys, accountants, financial planners,
actors, consultants, engineers, etc.), income is non-passive if the taxpayer
materially participated any prior 3 years. See Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)(6).
_____ Verify that income is not from an investment such as lots, the sale of
a building never rented or used in a business, or the sale of timber.
Investment income is not passive income. See IRC § 469(e)(1)(a)(ii)(II). Passive
income only comes from a passive activity, i.e. passive income must be
generated either by a rental activity OR a business in which the taxpayer does
not materially participate. If income on Form 8582 is from Schedule D, examiner
should consider the possibility that it could be simply investment income. Some
real estate developers have splintered their projects into many separate entities
and entered net gains on Schedule D, limiting their tax rate to 20 percent. If
income is treated as investment income (as opposed to business income), it
cannot be passive income. The examiner should consider whether the
motivation in creating multiple entities was to circumvent IRC § 469. If so, the
examiner may want to invoke the anti-abuse rule in Reg. § 1.469-4(f) and
regroup the entities as one single activity. Also consider whether the taxpayer
should be treated as a dealer. Consequently, property would be inventory and
taxed at ordinary rates versus capital gain.
_____ Verify that income is not compensation for personal services such as
wages, guaranteed payments from a partnership or Form 1099-Misc commission
income. See IRC § 469(e)(3), Reg. § 1.469-2T(c)(4).
_____ Verify income is not from a covenant not to compete. Reg. § 1.469-
2(c)(7)(iv).
Note, however, that passive losses will be triggered up to the amount of gain
reported in the current year. See IRC § 469(g)(3).
3-8
_____ If there was a gain on disposition of a passive activity, verify that the
Form 4797 gain and current and carryforward losses have been entered on
Form 8582. If there was a gain on sale, but current and suspended operating
losses exceed the gain, nothing should be entered on Form 8582. In both
instances, the full gain should be entered on Form 4797. Reminder: passive
income is not investment income under IRC § 163(d). The same type of income
should never be entered on both Form 4952 and Form 8582.
_____ If income is generated by an oil & gas entity, ask the taxpayer if there
were losses in prior years. If so, request prior year returns. If losses were
claimed as non-passive under the working interest exception in any prior year,
income in subsequent years is non-passive and should not be in Form 8582.
See IRC § 469(c)(3)(B).
ADJUSTMENT: Remove non-passive income from Form 8582 L1a, or 3a, and
recompute. Adjustment to allowable passive losses is difference between Form
8582 L16 per return and Form 8582 L16 as corrected (without income
determined to be non-passive).
3-9
Exhibit 3.2: Self-Rented Property - Income Recharaterization
ISSUE: Should net rental income for Property ____ be recharacterized as non-
passive? When the taxpayer rents property to his own business, income
generally is non-passive. In other words, should income be removed from Form
8582 line 1a, thereby reducing allowable passive losses?
NOTE: Net losses are generally passive under IRC § 469(c), even in a self-
rental situation. Reg. § 1.469-2(f)(6) recharacterizes only net income.
_____ Is there a written lease signed before 2/19/88 which binds the year
under examination? As a practical matter, there are very few leases executed
before 1988, which would bind current years. See Reg. 1.469-11(c)(ii). If there
is a lease, be sure to request it immediately to verify the date it was signed and
that it binds the current year.
If the answer to first question is YES and answer to second question is NO,
income is non-passive and should not be on Form 8582 line 1a.
3-10
3-11
Decision Tree
If the answer is yes to any of the following, income on Form 8582 lines 1a or 3a
is not passive income:
participates
3-12
Chapter 4, Material Participation
In a Nutshell
The rules discussed in this lesson are applied at the Form 1040 level for
individuals involved i n partnerships and S Corporations.
4-1
Activity Defined
There are only two business activities that are excepted from the passive loss
rules:
Grouping of Activities
It is also possible that several different activities may exist within a single entity:
two unrelated businesses, or a business and a rental activity.
By grouping related businesses as a single activity, the taxpayer can more easily
meet the 500-hour test for material participation discussed below. Before
considering the material participation tests, the examiner should identify related
businesses and determine if the taxpayer has grouped any to form a specific
“activity”. Ask- or Issue an IDR - asking if the taxpayer has grouped any activities
under Reg. § 1.469-4; to explain why the grouping is appropriate; and when the
grouping decision was made. See Chapter 8.
1. The taxpayer works 500 hours or more during the year in the activity.
2. The taxpayer does substantially all the work in the activity.
3. The taxpayer works more than 100 hours in the activity during the year
and no one else works more than the taxpayer.
4-2
Note: The first four tests look to a set number of hours of participation in the tax
year. The next two tests look to material participation in prior tax years. The final
test looks to the facts and circumstances, but is highly restrictive.
500 Hours
If the taxpayer participates more than 500 hours during the year in a business,
income or loss from the activity will be non-passive. Participation of both
spouses is counted, but not participation of the children or employees.
Examination Techniques:
• Review W-2s and other non-passive activities. Does it seem likely that the
taxpayer could spend 500 hours on the activity in light of other
employment obligations?
4-3
Substantially All
Stated simply, if the taxpayer does most of the work, income or loss will be non-
passive. The involvement in the activity of an employee or non-owner could
cause the taxpayer to fail this test.
Note: There is no specific number of hours associated with this test. In addition,
the term “substantially” is not defined in the regulations.
100 Hours
If a taxpayer participates in an activity for more than 100 hours and no other
individual participates more than the taxpayer (including any employee or non
owner), income or losses from the activity are non-passive.
Examination Techniques:
• The taxpayer to participate more than 100 hours during the year.
• The activity must be a business, i.e. it cannot be a rental or investment
activity.
• The business must be a passive activity. Thus, if the taxpayer works more
than 500 hours in the business, it is not a SPA as 500 hours is one of the
qualifying tests for material participation. Similarly, if the taxpayer does
4-4
Even if the taxpayer performs no services for a business currently, the examiner
should inquire about involvement in prior years and review the returns to see if
income or losses were treated as non-passive.
If a taxpayer materially participated for any three prior taxable years in a personal
service activity the current year income or loss will be treated as non-passive. It
does not matter whether those three prior taxable years were consecutive.
The facts and circumstances test may apply if none of the other tests are met.
This test does not apply unless the taxpayer worked more than 100 hours a
year. Furthermore, the taxpayer’s time spent managing will not count if:
Examination Techniques:
• Taxpayers may argue the facts and circumstances test when they fail the
others. However, due to the stringent limitations, few taxpayers can meet
the facts and circumstances standard. If there is paid on-site
management, the facts and circumstances test cannot be used.
4-5
Indicators
Indicators that the taxpayer did not materially participate:
• The taxpayer was not compensated for services. Most individuals do not
work significant hours without expecting wage or commissions.
• The taxpayer's residence is hundreds of miles from the activity.
• The taxpayer has a W-2 wage job requiring 40+ hours a week for which he
or she receives significant compensation.
• The taxpayer has numerous other investments, rentals, business
Limited Partners The IRC § 469(h)(2) presumes that limited partner interests are
per se passive, and losses are therefore not deductible unless the taxpayer has
passive income reported on the return.
• The taxpayer works 500 hours or more in the trade or business activity.
• The taxpayer materially participated in the activity in any 5 of the prior 10
years.
4-6
If a taxpayer holds both a general and a limited partnership interest all year, he
may use any one of the seven tests to qualify for material participation.[5]
Examination Techniques:
Reminder: If the activity of the entity is equipment leasing or rental real estate,
losses are generally passive to the investor.
A former passive activity is an activity that is non-passive in the current year, but
was a passive activity in prior years. If the former passive activity generates net
income, suspended passive losses from prior years can offset that net income.
Remaining suspended losses are treated like any other passive loss. Passive
losses can only be offset against passive income. Unused suspended losses
may be carried forward indefinitely. Change in status does not constitute a
qualifying disposition.
Methods of Proof
4-7
Examination Techniques:
Qualifying Participation
Once the taxpayer provides the type of participation and the approximate hours
spent performing that participation, a determination can be made as to whether
that participation qualifies.
General Rule
Work performed by either spouse will be considered even if the spouse does not
own an interest in the activity. [6]
Non-Qualifying Time
While the taxpayer may have spent time working on various aspects of the
activity, certain hours do not count in the tests for material participation:
4-8
The above list is not all inclusive. Other activities could be investor-type activities
such as organizing records, preparing taxes, and paying bills [7].
Travel Time generally should not be considered in computing the hourly tests for
material participation, particularly if other factors indicate the taxpayer is not
participating in the activity on a regular, continuous and substantial basis.[9].
Legislative history provides that "services must be integral to operations". It is
somewhat difficult to construe that travel constitutes "services" or "participation"
as contemplated by Congress or the Regulations. More importantly, travel is not
integral to operations in most cases.
Supporting Law
• IRC § 469(h): The taxpayer materially participates if he is involved in the
operations of an activity on a regular continuous and substantial basis.
• IRC § 469(h)(5), Reg. 1.469-5T(f)(3), Reg. 1.469-1T(j): Participation of
both spouses counts. Income or losses for both spouses are non-passive,
even if only one spouse rises to any of the seven tests for material
participation.
• IRC § 469(h)(4): Material participation rules for closely held C-
4-9
Summary
[1]
IRC § 469(c)
[2]
Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(6)
[3]
Reg. § 1.469-5T(b)
[4]
Reg. § 1.469-5T(e)(2)
[5]
Reg. § 1.469-5T(e)(3)(ii)
[6]
IRC § 469(h)(5) and Reg. § 1.469-5T(f)(3)
[7]
W.A. Barniskis, 78 TC Memo 226, December 53,486(M), TC Memo 1999-258
[8]
Reg. § 1.469-5T(f)(2)(i)
4-10
[9]
We ha ve no express statutory guidance on travel. While not precedent setting
and just a summary opinion, the following case provides guidance on travel time:
[10]
Reg. § 1.469-4(d)(1)
[11]
IRC § 469(h)(2)
[12]
Reg. § 1.469-5T(e)(2), Reg. § 1.469-5T(e)(3)(ii)
4-11
OR
1.____ Does taxpayer and/or spouse work more than 500 hours a year in
the business?
2.____ Does taxpayer do most of the work? Even if taxpayer does not meet
500 hour test, but his participation is the only activity in the business, he
materially participates. Example: sole proprietor with no employees.
3.____ Does taxpayer work more than l00 hours and no one (including non-
owners or employees) works more hours? Example: If owner puts in l75
hours a year and an employee works 190 hours a year, taxpayer would not meet
material participation test.
4-12
1. any person, other than the taxpayer, received compensation for managing
the activity; or,
2. if any person spent more hours than taxpayer managing the activity.
REMINDER: Limited partners under IRC § 469(h)(2) are generally passive. The
exceptions to the limited partner rule are tests 1, 5 and 6 above. If taxpayer
holds both a general and limited partner interest, he will have all seven tests
available.
If the answer to any of the above questions is YES the taxpayer meets the
material participation standard. Losses or income should not be reflected on
Form 8582, and the taxpayer may generally deduct in full the amount of the loss
in the current year. If the taxpayer materially participated, losses or income are
reflected on the return as non-passive.
If the answer is NO to all seven tests, the material participation standard is not
met, and losses are passive. Taxpayer will be allowed losses only to the extent of
passive income.
CONCLUSION: Under IRC § 469, it has been determined that the taxpayer is /is
not materially participating.
Reminder: If the taxpayer does not materially participate, credits arising from
the business are generally passive. In the absence of passive income, a passive
activity credit is nondeductible in the current year.
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Decision Tree
If answer to any one is yes, losses are excepted from the passive loss limitations
and generally fully deductible.
• Did the taxpayer work more than 500 hours in the activity during the year?
• Did TP perform substantially all the work in the activity?
• Did TP work more than 100 hours and more than anyone else (including
non-owners)?
• Did the taxpayer work more than 100 hours, but less than 500, in two or
more businesses and the sum of all the hours in these businesses is more
than 500?
• Did the taxpayer materially participate in the activity for any five of the last
ten years?
• If the activity is a personal service activity, did the taxpayer materially
participate for any three prior years?
• Under all the facts and circumstances, did the taxpayer work on a regular,
continuous and substantial basis in the activity? This test is not available
if anyone was paid compensation in connection with management of the
activity.
If answer to all the above tests is no, the taxpayer does not materially
participate. The loss is passive and not deductible in the absence of passive
income.
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Is the activity a SPA? Losses are nonpassive if the sum of hours in all SPAs is
more than 500 hours for the year.
Decision Tree
Go to the next step. Do not include any of the above activities in the following
step.
• The taxpayer worked 100-500 hours during the year in the activity.
• Hours in all SPAs are more than 500 in total.
4-15
Exhibit 4.4: Activity Log
Business/Property:__________________ Year:____________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
__________________________________ ___________________
Reg. § 1.469-5T(f)(4) provides that reasonable means for proving hours may
include a statement of services performed AND approximate hours based on
appointment books, calendars, etc. To meet his burden of proof under IRC 7491,
the taxpayer must comply with the recordkeeping requirements of the
regulations.
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Chapter 5, Dispositions
In A Nutshell
Passive losses are generally deductible only to the extent of passive income.
However, current and suspended losses are fully deductible if there is a
“qualifying disposition.” Under IRC § 469(g), a “qualifying disposition” requires
three criteria:
If these three tests are met, losses are fully deductible against non-passive
income (unless the taxpayer has basis limitations). Thus, in the year of
disposition, losses allocable to the passive activity may offset portfolio and other
investment income or may become part of a net operating loss.
Entire Interest
The taxpayer must dispose of his entire interest in the activity, or substantially all
of it, in order to trigger the recognition of loss. If less than an entire interest is
disposed, then the issue of ultimate economic gain or loss is unresolved.
If a partnership conducts two separate activities within the entity, a fully taxable
disposition of all assets used or created in one activity constitutes a disposition of
the partner’s or shareholder’s entire interest in the activity. The taxpayer must
have adequate records of suspended losses and credits that are allocable to that
activity.
Partial Interest
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Reminder: The taxpayer must still meet the fully taxable requirement and the
sale must be to an unrelated party before losses are allowed as non-passive.
If the taxpayer made an election to group his rentals as a single activity under
Reg. § 1.469-9(g), the sale of one property would not constitute an entire
disposition. See Chapter 2 regarding Real Estate Professionals. However,
losses will be triggered to the extent of net gain reported.
In a fully taxable disposition, all gain or loss is realized and recognized in the
current year.
An exchange of the taxpayer’s interest where all gain or loss is not recognized
does not trigger suspended losses, (suc h as transactions governed by IRC §
351, 721 or 1031). To the extent the taxpayer has recognized gain on the
transaction, that income generally is passive and may be entered on Form 8582,
triggering passive losses.
Reminders:
Death
Current and suspended passive losses are permitted only to the extent they
exceed any step-up in basis in the hands of the beneficiary. Basis is stepped up
5-2
to fair market value.[3] If the increase in basis exceeds unused passive losses,
no losses are deductible on the decedent’s return.
Installment Sale
If the taxpayer sells a passive activity on the installment basis, current and
suspended losses may only be deducted in the same ratio as the gain reported.
If there is excess gain, that gain is passive income under Reg. § 1.469-2T(c)(2)
and will permit deductibility of additional losses to the extent of the gain.
Unrelated Party
If a passive activity is sold to a related party, losses are not triggered (except to
the extent passive income is generated). They remain with the taxpayer and are
shown on Form 8582 until the activity is ultimately acquired by an unrelated third
party. See IRC § 469(g)(1)(B). Aside from IRC § 469(g), IRC § 267 generally
does not permit a loss on the sale of property to a related parties. The following
are related parties[4]:
• Members of a family;
• An individual and a corporation in which he owns directly or indirectly
more than 50 percent in value of the outstanding stock;
• Two corporations which are members of the same controlled group;
• A grantor and trustee of any trust;
• A trustee and a beneficiary of the trust;
• A corporation and a partnership if the same persons own more than 50
percent in value of the outstanding stock of the corporation and more than
50 percent of the capital interest or profits interest in the partnership;
• An S Corporation and another S Corporation if the same persons own
more than 50 percent in value of the outstanding stock of each
corporation; or,
• An S Corporation and C Corporation if the same person owns more than
50 percent in value of the outstanding stock in each corporation.
Issue Identification:
5-3
may not be a fully taxable disposition, (i.e. the sale of assets may not yet
have been completed).
Examination Techniques:
• Ask who the activity was sold to and if the buyer is related to the taxpayer.
• Determine if the taxpayer retained an interest in the activity.
• Determine if the taxpayer is still responsible for any liabilities of the
activity.
partnership.
The purpose of Form 8582 is to compute the allowable passive losses. If the
disposition of the passive activity is a qualifying disposition as previously
discussed, the losses attributable to that activity are allowed in full, and, as such,
would not be required to be reflected on Form 8582.
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Income from the sale or other disposition of passive activity is generally passive
income if the activity was a passive activity in the year of sale (Reg. § 1.469-
2T(c)(2)(i)). Similarly, income from the sale or property used in a passive activity
is passive income. If there is overall net income on a disposition (gain on the
sale exceeds the current and prior years losses), income and losses should both
be reflected on the same line of Worksheet 1, 2 or 3 of Form 8582. As discussed
above, if there is an overall net loss on the disposition, nothing should be entered
on Form 8582. If there are two dispositions, one with an overall net loss and
another with an overall net gain, they should be netted.
The following gains generally are not passive and should not be used to offset
passive losses:
The fact that an activity is passive does not determine the character of the gain
(or loss) in terms of whether it is capital or ordinary in nature. Gain on
disposition, usually capital in nature, will be reflected on Form 4797 and
Schedule D. Current gains/losses as well as suspended losses represent
ordinary income. They are generally entered on Schedule E and do not reduce
capital gains reflected on Schedule D.
Issue Identification: Watch for returns where the net gain on Form 4797 has
been entered on Form 8582, but not the current and carryover losses. If there is
an overall net loss, nothing should be reflected on Form 8582. By entering the
income without the losses, the taxpayer has erroneously triggered deductibility of
other passive losses.
Examination Techniques:
5-5
On dispositions with an overall net gain, the net gain, current losses, and
suspended losses are all reflected on Form 8582. Entering the gain, but not the
losses, on the Form 8582 results in unrelated passive losses being allowed in
error. Any gain must first offset losses from the same activity.
The purpose of Form 8582 is purely computational. The examiner should verify
that all income shown on Form 8582 line 1a or 3a is reflected elsewhere on the
return, most commonly on Schedule E or Schedule D. The Form 8582 does not
report income. If income shown on Form 8582 is not reflected on the return, it is
unreported income!
Summary
• For current and suspended losses to be deductible, the taxpayer must sell
or otherwise dispose of his entire interest in a passive activity.
• The disposition must be a fully taxable transaction. Transfers to other
entities and likekind exchanges are non-qualifying dispositions. Losses
remain on Form 8582.
• When a taxpayer dies, only losses in excess of the step-up in basis are
allowed. Stated differently, the decedent’s losses are allowed only to the
extent they exceed the amount by which the beneficiary’s basis in the
passive activity has been increased.[10]
• On an installment sale, losses are triggered in ratio to gain reported.
• When gain and current and suspended losses are netted, if there is an
overall loss, nothing should be entered on Form 8582.
• If there is an overall gain on disposition, all gains and losses should be
entered on Form 8582. Any excess gain, generally is passive income
which may trigger deductibility of unrelated passive losses.
Supporting Law
• IRC § 469(g): Passive losses are allowed on an entire disposition to an
unrelated party in a fully taxable transaction.
• IRC § 469(g)(1)(B): If an entire interest in a passive activity is sold to a
related party, passive loss remains with the taxpayer on FORM 8582 until
the related party sells to an unrelated party.
• IRC § 469(g)(2): On death of a taxpayer, passive losses are deductible
on to the extent they exceed the difference between adjusted basis and
the stepped-up basis FMV in the hands of the beneficiary. In other words,
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the step-up in basis usually absorbs the decedent’s passive losses, and
therefore, no deduction is allowed to the taxpayer, estate, or beneficiary.
• IRC § 469(g)(3): On an installment sale, losses are recognized in the
same ratio as gain reported.
• IRC § 469(j)(6): When a passive loss is gifted to a person or charity,
losses are added to the donee’s basis. They are not deductible b y the
taxpayer/donor.
• IRC § 469(j)(12): When an estate or trust distributes a passive activity,
losses are not deductible by the estate or trust. They are added to the
beneficiary’s basis.
• IRC § 1398(f)(1), Reg. § 1.1398-1(d)(1): A transfer of an interest in a
passive activity between an individual and a bankruptcy estate is not a
qualifying disposition, which triggers deductibility of losses.
• Reg. § 1.469-2T(c)(2)(i)(A)(2): Gain on disposition generally is passive
income if the activity was a passive activity in the year of disposition.
• Reg. § 1.469-2T(c)(2)(i)(A)(3): Gain on disposition is not passive income
if the activity is not a passive activity in the taxable year of disposition.
• Reg. § 1.469-2T(f)(3): If less than 30 percent of the unadjusted basis of
leased property is depreciable, gain is non-passive.
• Reg. § 1.469-2(f)(6): Gain on the sale (or rental income) of property
leased to a business in which the taxpayer materially participates (i.e.
where he regularly works) is non-passive.
• Reg. § 1.469-4(g): If substantially all of an activity is sold, that portion
may be treated as a separate activity.
• Reg. § 1.469-6 on dispositions has not yet been written. Thus, we have
no regulations on dispositions other than those mentioned above.
[1]
Reg. § 1.469-4(g)
[2]
Committee Reports on P.L. 99-514 (Tax Reform Act of 1986)
[3]
IRC § 469(g)(2)
[4]
IRC § 267(b) and § 707(b)
[5]
Reg. § 1.469-2T(f)(3)
[6]
IRC § 469(e)(1)(A)(ii)(II)
[7]
Reg. § 1.469-2(f)(6)
[8]
Reg. § 1.469-2T(c)(2)(i)(A)(3)
[9]
IRC § 469(c)(7)
5-7
[10]
IRC § 469(g)(2)
5-8
Computation
Decision Tree
Overall Gain: If there is an overall net gain, all income, including gain on sale of
property generally goes on Form 8582, as do the current and suspended losses.
All income and losses are also reported on the appropriate schedules, typically
Schedule E and Form 4797. Losses are fully deductible.
Overall Loss: If there is an overall net loss, none of the losses go on Form
8582, but are reported on the appropriate schedules, if answer to all the
following is yes:
If the answer to any of the above is no, income and losses from the activity are
reflected on Form 8582. Losses are deductible only to the extent of passive
income.
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ISSUE: Are current and suspended passive losses fully deductible due to a
disposition? In other words, is the transaction an entire disposition to an
unrelated party in a fully taxable transaction? If not, losses remain on Form 8582
and are deductible only to the extent of passive income.
_____ Verify that all gains and losses have been realized and recognized.
The following are not fully taxable:
• Like-kind exchanges.
• Conversion to personal use.
• Transfer to a corporation or partnership.
• Transfer due to divorce (treated as gift-IRC § 469(j)(6) & § 1041(b).
• Installment sale (PALs triggered in ratio to gain reported).
• Bankruptcy (see below).
NOTE: The absence of Form 4797 attached to the return may indicate that there
is not a fully taxable disposition.
_____ Verify the loss has been deducted in the correct year. The Senate
Report indicates that the taxpayer’s accumulated tax loses should be permitted
to be deducted when, and only when the actual economic gain or loss on the
activity can finally be determined.
_____ Does the taxpayer still own the activity, just in a different entity
form? An entity is not an activity. An activity is a business or a rental activity.
The entity form may change, i.e. from a partnership to an LLC, but the taxpayer
has no t disposed of his “activity”, i.e. rental or business activity.
_____ Did the taxpayer sell his partnership/S Corporation interest – and
then repurchase it within a short time? Substance versus form governs in tax
law. The Senate Finance Committee Report on P.O. 99-514 (1986) states, “For
example, sham transactions, transfers not properly treated as sales due to the
existence of a put, call or similar right relating to repurchase do not give rise to
allowance of suspended losses.”
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instances, the debt cancelled under § 108 fully absorbs any current or
suspended losses, and therefore nothing is deductible on the return.
• Inquire whether the bankruptcy estate may have already used suspended
passive losses. Some taxpayers carry the losses into subsequent years,
despite having been used by the bankruptcy estate.
• Before allowing losses, consider basis and at-risk limitations. Furthermore,
if the property is transferred out of the bankruptcy estate back to the
taxpayer, he still has an ownership interest and losses are not triggered by
IRC § 469(g). Such a transfer is not a qualifying disposition.
Be sure to look at the ownership percent on the Schedule K-1. Under IRC §
707(b)(1)(A), if a person, directly or indirectly, owns more than 50 percent of the
capital interest or the profits interest of a partnership, he is a related party.
_____ Verify that substantially all of the activity was sold or otherwise
disposed of. See IRC § 469(g) & Reg. § 1.469-4(g).
_____ Verify that activity has been truly terminated (in other words, that it is
not continuing on as an LLC or other entity or another Schedule C under a
different name, but the taxpayer still retains an ownership interest). The Senate
Report (S. Rep. 99-313, 99th Cong., 2d Sess.) states, "The taxpayer must
dispose of his entire interest in an activity in order to trigger the recognition of
loss. If he disposes of less than his entire interest, then the issue of ultimate
economic gain or loss on his investment in the activity remains unresolved. A
disposition of the taxpayer’s entire interest involves a disposition of the taxpayer's
interest in all entities that are engaged in the activity, and ... all assets used or
created in the activity." (Emphasis added.) Note that the Senate report indicates
all entities and all assets (used in the activity and inventory created by the
activity).
_____ Check Form 8582 to see if Form 4797 gain on disposition may have
been improperly entered on line 1a or 3a. Gain o n disposition belongs on
Form 8582 only if there is an overall gain after considering current and
suspended losses. If there is an overall gain, both the gain and the losses
should be on Form 8582. Gain should never be reflected on Form 8582 without
the associated losses. If there is an overall loss after current and suspended
5-11
losses are subtracted from net gain, nothing (neither gain nor losses) should be
on Form 8582.
_____ If owner died, verify that suspended losses are allowed only to the
extent they exceed the amount by which the transferee's basis in the
passive activity has been increased. Basis is generally stepped up to FMV. If
the increase in basis exceeds unused passive losses, no PALs are deductible.
Neither the deceased taxpayer nor the beneficiary will ever be able to deduct the
losses.
_____ If loss is from a "rental", verify that it was not a temporary rental of
the taxpayer's residence. If the rental period was less than a year or two, IRS
may view it as a temporary rental lacking in the necessary profit motive under
IRC § 183, i.e. a nondeductible loss. Deductions for rental of a personal
residence may also be limited under IRC § 280A.
_____ Verify via Form 4797 and the depreciation schedules that prior year
depreciation has been properly recaptured and treated as ordinary income.
LAW: Under IRC § 469(g), current and carryforward passive activity losses are
fully deductible in the year of an entire disposition in a fully taxable transaction to
an unrelated party. A qualifying disposition may create an Net Operating Loss
(NOL) which can be carried back. See IRC § 172. NOTE: Whether or not there
is a qualifying disposition, passive losses will always be triggered up to passive
income reflected on the return.
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ISSUE: On the sale (or other disposition) of a passive activity, is gain or other
income on Form 8582 truly passive income? Should gain on sale be removed
from Form 8582, thereby limiting deductibility of passive losses?
_____ Verify that income on Form 8582 line 1a, and 3a resulting from a
disposition is also reflected on Form 4797 and Schedule D or elsewhere.
Form 8582 is merely a computational form for allowable passive activity losses.
Income on Form 8582 must also be reflected on the appropriate schedule.
Generally, income on Form 8582 from the sale of a building used in a rental
activity is carried from Form 4797 to Schedule D (capital gain portion) and Line
15 of the front Form 1040 (ordinary income).
NOTES: (1) If no Form 4797 is filed with the return, it is indicative that there was
not a fully taxable disposition which would trigger suspended losses. (2) Gain
on sale, however, generally is passive income. See Reg. § 1.469-2T(c)(2).
_____ Ensure that only net gain has been entered on Form 8582 line 1a or
3a, not the entire sales price .
_____ Verify that net gain from Form 4797 has been entered on Form 8582
line 1a or 3a and the current net loss on line 1b, 2b or 3b and carryover
losses on line 1c or 2c. The result is that only excess gain after current and
carryforward losses have been absorbed can be used of offset other passive
losses. If there was a gain on disposition, but current and carryforward losses
exceed the gain, nothing should be entered on Form 8582. In both instances,
the full taxable gain should be on Schedule D and current and suspended losses
on Schedule E. See Form 8582 Instructions, page 8.
NOTE: Some taxpayers enter only the Form 4797 gain on Form 8582 without
considering the impact of current and suspended losses, thereby erroneously
allowing other passive losses. If net gain is more than current and suspended
losses, both the net gain and all losses must be reflected on Form 8582.
_____ Verify that activity was a passive activity (rental or business without
material participation) in the year of disposition in which gain is
recognized.
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_____ Verify that income is not from the sale of land. Passive income is only
generated by rentals or passive businesses. Whether held for investment or
leased, gain on the sale of land is not passive and should not be on Form 8582.
See IRC § 469(e)(1)(A)(ii)(II), Reg. § 1.469-2T(c), Reg. § 1.469-2T(f)(3).
• Income entered on Form 6252 line 24 ties to Form 8582 line 1a, AND
• Current and carryforward losses are deducted in same ratio as gain.
NOTE: When gain recognized from an installment sale exceeds all the current
and suspended losses, taxpayer need not compute any ratios. Losses are fully
deductible.
_____ If gain is from the sale of a building, verify that building was used in
a passive activity in the year of sale. Passive activity is either a rental activity
(check Schedule E for rental income and advertising) or a business in which the
taxpayer does not materially participate. If there are no gross receipts/rents and
no advertising, it is an indicator that there may be no rental or business activity in
the year of disposition. Also verify that building was not simply held for
investment, and thus income is non-passive. See IRC § 469(c), Reg. § 1.469-
2T(c), Seits T.C. Memo 1994-52 If income is non-passive, it should be removed
from Form 8582, thereby reducing allowable passive losses. Investment income
is not passive income (IRC § 469(e)(1)(A)).
_____ If a business interest is sold, verify the taxpayer did not materially
participate in any 5 of the prior 10 years. If losses/income are non-passive in
any 5 of 10 years, current year gain will be non-passive even if the taxpayer did
not work in the activity in the current year. See Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)(5).
_____ For 1994 and later years, consider whether the taxpayer might be a
real estate professional. If he did most of the work or otherwise materially
participated in the rental sold OR if he elected to group rental properties, gain on
disposition is non-passive. A real esta te professional is an individual who spent
more than half his time on real property businesses and rentals AND more than
750 hours during the year. See IRC § 469(c)(7), Reg. § 1.469-9.
_____ Consider whether property was held for investment and thus falls
outside the rental definition (i.e. that the rental activity is incidental to an
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investment motive). Did the taxpayer seriously intend to generate rental income
or was his motive ultimate gain via capital appreciation? Reg. § 1.469-
1T(e)(3)(vi) provides that property will not be treated as a rental if the principal
purpose was gain from appreciation AND gross rental income is less than 2
percent of unadjusted basis or FMV OR propertywas leased to a business in
which the taxpayer has an ownership interest AND gross rental income is less
than 2 percent of unadjusted basis or FMV.
_____ Verify that income on FORM 8582 line 3a (2a for 2001 and prior
years) is not from an activity in which the taxpayer materially participates.
See Reg. § 1.469-5T(a). If the taxpayer and/or the spouse meets any of the
following, he materially participates and income is non-passive and should not be
on Form 8582, triggering passive losses:
5-15
5-16
This chapter consists of four separate and distinct topics as they relate to passive
activities: C Corporations, Trusts, LLCs, and the self-charged rules.
The passive loss rules do not apply to partnerships and S Corporations. They
apply to investors in these entities. Thus, material participation for a partner or
shareholder is determined at the individual level. The IRC § 469 does, however,
apply to C Corporations and to trusts. There are also special rules for LLCs.
Finally, unlike most interest income, self-charged interest from loans to passive
activities may be used as passive income on Form 8582.
C Corporations In a Nutshell
The passive loss limitations apply to all Personal Service Corporations (PSCs).
For other closely held C Corporations, they apply only to a limited extent. The
passive loss rules do not apply to large C Corporations that are not closely held
and are not PSCs. See the checksheet for C Corporations at end of chapter.
One or more of the individuals who hold more than 50 percent of the outstanding
stock must materially participate in each activity for the corporation to meet the
material participation standard. See Chapter 4 for the seven material
participation tests. If not, losses are passive and belong on Form 8810,
Corporate Passive Activity Loss and Credit Limitations. They are not deductible
in the absence of passive income.
Closely held corporations, but not PSCs, may also materially participate by
meeting the requirements of IRC § 465(c)(7)(C). In certain limited
circumstances, a full-time employee of the corporation can meet the material
participation test.
6-1
• Passive loss limitations apply in full to all PSCs, including closely held
PSCs.
• A loss is passive if the loss stems from rental real estate or equipment
leasing activities or from any partnership or S- Corporation business in
which shareholders holding more than 50 percent of the outstanding stock
do not materially participate.
• Passive losses can offset only net income from another passive activity.
• Passive losses cannot offset PSC ordinary income, or portfolio income, or
any other non-passive income.
6-2
Questions to ask:
• Are there any losses or credits from rental or leasing activities offsetting
corporate and portfolio income (i.e. non-passive income)?
• Are there any partnership or S Corporation losses or credits which are
from rental real estate or leasing activities?
• Which shareholders work in the partnerships or S Corporations? Are
there any businesses conducted in partnerships and S- Corporations in
which shareholders owning more than 50 percent of the stock do not
materially participate?
General Rule: For closely held C Corporations that are not PSCs, passive
losses and credits can offset C-Corporate net income BUT not portfolio income.
Stated differently, a passive losses can offset corporate earnings of a closely
held C Corporation business, but not portfolio income[6] .
Closely held simply means that 5 or fewer shareholders control more than 50
percent of the outstanding stock during the last half of the year[7] . Even many
publicly traded corporations are closely held, despite having hundreds of
shareholders.
If the shareholder(s) do not material participation, passive losses can offset net
active corporate income, but not portfolio income. Furthermore, a passive loss
cannot be carried back, but instead must be carried forward.
6-3
Identify rental real estate losses, equipment leasing losses, and partnership or S
Corporation losses.
• Verify that that passive losses have not been used to offset interest,
dividends, royalties, gains on stocks and bonds and other portfolio
income.
• Verify that passive losses have not created or increased a NOL. If so,
pick up the NOL years and adjust them. Unlike an NOL, a passive activity
loss cannot be carried back. It may only be carried forward[8].
Consolidated Corporations
Supporting Law
6-4
Trusts In a Nutshell
Losses from partnerships and S Corporations in which the trustee does not
materially participate are not deductible against portfo lio income of the trust.
Passive losses go on Form 8582 line 3b (2b prior to 2002) and must be carried
forward until there is passive income or a disposition to an unrelated party in a
fully taxable transaction.
6-5
Estates are similar to complex trusts. The same tax rules that apply to trusts also
generally apply to estates. In this Chapter, we have used the term “trustee”. If
you are examining an estate, substitute executor or administrator for trustee.
Since rentals are defined as passive activities in IRC § 469(c)(2), losses from
rental real estate or equipment leasing activities are passive [11] and are generally
not deductible in absence of passive income.
Also, while relief is provided for taxpayers with rentals who spend the majority of
their time in real property businesses (real estate professionals) under IRC §
469(c)(7), this provision does not address trusts.
Issue Identification:
• Passive business losses or rental losses on Form 1041, U.S. Income Tax
Return for Estates & Trusts, lines 5 and 6 may not have been entered on
Form 8582.
• Unless there is sufficient passive income to absorb all passive losses, the
absence of Form 8582 on a trust return with losses on lines 5 and 6 is an
indicator the passive loss limitations may have been ignored.
• Losses on Form 1041 lines 8 and 15a labeled as net operating losses may
actually be generated by a rental activity or business in which the taxpayer
does not materially participate. In other words, they may be passive
losses, which, unlike an NOL, cannot offset portfolio income and cannot
be carried back.
Examination Techniques:
• Read the trust instrument or will for details on who manages the
• Verify that rental real estate losses have not been entered on Form 8582
line 1b, thereby permitting the $25,000 offset in error. Other than estates,
rental losses should be entered on line 3b (2b prior to 2002) of Form 8582.
• Review Schedule K-1s to determine if any rental losses were improperly
passed through to the beneficiary returns.
6-6
Documents to Request:
Supporting Law:
• IRC § 469(a)(2)(A) & Reg. § 1.469-1T(b)(2): Passive loss rules apply to
trusts and estates. Since neither IRC § 469 (passive activities) nor § 641
692 (trusts and estates) contain any provision for a pass through of
passive activity losses, disallowed passive losses generally remain
suspended at the estate or trust level and do not flo w out to
beneficiaries[14].
• IRC § 469(i): A trust is not a natural person; it is an artificial entity. Thus,
rental losses are generally disallowed in the absence of passive income,
and the $25,000 rental real estate offset is not applicable.
• IRC § 469(i)(4)(A): An estate may use the $25,000 offset for two years
after the decedent’s death. However, IRC § 469(i)(4)(B) requires that the
portion used by the surviving spouse reduce the $25,000 offset.
The IRC § 469(h) requires regular, continuous and substantial participation in the
operations of the business to meet material participation and for losses to be fully
deductible. There is no guidance in the regulations at this time for material
participation of trusts and estates[15].
Grantor Trusts: Since tax law does not recognize a grantor trust as a separate
taxable entity, the examiner should ignore the trust entirely and look to the
grantor (individual taxpayer) to determine material participation.
6-7
Exceptions: There are two major exceptions to the passive loss rules:
Examination Techniques:
Documents to Request:
Supporting Law
• The Senate Report[19] clearly provides that an estate or trust would be
treated as materially participating if the executor or fiduciary/trustee
materially participates.
6-8
• Reg. § 1.469-1T(b)(2) Passive loss rules apply to trusts other than trusts
described in IRC § 671 (grantor trusts). Also see Rev. Rul. 85-13, 1986-1
CB 184.
• QSSTs: The General Explanation of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 by the
Staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation, Note 33, page 242, explains,
“Similarly, in the case of a qualified electing Subchapter S trust (§
1361(d)(1)(B)) that is treated as a grantor trust (i.e., the beneficiary is
treated as the owner for tax purposes), the material participation of the
beneficiary is relevant to the determination of whether the S Corporation’s
activity is a passive activity with respect to the beneficiary.”
Examination Techniques:
6-9
have been a sale at fair market value, current and suspended losses from
the passive activity remain suspended at the trust level until the activity is
ultimately sold to an unrelated party.
• Review losses triggered on a disposition to verify that it was indeed a sale
and not merely a distribution to a beneficiary. If there is a loss on
disposition yet no F4797, it is an indicator that there was merely a
distribution to a beneficiary. Final returns should be scrutinized carefully
for this issue.
• Inquire whether the passive property or activity was sold, distributed or
gifted to a beneficiary, trustee or other related party
Documents to Request:
Supporting Law
parties.
LLCs In a Nutshell
The LLCs combine features of both partnerships and corporations. The most
notable characteristics of LLCs are contractual freedom and limited liability for all
investors. An LLC with more than one owner is treated as partnership and files
Form 1065 unless the LLC elects to be treated as a corporation. Single member
LLCs are generally disregarded, and gain or loss is reported on the single
member’s return (Form 1040 for a n individual).
Since each member of an LLC has limited liability, investors are analogous to
limited partners under IRC § 469. For purposes of passive loss rules, LLC
members are treated as limited partners, even if the taxpayer is a member-
manager.
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When looking at an LLC, the very first step is to determine whether you are
dealing with a rental/leasing activity or a business activity. If the LLC is a rental
activity, all member losses are generally passive [24], even if a member materially
participates. The IRC § 469(c)(2)&(4) hold that rentals are passive regardless of
the level of participation.
• The taxpayer must prove he worked more than 500 hours during the year.
• The taxpayer must prove he materially participated any 5 of the last 10
years.
• If a personal service activity (doctor, accountant, engineer, architect,
consulting, etc), the taxpayer must prove he materially participated any 3
prior years.
The self-charged interest income rule in Reg. § 1.469-7[27] is the sole exception
where portfolio income is recharacterized from non-passive to passive income.
Interest income may be treated as passive income if it results from a loan
between a taxpayer and a passthrough entity in which he has a direct or indirect
ownership interest. See checksheet at the end of the chapter. Interest income
may be treated as passive income only if:
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percent ownership interest in a partnership, only $100 of the interest income can
be used as passive income on Form 8582.
Issue Identification:
• Look for self-charged interest income on Form 8582, which might have
been entered on Form 4952 as investment income, erroneously triggering
deductions for investment interest expense. Passive income is not
investment income and should not be on Form 4952[28].
• Verify that self-charged interest income has been reported on Schedule B
in the same dollar amount as on Form 8582 line 1a or 3a. Form 8582
does not report income. It merely calculates the allowable passive loss for
the year. Taxpayers sometimes reflect self-charged interest on Schedule
E. If the income is not on Schedule B or E, it is possible that some other
self-charged item has been recharacterized as non-passive. There is no
provision in law for recharacterization of any item as passive income other
than interest. If rents, guaranteed payments or any other self-charged
item (other than interest income) is on Form 8582, it should be removed
and an adjustment made.
• Verify that a passive loss (from the same activity as self-charged interest)
has also been entered on Form 8582. For self-charged interest to be on
Form 8582, it must be from a passive activity (a rental/leasing activity or
business in which taxpayer does not materially participate).
Summary
• The PSCs are fully subject to passive loss limitations, even if closely held.
• For closely held C Corporations, other than PSCs, corporate income,
other than portfolio income, generally may offset passive losses.
• The passive loss limitations apply to trusts. For trusts, there is no $25,000
offset for rental real estate. For business activities held by the trust, the
trustee must materially participate for losses to be non-passive and offset
portfolio income.
• Members of LLCs are treated as limited partners for purposes of the
passive loss rules. If the LLC member works more than 500 hours in the
business, he is non-passive.
• The self-charged interest rule treats interest income from a loan to a
related entity as passive income. No other self-charged item may be
recharacterized as passive income and entered on Form 8582.
[1]
IRC § 469(c)(2)&(4)
[2]
IRC § 469(i)
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[3]
IRC § 469(b)
[4]
IRC § 469(c)(2)&(4) and Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(3)
[5]
See Chapter 2 and Reg. 1.469-1T(e)(3) for what is and is not a rental activity.
[6]
See IRC § 469(e) and Reg. § 1.469-2T(c)(3)
[7]
IRC § 469(j)(1)
[8]
IRC 469(b)
[9]
IRC § 162 and § 404 business expenses
[10]
On distribution of a passive activity, however, the basis of the activity is
increased by suspended losses. The increased basis will give the beneficiary the
benefit of the loss when he eventually disposes of the activity. See IRC §
469(j)(12)(A)
[11]
See Chapter 2 and Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(3) for a discussion of what is and is
not a rental activity.
[12]
IRC § 469(i)
[13]
For estate tax years ending less than two years after the death of the
decedent.
[14]
See Reg. § 1.1398-1 for bankruptcy estates for individuals.
[15]
Note that Reg. § 1.469-5T(g) is “Reserved”.
[16]
See IRC § 1361(d) where the beneficiary elects to be treated as the owner of
the trust for purposes of IRC § 678.
[17]
Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(6)
[18]
IRC § 469(c)(3), Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(4)(v)
[19]
S. Rep. No. 313, 99th Cong., 2d Sess., Reprinted in 1986-3 C.B. (Vol. 3)1, a t
735.
[20]
See Chapter 5 for much more information on dispositions.
[21]
IRC § 469(g)(1)(B)
[22]
IRC § 469(j)(12)
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[23]
IRC § 469(j)(6)
[24]
See Chapter 2 and Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(3) for a discussion of what is and is
not a rental activity.
[25]
See Chapter 4 for additional information on material participation.
[26]
Single member LLCs are disregarded entities. Since they are not recognized
by federal tax law, the taxpayer will have all seven tests in Reg. § 1.469-5T
available to him. He will not be subject to the limited partner taint.
[27]
Final Regulation § 1.469-7 was issued on 08/21/2002.
[28]
IRC § 163(d)(4)(D)
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Exhibit 6.1: C Corporations: Passive Activity Issues
The passive loss limitations in IRC § 469 apply in full to all PSCs, whether or not
closely held. A passive loss cannot offset corporate income or portfolio income
nor can it create an NOL. A passive loss goes on Form 8810 and is deductible
only to the extent of passive income.
_____ Are there any losses or credits from rental or leasing activities offsetting
corporate and portfolio income?
A closely he ld C Corporation that is not a PSC can offset a passive loss against
net against net active corporate income, but not against portfolio income. A
passive loss cannot create an NOL. Closely held means 5 or fewer shareholders
hold more than 50 percent of the stock at year-end.
_____ Is the building owned by the shareholder and leased back to the
corporation? Or is the building held in a partnership and leased back to
the corporation? If so, net rental income generally should not be on Form
8582 line 1a, triggering otherwise nondeductible passive losses. See Reg. §
1.469-2(f)(6).
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6-16
Note: Rental real estate losses should be reflected on line 3b, not line 1b. Thus,
lines 1a, 1b and 1c should be blank. As a practical matter, it is of no
consequence whether income is on line 1a or 3a as long as it is truly generated
by a passive activity.
_____ Does trust have passive activities? Scrutinize Form 1041 line 3,5,6,8,
and15 for losses which might be passive and may have been erroneously
deducted. Rentals, whether real estate or equipment leasing, are generally
passive. Furthermore, businesses in which trustee or executor does not
materially participate are passive. All of a trust’s passive losses go on Form
8582 and are deductible only up to passive income.
_____ Verify rental real estate losses have been entered on Form 8582 line
3b (not line 1b which erroneously gives the benefit of the $25,000 offset). If
losses are on line 1b, disallow losses on Form 1041 and secure beneficiaries
returns and disallow losses which may have been deducted (unless there is
passive income on the trust's FORM 8582 OR the activity was sold to a unrelated
party). Rentals must be separated from interest, dividends, gains on
stocks/bonds and other portfolio income. Trusts are not an individual and do not
qualify under IRC § 469(i) for the $25,000 offset. Thus, rental losses are not
deductible i n the absence of passive income. Unused passive losses are
suspended (not passed through to beneficiaries). If there are passive activities,
the absence of FORM 8582 is an indicator that the passive loss limitations may
not have been considered.
NOTE: For estates, if the taxpayer actively participated before he died, IRC §
469(i)(4)(A) provides the estate may use the $25,000 offset for 2 years after his
death. However, IRC § 469(i)(4)(B) provides that the $25,000 offset is reduced
by the portion of the $25,000 offset used by surviving spouse.
_____ Verify that Schedule E royalties are not improperly reducing rental
losses. Royalties are not passive income. See IRC § 469(e) and Reg. § 1.469-
2T(c)(3)(E).
_____ Verify that interest, dividends, capital gains from stocks and bonds,
annuities, and royalties have not been entered on FORM 8582 line 1a no or
3a. While these types of income seem "passive", they are not passive under IRC
6-17
§ 469. Passive income is net rental income OR net income from businesses in
which taxpayer does not materially participate. The Form 8582 is a
computational form to limit passive losses to passive income. For every dollar of
income removed from Form 8582, allowable passive losses are generally
reduced by a dollar. Passive income, of course, is always reportable on the
return, typically on Schedule E.
_____ Verify that income from land, whether leased or held for investment,
has not been included on Form 8582 line 1a or 3a. Land income, including
gain on sale, is non-passive. It may not be used as passive income. See IRC §
469(e)(1)(A)(ii)(II) property held for investment and Reg. § 1.469-2T(f)(3) leased
land.
_____ Verify Schedule F farm losses have been entered on Form 8582 line
3b unless trustee materially participates. For farm losses to be fully
deductible without considering the passive loss limitations, the trustee must
materially participate in the farm. Material participation does not simply mean
making management decisions. It means working on a regular, continuous and
substantial basis in operations. See IRC § 469(h).
_____ Verify that NOLs (Form 1041 line 8 or 15) are not, in fact, passive
losses (rentals or passive business losses) - which should be on Form 8582
line 3c (not on the face of F1041 which will offset portfolio and other non-passive
income). Remember, a passive loss cannot offset portfolio income. An NOL will
however, offset portfolio income or any other kind of income on the Form 1041.
_____ If passive losses have been triggered due to a disposition, ask if the
disposition was, in fact a distribution to beneficiary? If so, suspended
losses from the trust are added to basis of asset. They are not a current
deduction. If return reflects a disposition or large losses deducted, but no Form
4797, it is an indicator property was distributed to beneficiary. Final returns
should be carefully scrutinized for this issue. Review trust Schedule K-1s and
beneficiary's Form 1040 Schedule E to verify losses have not been improperly
6-18
deducted. IRC § 469(j)(12) A distribution does not trigger losses under IRC §
469(j)(12). Furthermore, a beneficiary often is a related party. See IRC §
469(g)(1)(B).
_____ If you are reviewing a return for the year of an individual’s death,
verify via review of the final Form 1040 that suspended passive losses are
allowed only to the extent they exceed the step-up in basis (FMV) in the
hands of the beneficiary. Frequently, the step-up in basis to fair market value
absorbs all passive losses. Thus, none are deductible. See IRC § 469(g)(2).
Example in Pub. 925, Passive Activity and At-Risk Rules: If the basis of a
passive activity in the hands of a transferee is increased by $6,000, and taxpayer
had unused passive losses a date of death of $8,000, the decedent's deduction
is limited to $2,000 (8,000 less 6,000).
GRANTOR TRUSTS: As a grantor trust is not an entity in the eyes of tax law, for
purposes of the passive loss limitations, we ignore the trust and look directly to
the grantor (individual taxpayer) to determine whether the active or material
participation standard has been met. An examiner will generally know he is
dealing with a grantor trust as no Schedule K-1 will be filed (generally taxpayer
has only a letter or a statement) and losses are generally reflected on Schedule
C or the front of Schedule E. Often no F1041 is filed for a grantor trust.
However, if a Form 1041 is filed, the box in the upper left hand side of the F1041
will be checked “Grantor Type Trust”.
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_____ If a rental has been transferred into an LLC, verify that losses on
disposition have not been deducted on Form 1040 Schedule E or D. In
particular, look for losses erroneously entered in the non-passive column of
Schedule E – or losses in excess of $25,000 on the face of Schedule E due to a
“disposition”. The transfer is NOT a qualifying disposition under IRC § 469(g) as
it is not fully taxable nor is it to an unrelated party. A mere change in form is not a
qualifying disposition. Losses stay with the individual and remain o n Form 8582.
_____ At the initial interview, ask what each LLC member does. Determine
the time and activities of each LLC member. Also request LLC agreement (and
management agreements, or contracts, if any) with duties highlighted. See log
in Chapter 4.
_____ If the LLC rents its building or equipment from an LLC member
individually , determine whether the LLC member works on a regular basis
in the business. If the member materially participates, the income is
recharacterized as non-passive. While it still is reportable on Schedule E of
Form 1040, it cannot be used to offset other passive losses and should not be
reflected on Form 8582 line 1a.
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_____ When perusing the LLC members' individual returns, verify Schedule
K-1 portfolio income (line 4) have not been entered on Form 8582 line 1a or
3a. This type of income is reportable on Schedule B, D and E, but should not be
on Form 8582 as it is non-passive income under IRC § 469(e). If portfolio
income is on F 8582, it should be removed. Result: there is generally a passive
loss adjustment up to the amount of income removed from Form 8582.
_____ If the LLC falls under TEFRA, prepare an affected item report for
passive issues.
NOTES:
BASIS AND AT-RISK: Basis and at-risk rules override IRC § 469. If taxpayer
has no basis or is not at-risk under IRC § 465, LLC losses are not allowable
even if the loss would have been allowed under IRC § 469. See Reg. § 1.469-
2(a)(2)(ii) and Reg. § 1.469-2(d)(2)(x).
6-21
_____ Request the loan instrument and verify that self-charged interest
income is actually interest on a loan. Also check balance sheet for loans from
shareholder/partner. Other self-charged items such as management fees,
guaranteed payments, rents, royalties, etc. should not be on Form 8582 as
passive income. There is no provision in IRC or Regulations for any other type of
income to be treated as passive other than interest income as provided for in
Reg. § 1.469-7. To read proposed Reg. §1.469-7 as providing self-charged
treatment to nonlending transactions expands the Regulations to transactions it
was not intended to cover.
_____ Verify that loans are not between two entities which are not tiered.
6-22
_____ Verify that interest income has been reported on Schedule B in the
same dollar amount as self-charged passive income on Form 8582 line 1a or
3a. Passive income must be reported on the return. Form 8582 is merely a
computational schedule which figures allowable passive losses. Entering income
does not report it on return. It must be entered on one of return schedules to be
appropriately reported. The self-charged income rules are the one exception
where portfolio income is recharacterized from non-passive to passive income.
Typically, interest income is reported on Schedule B – although taxpayers
sometimes reflect it on Schedule E in the passive income column.
_____ Verify that income in the same amount as the self-charged interest
has NOT been removed from Schedule B. Reg. § 1.469-7 merely permits
interest income (which otherwise is non-passive) to be entered on FORM 8582
as passive income in order to trigger a like amount of loss (representing the
related interest expense). The allowed loss would generally be reflected on
Schedule E line 27 in the passive loss column. If in doubt as to where the loss is
reflected, refer to worksheet 6 of Form 8582 which designates the schedules
allowed passive losses are entered on. Reminder: Form 8582 is only a
computational schedule. It does not in any manner report income. If income is
removed from Schedule B and reflected only on Form 8582, it results in
unreported income!
_____ Verify that interest expense on a loan which is capitalized has not
been recharacterized. Reg. § 1.469-7(c)(1)(i) & (d)(1)(ii) provide that the loan
must give rise to an interest deduction for the same year.
_____ Verify that a passive loss (from the same activity as self-charged
interest) has also been entered on FORM 8582. For self-charged interest to be
on Form 8582, it must be from a passive activity (a rental/leasing activity OR
business in which taxpayer does not materially participate). The Reg. § 1.469-
7(a)(1)(ii) and § 1.469-7(c)(iii) and § 1.469-7(d)(iii)
_____ Verify that the interest income is not from a non-passive activity. If
the partnership or S Corporation generating the interest is entered as non-
passive, the interest income cannot be on Form 8582. Similarly, if the taxpayer
materially participated any 5 of the prior 10 years, income in the current year is
non-passive.
_____ Verify that self-charged interest has been properly allocated based
on the portion that is self-paid. Fraction to compute allocation: Taxpayer’s
ownership percentage (i.e. his share of entity's self-charged interest expense)
multiplied by taxpayer’s Schedule B interest income. Obviously, this procedure is
6-23
6-24
The IRC § 469 on PAL is only one IRC section among several others that limit
losses and deductions. Basis and the at-risk rules in IRC § 465 should always be
applied before the passive loss rules[1]. Interest expense generated as a result of
an “investment” in a limited partnership or other passive activity is not investment
interest. It is passive activity interest expense[2] and must be limited using Form
8582. Similarly, any deduction from a passive activity (IRC § 179 expense, for
example) must be entered on Form 8582 along with the ordinary loss. Even if
the taxpayer has sufficient passive income to trigger losses under IRC §
469, other IRC section limitations must be considered.
This Chapter addresses several other IRC sections, that reference or rely upon
IRC § 469.
Investment interest expense is interest paid on loans to buy portfolio assets such
as CDs or stocks and bonds. Interest expense on an “investment” in a
partnership or S Corporation generally is not investment interest expense.
Interest traceable to an investment in a partnership or S Corporation is either:
7-1
Investment Income
Property held for investment is defined in IRC § 163(d)(5) via reference to IRC §
469(e)(1). Investment interest expense is deductible only to the extent of
investment income. Investment income is:
7-2
Issue Identification:
Exceptions: (1) working interests in oil and gas and (2) traders in stocks and
bonds.
Reminder: investment income must be reported on the return. The Form 4952
does not report income. Investment income is not income from a business nor is
it income form the sale of a business asset.
• If a capital gain election has been made on Form 4952 line 4e, verify the
same amount is also on Schedule. D line 22. In other words, verify that
the income has been taxed at ordinary rates. If there is no entry on
7-3
Schedule D line 22, the taxpayer has erroneously used the lower capital
gain rate.
7-4
Furthermore, the personal use provisions of IRC § 280A override the passive
loss limitations [12]. If the taxpayer or relatives[13] use the property at less than fair
rental value for more than the greater of 14 days or 10 percent of the number of
days rented at fair market value, then IRC § 280A applies and generally limits
losses to net income. To the extent that the property was used personally, a pro
rata share of interest and the full amount of taxes are permitted on Schedule A
as itemized deductions.
Issue Identification:
• Watch for Schedule E rentals with the same or similar address as on the
front of the return.
• Unusually low gross receipts during peak rental periods may indicate
rental at less than fair market value or possible personal use.
• Property that has little or no advertising and was unrented for many weeks
during the year may indicate high personal use.
Examination Techniques:
Inquire early in the examination as to whether the property was used personally
by the taxpayers or relatives. Ask if anyone used the property at less than the
standard rental rate, i.e. at less than fair rental value.
Documents to Request:
7-5
• Detail regarding personal use by taxpayers, relatives or any other person
at less than fair market value [14] in order to calculate personal days versus
days rented at fair market value.
Supporting Law:
• IRC § 280A: Disallows certain expenses in connection with business use
of home, rental of vacation homes, etc.
• IRC § 469(j)(10): If a passive activity involves the use of a dwelling unit to
which IRC § 280A(c)(5) applies for any taxable year, then any income,
deduction, gain, or loss allocable to such use shall not be taken into
account for purposes of this section for such taxable year.
Interest Issues
Issue Identification:
Examination Techniques:
7-6
Documents to Request:
• Do the taxpayers file state tax returns where the property is located, have
a car registered in that state, have a valid driver’s license from that state?
• If the responses appear questionable or unreasonable, ask for
documentation or third party statements to corroborate the taxpayer’s oral
testimony.
Supporting Law:
• IRC § 469(j)(7) and Reg. 1.163-8T(m)(3): Provides that passive activity
losses will be computed without regard to qualified residence interest.
• IRC § 163(h)(4)(A)(i): Defines qualified residence interest as either a
principal residence or a second residence.
nd
• Stolk 40 T.C. 345, affirmed 326 F.2d 760 (2 Circumstance 1964) The
taxpayer moved out of his principal residence two years prior to its sale,
and the Court held that the property did not qualify as his principal
residence.
• Friedman TC Memo 1982-178 The Court held that a residence used by
the taxpayer only during the summer months cannot qualify as a principal
residence.
Unlike passive losses, a NOL can be carried back 2 years and forward 20 years
for 2003 [17] and can offset portfolio income as well as wages and other non-
passive income. An important audit step is to verify that a purported NOL is not,
in fact, a passive loss. The chart below addresses the carryback and
carryforward rules for various years.
A loss from a passive activity which cannot be used due to the passive loss
limitations must be carried forward indefinitely[18] until there is passive income or
an entire disposition of the activity in a fully taxable transaction[19]. In other
words, if a taxpayer has a loss from a passive activity and no other passive
income to offset it against, the loss cannot be carried back, but instead is
7-7
suspended until a future year when the taxpayer has passive income or disposes
of the activity.
Passive losses allowed in excess of passive income due to the special $25,000
rental real estate allowance can become part of the taxpayer's NOL, which is
carried back 3 years or forward 15 years.
The passive loss limitations do not apply to an oil and gas activity in which the
taxpayer has a working interest[21] if the entity does not limit his liability[22] . As a
practical matter, this means if the taxpayer is a general partner or owns his
interest in an oil and gas activity via a joint venture[23], his liability will not be
limited. The passive loss limitations do not be apply. Losses or income will be
non-passive.
7-8
entity which trades in stocks and bonds belong in the non-passive column of
Schedule E.
Income from a trading partnership should not be on Form 8582 line 3a. Trading
activities are not passive activities. Thus the income, even if the taxpayer
performs no work, cannot be passive income. Clues the entity may be a trading
activity: name containing "investment", “equity”, "securities", "financial",
"hedging", "XXX fund",etc. Furthermore, most trading partnerships us 523900
as the business code in block C on Form 1065.
CASULATY LOSSES
Casualties Losses
Even though an activity is passive, casualty losses are permitted if the casualty
requirements in IRC § 165 are met. Reg. § 1.469-2(d)(2)(xi) states that a
casualty as defined in IRC §165(c)(3) will not be treated as a passive
deduction[25] .
For current years, low income housing losses are subject to the passive loss
limitations just like any other rental real estate activity. The exceptions for credits
provided for in IRC § 469(i)(3)(C) and § 469(i)(6)(B) do not apply to LIH losses.
For information on the LIH credit, see chapter 10.
The taxpayer must actively participate to qualify for the $25,000 offset.
Furthermore, the $25,000 special allowance is phased out at the rate of 50 cents
for every dollar over MAGI of $100,000. If AGI exceeds $150,000, no LIH losses
may be deducted (unless he has passive income). As many investors are limited
7-9
partners, and limited partners do not qualify for the active participation
standard[29] , losses for limited partners should be entered on FORM 8582 line 3b
(not line 1b). Thus, no $25,000 offset is available, and losses are deductible only
up to passive income reported on the return.
Audit Tip: Some taxpayers automatically place any rental activity on Form 8582
line 1. For LIH losses to be entered on line 1, a taxpayer must actively
participate. The IRC § 469(i) provides that limited partners do not actively
participate. Examiners should carefully scrutinize Form 8582 line 1b (or
worksheet 1) to verify that LIH losses have not been improperly entered there.
Entering LIH losses from limited partners on line 1b (instead of 3b where they
belong) erroneously permits deductibility of up to $25,000 in losses against
wages and portfolio income. Examiners should also verify that an LIH loss has
not been deducted in the non-passive column of Schedule E.
Summary
[1]
Reg. § 1.469-2(a)(2)(ii) and Reg. § 1.469-2(d)(2)(x)
[2]
Reg. § 1.469-2T(d)(3), 1.163-8T(a)(4)(B) and Notice 89-35
[3]
IRC § 469(c)(3), Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(4)(v)
[4]
Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(6)
[5]
IRC § 163(d)
7-10
[6]
Reg. § 1.469-2(f)(10) and Reg. § 1.469-2T(f)(3)
[7]
IRC § 469(e)(1)
[8]
IRC § 469(e)(1)(A)(ii)(II)
[9]
IRC § 163(d)(5)(A)(ii)
[10]
Reg. § 1.469-2T(d)(3), § 1.163-8T(a)(4)(B) and Notice 89-35
[11]
Qualified residence interest under IRC § 163(h)(3)
[12]
IRC § 469(j)(10) and § 280A(c)(5)
[13]
IRC § 280A(d)(2)(A) and § 267(c)(4)
[14]
IRC § 280A(d)(2)(C)
[15]
Reg. § 1.163-8T(m)(3), IRC § 163(h)(4)(A), IRC § 280(d)(1)
[16]
Total home acquisition debt cannot exceed $1,000,000 (500,000 if MFS)
IRC § 163(h)(3)(B)(ii). Total home equity debt cannot exceed $100,000 ($50,000
if MFS).Interest which goes over these limits is nondeductible personal interest.
Home equity debt is limited to the smaller of (1) the $100,000 threshold or (2) the
amount that the residence’s FMV exceeds the home acquisition debt. The
$1,000,000 and $100,000 dollar thresholds apply to the combined mortgages on
the primary and second residence. There is a 3 percent phaseout for most
itemized deductions. Home mortgage interest expense is limited if AGI is more
than $126,600 (for 1999), 132,950 (2001), 137,3000 (2002), 139,500 (2003).
[17]
IRC § 172 ; also see IRS Pub. 536
[18]
IRC § 469(b)
[19]
IRC § 469(g)
[20]
IRC § 469(g)(1)(B)
[21]
Reg. § 1.469-1(e)(4)(iv) defines “working interest” as a working or operating
mineral int in any tract or parcel of land with the meaning of § 1.612-4(a).
[22]
IRC § 469(c)(3) a nd Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(4)(v) (v)
[23]
Oil and gas joint ventures are generally reflected on Schedule C
[24]
Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(6)(ii) and § 1092(d)
7-11
[25]
Same information in Notice 90-21, 1990-1 C.B. 332.
[26]
IRC § 165(a)
[27]
Reg. § 1.165-7
[28]
IRC § 165(h)
[29]
IRC § 469(i)(6)(C)
7-12
Exhibit 7.1: Investment Income And Investment Interest Expense
LAW: Under IRC § 163(d) interest on debt on property held for investment is
limited to net investment income. Investment income is only income defined in
IRC § 469(e)(1), i.e. generally portfolio income. Additionally, it is reduced by
investment expenses. It is not business income (other than working interests in
oil and gas and traders in stocks and bonds) nor rental income. Furthermore,
after 1992 investment income generally does not include long-term capital gains
from the sale of investment property unless the taxpayer elects to forego the
lower capital gains rate. Also see Reg. § 1.163-8T on interest tracing and
Notices 89-35, 88-37 and 88-20 relating to passive activity interest.
INVESTMENT INCOME:
_____ Verify via review of Schedule K-1s, Form 1099-Misc., etc. that Form
4952 line 4 (investment income) does not include business income or rental
income. Whether the business or rental is on Schedule C/E, Form 4797 or a flow
through from a partnership, S Corporation or trust, income generally is not
investment income. If investment income on Form 4952 is also on the back of
Schedule E in the non-passive column, it is strong indicator that the taxpayer
erroneously used ordinary business income as investment income. Investment
income is portfolio income as defined in IRC § 469(e)(1) (interest, dividends,
royalties, annuities, short-term capital gains, and long-term capital gains if
election on Form 4952 line 4e to tax at ordinary rates.
LAND: Income from leased land is also treated as investment income (Reg. §
1.469-2(f)(10) and § 1.469-2T(f)(3)) This income goes on Form 4952, but should
not be on Form 8582 line 1a as it is non-passive under Reg. §1.469-2T(f)(3).
PTPs: Net income from PTPs (also known as master limited partnerships) is
investment income. See Notice 88-75.
_____ Verify income on line 4a does not include capital gains from the
disposition of business property (Schedule D flowing from Form 4797) nor
income from a business, whether in the form of a sole proprietorship,
partnership or S Corporation nor distributions from mutual funds. Verify
that investment income is only interest, dividends, annuities, royalties, and short-
term capital gains, etc. Beginning with the 1993 tax year, if capital gains are
included in investment income on line 4, that income must be taxed at ordinary
income rates. Taxpayer loses the benefit of the lower capital gain rate for capital
gains on Schedule D. The amount on Form 4952 line 4e should also be on
7-13
Schedule D line 22 reducing the amount available for the lower capital gain rate.
Furthermore, capital gains on Form 4952 line 4e should be gains from stocks,
bonds or other securities. Capital gains from the sale of any business asset or
interest in a rental property are not investment income. If gain flows from Form
4797, it should not be on Form 4952.
_____ Verify that line 4 of Form 4952 does not include capital gains from
rentals nor any other passive activity. Since gain on disposition of rentals is
passive income, it cannot be used as investment income. See Reg. § 1.163(d) &
1.469-2T(c).
_____ Verify that line 4b does not contain any income that was reflected on
Form 4797. The Form 4797 is for the sale of business assets. The Form 4952
reflects income from investments.
_____ Verify that investment income has been reduced by losses from
working interests in oil and gas activities (Schedule C or E). IRC § 163(d)(1)
provides that investment interest shall not exceed net investment income. The
IRC 163(d)(5)(A)(ii) provides that property held for investment includes a
business which is not a passive activity and taxpayer does not materially
participate. A working interest in oil and gas fits this criteria IRC § 469(c)(3).
_____ Verify that investment income has been reduced by losses from
partnership and S Corporations that trade in stocks and bonds and other
securities on the owner’s account. Check for Schedule E non-passive losses
from Form 1065s with names such as XXX Equities, XXX Mutual Funds, XXX
Investors – all of which are generally traders in stocks and bonds. While those
losses are excepted from the passive loss limitations under Reg. § 1.469-
1T(e)(6) the losses are nothing more than investment expenses that reduce
investment income. The IRC § 163(d)(5)(A)(ii) provide that property held for
investment includes a business that is not passive and in which the taxpayer
does not materially participate. Traders in stocks and bonds fall into the
investment interest rules because IRC § 163(d)(5)(A)(ii) defines property held for
investment as any interest in a business which is not a passive activity and in
which the taxpayer does not materially participate. Trading is a business. It is
not a passive activity under Reg. § 1.469-1T(e)(6). Most limited partners do not
materially participate. In other words, traders fit squarely within the definition in
IRC § 163(d)(5)(A)(ii). The IRC § 163(d) repeatedly uses the term net
investment income. Investment income and losses must always be netted to
determine the amount of net investment income. Furthermore, IRC § 163(d)(4)
(A) explains that the term net investment income means the excess of
investment income over investment expenses.
_____ Verify that income reflected on line 4 of Form 4952 has been reported
on Schedule B, D or E. The Form 4952 is a computational form only, limiting
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_____ Verify via review of Schedule K-1s, Form 1099-Misc., etc. that income
Form 4952 line 4 does not include any passive income, i.e. income that
would properly belong on Form 8582. Passive income is income from a rental
activity or from a business in which the taxpayer does not materially participate.
_____ Verify that income has been reduced by investment expenses (costs
directly connected with production of investment income). Also verify that
investment expenses have not been deducted on Schedule C.
_____ Verify that investment income on Form 4952 has not also been
entered on Form 8582 lines 1a or 3a as passive income. Investment income
is never passive income, and passive income is not investment income. The
same type of income should never be entered on both Form 4952 and Form
8582. IRC § 163(d)(4)(D)
_____ Verify that self-charged interest income from loans to related parties
on Form 8582 lines 1a or 3a (which has been recharacterized as passive
income under the provisions of Reg. 1.469-7) has NOT also been entered on
Form 4952 as investment income, erroneously triggering deductions for
investment interest expense. The IRC § 163(d)(4)(D) specifically states that
investment income does not include any income taken into account in computing
passive losses. Since investment interest expense is deductible only up to
investment income, removing self-charged interest income from F4952 will result
in automatic adjustments to investment interest expense.
_____ Verify that capital losses including loss carryovers have been used
to reduce capital gains.
_____ Via review of Schedule D line 22, verify that ordinary rates (versus
lower capital gain rates) were used for any amount of Form 4952 line 4e. In
other words, the amount elected as investment income is subtracted on
Schedule D from the amount which receives the preferential capital gains rate
(20/10 percent). Instead it is taxed as ordinary income, i.e. potentially as high as
39.6 percent.
7-15
INVESTMENT INTEREST EXPENSE
_____ Tie Schedule K-1s and Form 1099-Misc. substantiating interest Form
4952, line 1.
_____ Verify via loan documents, etc., that interest expense is for monies
borrowed to buy investments that produce interest, dividends, royalties or
annuities. It is not interest expense to purchase a business or rental property.
See § 163(d) and § 469(e)(1). Investment interest expense is NOT interest to
purchase an "investment" in a partnership or S Corporation. If entity is a rental,
interest goes on Form 8582 line 1b or 3b. If the taxpayer does not materially
participate (work on a regular basis-IRC § 469(h), Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)) in the
entity, interest expense goes on Form 8582 line 3b. If the taxpayer materially
participates in business, interest is deductible on back of Schedule E.
_____ Verify via review of Schedule K-1s that the taxpayer has not included
any interest expense from a rental property or other passive activity
(partnership, S Corporation or business without material participation - regular,
continuous and substantial). Interest from passive activities is reflected on
Form 8582, but is not reflected on Form 4952. Even interest on a loan to
purchase stock in a passive activity carries a passive taint under the tracing rules
and should be entered on Form 8582 lines 1b or 2b (not on F4952). Notices 89
35, 88-37, 88-20. Under the interest tracing rules in Reg. § 1.163-8T, interest
allocable to a passive activity remains passive even in years after disposition of
the activity. It is not investment interest because it is allocated to a passive
activity expenditure. See Reg. § 1.469-2T(d)(3) and § 1.163-8T(a)(4)(B) & (b)(4).
_____ Verify that the taxpayer has not included tax exempt interest (IRC §
265(a)(2) Ex. municipal bond interest) nor any interest that should be
capitalized, such as construction interest subject to
IRC § 263A.
7-16
QUESTION: How many days did you spend at the rental property during the
year?
NOTE: In virtually all cases, box 2 on Schedule E has been checked NO,
indicating that the taxpayer fails the requirements of IRC § 280A(d). Therefore,
the property does not qualify as a second residence. If box 2 is YES and
taxpayer spends more than 14 days, losses are limited IRC § 280A, i.e.
expenses deductible up to rental income.
_____ Verify via review of bank statement and/or cancelled check that
interest was actually paid in year deducted. If taxpayer fails qualified
residence test OR cannot verify interest, disallow losses. If he passes, go to next
step.
_____ Verify that interest expense qualifying under IRC § 469(j)(7), i.e.
qualified residence interest, has been properly reflected on Schedule A as
7-17
7-18
An “activity” is not constrained by entity lines. If the taxpayer spends 500 hours
among the grouped businesses, even though in different entities, he materially
participates in all. The entire 500+ hours could be spent all in one business
entity or could be spread among several related entities. See checksheet at end
of chapter.
It is possible that several different activities may exist within a single entity.
Example: two unrelated businesses or a business and a rental activity within a
single partnership.
Five Factors
Not all factors are necessary. The determination as to whether related entities
form a single activity is made based on all the facts and circumstances. In a
realistic sense, are the entities interrelated, integrated businesses?
8-1
Audit Techniques
Rentals
Grouping real property and personal property rentals is also prohibited unless the
personal property is provided in connection with the real property.
Audit Techniques:
• Ensure that the taxpayer is not erroneously mixing a rental with a business
activity, i.e. using a rental loss to offset business income on Schedule C or
F.
• Look for rental losses which might have been erroneously entered on
Schedule E in the non-passive column. Even if owned via a partnership or
S Corporation interest, rentals generally retain their passive taint.
8-2
Limited Partners
C Corporations
If an entity contains more than one business or rental activity, it must group or
separate activities. Once the entity groups its activities, the investor may group
those activities with each other, with activities he conducts himself or with
activities conducted through other entities – as long as the grouped businesses
form an economic unit, i.e. they are integrated interrelated activities. See Reg. §
1.469-4(d)(5).
Consistency Requirement
Audit Technique:
8-3
• Has each activity on the return been treated as a separate activity under
Reg. § 1.469-4 [appropriate economic unit rules]? If so, please provide a
statement to that effect.
• If the Schedule C business or partnership interest or S Corporation
interest has been grouped with another business OR rental activity under
Reg. § 1.469-4, please provide a written explanation of the grouping and
why it is appropriate. If activities or entities were grouped under Reg. §
1.469-4, in what year were they grouped?
• If there a re tax workpapers or other documentation supporting your
grouping, please provide them. If you have no documentation from prior
years on your grouping decision, please state so.
Anti-Abuse Provision
Practical Note: If the examiner wishes to regroup the taxpayer's activities under
the anti-abuse rule, document the following facts as fully as possible:
• The factors indicating the two businesses form an economic unit: related
businesses, same customers, etc.
• All facts indicating an attempt to circumvent IRC § 469. Probably the most
common factor is that, in the absence of the purported passive income,
passive losses would be nondeductible.
Supporting Law
• IRC § 469(c): The term passive activity means any business in which the
taxpayer does not materially participate. It also generally includes any
rental or leasing activity, regardless of the taxpayer’s participation.
• IRC § 469(c)(2) & (4): In general, all rentals are passive whether or not
the taxpayer materially participates.
8-4
8-5
Summary
• The five factors indicating that activities form an economic unit are:
similarities, common control, common ownership, location, and
interdependencies.
• A rental may not be grouped with a business unless it is owned in the
same percentage as the business or it is insubstantial in relation to the
business.
• Limited partners in IRC § 465(c)(1) activities may not group with other
activities, unless in the same line of business.
• The PSCs and closely held C Corporations may be grouped with other
businesses, but only to determine material participation.
• An examiner may regroup business acts, including treating income
producing activities as separate activities, to prevent abuse of the
grouping rules.
[1]
Reg. § 1.469-4(c)(2)
[2]
A rental is permitted to be grouped under the same ownership rule only if it is
leased to the business activity in the grouping. See Reg. § 1.469-4(d)(1).
[3]
Reg. § 1.469-4(d)(3) and IRC § 465(c)(1)
[4]
Reg. § 1.469-4(d)(5). Note that Reg. § 1.469-4(d)(5)(ii) permits a C
Corporation to be grouped only for the purposes of determining whether the
taxpayer materially or significantly participates.
8-6
ISSUE: Does the grouping form an appropriate economic unit? In other words, in
a realistic sense, does the grouping form an interrelated, integrated economic
unit? Taxpayers may group related business entities into one single activity in
order to meet the 500 hour test for material participation in Reg. § 1.469-5T(a)(1).
Conversely, some taxpayers may attempt to separate inherently related activities
in an attempt to create purported passive income which would trigger otherwise
unallowable passive losses. In abusive situa tions, particularly with passive
income, the Government may regroup activities to prevent the taxpayer from
circumventing IRC § 469.
LAW: Under Reg. § 1.469-4, if businesses form an economic unit, the taxpayer
may group Schedule C/F, C or S Corporation and partnerships/ LLCs into a
single activity. Rentals may not be grouped with a business unless owned in
identical percentages as the business or insubstantial in relation to the business.
_____ At the initial appointment or first IDR, ask if entities were grouped.
Request statement as to how activities are grouped, which entities or
undertakings are grouped, and why they form an appropriate economic
unit.
_____ If the taxpayer states that he has grouped activities, ask when the
grouping decision was made and request tax workpapers or other
documents addressing the entities grouped. While not absolutely critical to
the issue, the failure to provide any written documentation generated at the time
of return filing (either in current or prior years) is an indicator that taxpayer did not
group his activities. In other words, each activity is separate. The decision to
group or not group is not made at the time of an audit. It is a decision which
generally should have been made in 1994 or in the year the interest in the activity
was acquired, whichever is later. The Reg. § 1.469-4(e) contains a consistency
requirement from year to year and provides that taxpayer may not regroup
(unless original grouping was inappropriate or there is a material change). The
Reg. § 1.469-4(g) does not permit losses to be deducted under the "substantially
all" provision unless the taxpayer can establish amount of deductions and credits
allocable to that part of the activity. Obviously, in both instances, it is critical to
know what constitutes the "activity".
_____ Verify the grouping forms an appropriate economic unit based on:
8-7
__Similarities __Location __Ownership __Common control and
Not all factors are necessary, and there is no factor which is required to be
present. Instead, the appropriateness of the grouping should be based on all the
facts and circumstances. It is important that examiner address the 5 factors and
anything else that points to the appropriateness or inappropriateness of the
grouping
_____ Ensure the taxpayer has not grouped rentals with businesses
unless:
• Insubstantial; OR,
• Owned i n the same percentage and the rental is leased to the business.
_____ Ensure that the grouping was not to circumvent the passive loss
limitations. Have similar businesses been treated as separate activities in order
to create passive income? If so, under the anti-abuse provisions, the
Commissioner can regroup. Scrutinize carefully any entity which produces
purported passive income, but is related or in the same line of business as other
non-passive activities. See example in Reg. § 1.469-4(f)(2).
_____ Review prior and subsequent year returns for passive and non-
passive losses and income to verify that the same grouping has been used
consistently. Do a comparative analysis of three years (or more) on an entity by
entity basis. Reg. § 1.469-4(e) provides that once the taxpayer has grouped
activities he cannot regroup in subsequent years unless the original grouping
was clearly inappropriate or a material change makes the original grouping
inappropriate.
8-8
one spouse's participation is attributed to the other spouse. Even if the spouse
does nothing, if the other spouse materially participates, income or losses are
non-passive. See IRC § 469(h)(5) and Reg. § 1.469-5T(f)(3)
8-9
Chapter 9: Credits
In A Nutshell
Issues
Issue Identification
• Identify the origin of all credits taken on the back of the Form 1040,
looking for passive activity credits which may have been deducted without
considering the passive activity credit limitations in IRC § 469.
• Review Form 8582 and 8582CR for passive loss and credit calculations.
• Examine the taxpayer’s Schedule K-1s and information on the return for
credit detail.
• Remember that the passive loss and credit rules apply to individuals,
trusts, estates, and PSC; and to a lesser extent, to closely held C
Corporations.
Types of Credits
Most credits that originate with a passive activity are subject to the passive loss
limitations. Passive activities include:
1. Rentals; and,
2. Businesses where the taxpayer does not materially participate.
Credits from rental activities typically include the LIHC and the rehabilitation
credit. Credits from business activities can include any of the following:
investment credit, work opportunity credit, credit for alcohol used as a fuel, credit
for increasing research activities, enhanced oil recovery credit, disabled access
credit, renewable electricity production credit, empowerment zone employment
9-1
credit, Indian employment credit, credit for employer social security and Medicare
taxes paid on employee tips, orphan drug credit, credit for contributions to
community development corporations, non-conventional source fuel credit, or
qualified electric vehicle credit.
Exception: The foreign tax credit is not subject the limitations in IRC § 469[2].
Examination Techniques:
Review and determine the origin of any credit taken. Determine whether any
credit is a passive credit.
Check Form 8582CR to see if passive activity credits have been limited.
Application of Credit
Credits are subject to an ordering rule. First, passive losses are offset against
passive income. Then, to the extent any passive income remains, passive
credits are allowed against the tax equivalent of remaining passive income. For
example, a taxpayer in the 28 percent tax bracket with $9,000 in passive credits
also has $8,000 in passive income and $6,000 in passive losses. The allowable
credit is computed as follows:
If the credits are from rental real estate, credits will also be allowed up to any
remaining $25,000 offset after passive losses. Above is a simplified example.
The Form 8582CR provides detailed instructions and a worksheet for calculating
the tax equivalency of passive income available for passive credits.
Examination Techniques:
9-2
• Verify that the same passive income was not used twice once on Form
8582 and again on Form 8582-CR. Income is entered on Form 8582 lines
1a, 2a and 3a. The tax attributable to passive income (i.e. tax equivalent
of passive income) is entered on Form 8582-CR on line 6.
The $25,000 special allowance for rental real estate activities applies when
passive losses and credits exceed passive income (See Chapter 2). Thus, low
income housing and rehabilitation losses or credits may use the special $25,000
offset if certain requirements are met. The $25,000 is available only to
individuals and is subject to phase-out limitations based on modified adjusted
gross income.
For low income housing credits or rehabilitation credits, the active participation
requirement does not apply.[3] Result: these credits automatically qualify for the
$25,000 allowance.
Yes
Phaseout range Does not $100,000 - $200,000 Does not
apply $150,000 $250,000 apply
Rental losses of real estate professionals are excepted from the passive loss
limitations if the taxpayer materially participates in the rental. Since many
9-3
Examination Techniques:
• Review LIH losses closely since the taxpayer may erroneously believe
that losses are treated the same as credits. A limited partner or the
taxpayer with less than a 10 percent interest cannot be active [4] . Thus,
losses go on Form 8582 line 3b and receive no $25,000 offset. Check
Schedule K-1s.
• The aggregate amount of total losses and credits (tax equivalent) are
limited to $25,000. The taxpayer is entitled to only one $25,000 offset for
all rental losses and credits in each tax year.
• Check the non-passive column on the back of Schedule E to verify that
LIH losses have not been entered there erroneously, thereby avoiding the
passive loss rules.
Dispositions
Examination Techniques:
• For any disposition activity, make sure the credits were not deducted. IRC
§ 469(g) triggers losses, but not credits.
• Look at Form 8582-CR, Part VI, to see whether an election has been
made to use credits to increase basis.
• Remember that passive activity income must exist in order for the
taxpayer to deduct the tax equivalent of passive credits, even in the year
of disposition.
Supporting Law
• IRC § 469(a)(1)(B): Passive activity limitations apply to credits generated
by rentals and businesses in which the investor does not materially
participate.
• IRC § 469(d): Passive activity credits are deductible only to the extent of
the tax allocable to (tax equivalency) passive income.
9-4
Summary
• Most credits generated by passive activities are subject to the passive loss
limitations with the exception of the foreign tax credit.
• A passive activity credit is generally deductible only to the extent of the tax
equivalent of passive income which remains after all passive losses are
absorbed. Excess unused passive income after passive losses are
absorbed is converted to the amount of tax that the passive income would
generate. The tax equivalent of remaining passive income permits
deductibility of passive activity credits.
• The tax equivalent of any $25,000 offset which remains after being
absorbed by rental real estate losses permits deductibility of the LIH and
rehabilitation credits.
• A passive activity credit is not deductible on disposition of a passive
activity. The taxpayer may make an election to add the unused credit to
basis.
[1]
IRC §469(i)(3)
[2]
IRC § 469(d)(2)(A)(ii) excludes IRC § 27(a) from the passive loss limitations.
[3]
IRC § 469(i)(6)(B)
[4]
IRC § 469(i)(6)(A)&(C)
9-5
LAW: Low income housing partnerships are rental activities and are therefore
subject to the limitations of IRC § 469, the passive loss rules. The LIH LOSSES
and low income housing CREDITS are each treated differently. See IRC §
469(i)(6)(B). For current years, LOSSES are generally subject to the passive loss
limitations - just like any other rental real estate activity. Limited partners do not
qualify for the $25,000 offset; thus losses are deductible only up to passive
income reported on the return. The IRC § 469(i)(6)(B) provides an exception for
low income housing CREDITS. There is no participation requirement. Thus,
even a limited partner may use the low income housing CREDIT. Furthermore,
for current tax years, there is no phaseout of the credit based on MAGI.
Therefore, a taxpayer with a ny amount of income may use the credit. However,
the credit is limited to the tax equivalent of $25,000. Furthermore, LIHC are only
allowed IF any $25,000 offset remains after rental losses and the rehabilitation
credit. Beginning in 1994, there is an e xception for a qualifying real estate
professional. Under IRC § 469(c)(7), if he materially participates in the LIH
project, current losses and credits are fully deductible.
NOTE: The LIH credit is reflected on Form 8586, Low-Income Housing Credit,
which is carried to Form 8582-CR, which is carried to Form 3800, General
Business Credit, which is ultimately carried to Form 1040. The LIH losses from
limited partners should be entered on Form 8582 line 3b, and, if allowable due to
passive income, would be carried to the back of Schedule E, the passive loss
column.
If the taxpayer is not a real estate professional, SKIP first two steps.
_____ Verify that the taxpayer qualifies as a real estate professional (spends
more than half his personal services in real property businesses and more than
750 hours a year – IRC § 469(c)(7)(B) ). A real estate professional is a taxpayer
who spends the majority of time on REAL PROPERTY businesses. See IRC §
469(c)(7) & Reg. § 1.469-9.
9-6
_____ Verify LIH credits on Forms 8586 and 3800 are on Form 8582CR. The
LIH credits are most often on FORM 8582-CR line 3.
_____ Review Form 8582-CR and verify that the low income housing credit
has been limited to the tax equivalent of $25,000.
_____ Verify that income on Form 8582-CR line 6 is not the tax equivalent
of the same amount of income on Form 8582, i.e. a duplication! The same
amount of income cannot be used both on Form 8582 for losses and Form 8582
CR for credits. Legitimate passive income from any source will trigger
deductibility of low income housing losses and credits. However, passive losses
first absorb passive income, followed by certain passive credits, the rehab credit
and, lastly, the LIHC.
_____ Verify LIHC have not been deducted on disposition. Passive credits
may be claimed only in future years when there is passive income (after
absorbing passive losses) OR the taxpayer may elect to increase his basis in the
property by any unused credits.
_____ Verify that the taxpayer has computed the tax equivalent of passive
income on Form 8582-CR line 6. In other words, verify that the taxpayer has
not entered the exact dollar amount of passive income from his documentation,
but instead has computed the tax equivalent at his tax bracket. Form 8582-CR
instructions provide good information.
_____ Verify that the taxpayer has not improperly deducted credits on
disposition of the LIH activity. The taxpayer may elect to increase the basis
on the LIH property by completing Form 8582-CR Part VI OR he must continue
to carry forward the credit until he has passive income or the $25,000 offset.
_____ Verify that losses have been properly reflected on Form 8582 line
3b. Because many investors are limited partners and limited partners do not
qualify for the active participation standard under IRC 469(i), losses should be
entered on FORM 8582 line 3b (not line 1b which would erroneously give
taxpayer benefit of the $25,000 offset). Thus, LIH losses will not be deductible -
9-7
_____ Verify that losses have not been erroneously deducted in the non-
passive column on the back of Schedule E.
9-8
Decision Tree
• Investment credit
• Rehabilitation credit
• Low income housing credit
• Credit for increasing research
• Credit for alcohol used as fuel
• Work opportunity credit
• Renewable electricity production credit
• Disabled access credit
• Enhanced oil recovery credit
• Credit for employer social security and Medicare tax paid on employee
tips
• Indian employment credit
• Empowerment zone employment credit
• Nonconventional source fuel credit
• Credit for contributions to community development corporations
• Orphan drug credit
• Qualified electric vehicle credit
If yes, is the credit attributable to a trade or business in which the taxpayer did
not materially participate. If so, the credit is not deductible, unless the taxpayer
has passive income. If there is excess passive income after passive activity
losses, the credit is deductible to the extent of the tax equivalency of remaining
passive income.
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