LD1
Epic Contributor
Had a rental house 23 years. Thought it would make a good retirement income. Most of the time had bad renters. The last 8 year had a good renter that wanted buy the house. I sold it to them then the suprise came. All the depreciations I had taken over the years had to be added back on the price of house. That made the capital gain high. The goverment took all my profit. Having the rental was a waste of time.
Thats how rentals work, It dont make them a waste of time though, if you are aware what you are doing.
Over the (29 years IIRC) a rental depreciates to 0 value. Thus when you sell it, the entire amount is subjected to taxes. Which is why most reccomend to stay cash flow positive. So when you sell, you recoup your investment and not necessarily make a profit upon sale. Rather the profit was the positive part of the "cash flow positive" all along.
But even if you set it up to be neutral cash flow.....IE.....rent coming in pays all bills and mortgage and leaves none for your pocket......then when you sell, all the money it is sold for minus taxes is still profit. Since you incured no expenses that wasnt covered by the rent.
If you were cash flow negative.....thats on you and a bad investment.
Mine is $500 positive. So I put $500 a month in the bank. ($6k/yr). The annual depreciation over 29 years is like $6500. So even though I put $6k in the bank a year, on paper it shows I loose money. So I dont pay taxes, persay, for the first 29 years.
After 29 years, If I choose to sell, even if I sell for what I paid (187k), and take taxes out, its still a nice chunk of change that didnt really cost me anything.
If you are loosing money all along, then loose money on the sale, you are doing something wrong.