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- Chapter 26. Nonbusiness Casualty and Theft Losses
-
- Introduction
-
- This chapter discusses how you treat casualty and theft losses for tax
- purposes when the losses are personal and not business related.
-
- As a result of hurricanes, earthquakes, tornadoes, fires, vandalism, car
- accidents, floods, and similar events, many people suffer damage to their
- property. When property is damaged or destroyed by such an event, it is
- called a casualty. This chapter will cover the following types of losses:
-
- ∙ Loss on deposits,
-
- ∙ Casualty loss, including disasters, and
-
- ∙ Theft loss.
-
- This chapter will also provide information on what you should do once you
- determine you have a casualty or theft loss. The following information is
- provided in this chapter:
-
- ∙ How to compute the amount of your loss,
-
- ∙ When to deduct your loss subject to certain limits,
-
- ∙ How to treat insurance and other reimbursements you receive for casualty
- losses, and
-
- ∙ Which form to use to report your loss.
-
- How to claim a loss. You must file Form 1040 and itemize your deductions
- on Schedule A (Form 1040) to be able to claim a casualty or theft loss of
- nonbusiness property. You cannot claim these losses if you file Form 1040A
- or Form 1040EZ.
-
- Note. The overall limit on itemized deductions discussed in Chapter 21 does
- not apply to casualty or theft losses.
-
- Publication 584 is available to help you make a list of your damaged goods and
- figure your loss. That publication can serve as an inventory of your personal
- goods. It includes schedules to help you figure the loss on your home and its
- contents, and on your motor vehicles.
-
- Deduction on casualty and theft losses is limited. You must reduce each
- casualty or theft loss on nonbusiness property by $100. You must further
- reduce the total of your casualty and theft losses for the year on nonbusiness
- property by 10% of your adjusted gross income. If these amounts are more than
- your losses, you do not have a casualty or theft loss deduction.
-
- For information on a casualty, theft, or condemnation concerning business or
- income-producing property, see Chapter 26 in Publication 334, Tax Guide for
- Small Business.
-
- For information on a condemnation of your home, see Involuntary Conversions,
- in Publication 544.
-
- Related publications and forms.
-
- This chapter refers to several forms and publications that you may need.
- The list of forms does not include Forms 1040, 1040A, and 1040EZ. For more
- information, you may want to order the following:
-
- Publication 544, Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets
-
- Publication 547, Nonbusiness Disasters, Casualties, and Thefts
-
- Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses
-
- Publication 551, Basis of Assets
-
- Publication 584, Nonbusiness Disaster, Casualty, and Theft Workbook
-
- Form 4684, Casualties and Thefts
-
- Loss on Deposits
-
- A loss on deposits can occur when a bank, credit union, or other financial
- institution becomes insolvent or bankrupt. If you incurred such a loss, you
- may be able to choose how to deduct it. You have 3 choices of how to deduct
- the loss:
-
- 1) As a nonbusiness bad debt,
-
- 2) As a casualty loss, or
-
- 3) As an ordinary loss.
-
- Note. You cannot choose (2) or (3) if you are at least a 1% owner, or an
- officer of the financial institution, or related to that owner or officer.
- For the definition of "related," see Related Party Transactions in Publication
- 550.
-
- Choice of loss deduction. If you qualify to choose the kind of deduction as
- explained above, the following information may help you choose the one best
- for you.
-
- Nonbusiness bad debt. A nonbusiness bad debt is deducted as a short-term
- capital loss on Schedule D (Form 1040). The capital loss that can be deducted
- after off-setting capital gains is limited to $3,000 ($1,500 if married filing
- separately) for each year. For more details, see Nonbusiness Bad Debt in
- Publication 550.
-
- Casualty loss. A casualty loss deduction has no maximum limit. But in figuring
- the deduction, the loss is reduced by $100 and 10% of adjusted gross income,
- as explained later. A casualty loss deduction cannot be taken unless you
- itemize deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040).
-
- Ordinary loss. An ordinary loss deduction for a loss on deposits at a
- particular financial institution is limited each year to $20,000 ($10,000 if
- married filing separately) reduced by any expected state insurance proceeds.
- Further, the deduction is taken as a miscellaneous itemized deduction and is
- limited to amounts in excess of 2% of adjusted gross income for that year.
-
- Note. You cannot choose the ordinary loss deduction if any part of the
- deposits related to the loss is federally insured (example - FDIC).
-
- When to choose. You can choose to deduct a loss on deposits as a casualty or
- an ordinary loss for any year in which you can reasonably estimate how much of
- your deposits you have lost in an insolvent or bankrupt financial institution.
- The choice is generally made on the return you filed for that year. Once you
- treat the loss as a casualty or ordinary loss, you cannot treat the same
- amount of the loss as a nonbusiness bad debt when it actually becomes
- worthless. Also, the choice applies to all your losses on deposits for
- the year in the particular financial institution.
-
- If you do not make a choice, you must wait until the actual loss is determined
- before you can deduct the loss as a nonbusiness bad debt. Once you make this
- choice, you cannot change it without permission from the Internal Revenue
- Service.
-
- How to report. The kind of deduction you choose for loss on deposits
- determines how you report your loss. If you choose to deduct the loss as a:
-
- ∙ Nonbusiness bad debt - report on Schedule D (Form 1040), Part 1, line
- 1d.
-
- ∙ Casualty loss - report the loss on Form 4684 first and then on Schedule
- A (Form 1040), line 17, or
-
- ∙ Ordinary loss - report the loss on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 20.
-
- Get the Form 1040 instructions for more information.
-
- Deducted loss recovered. If you recover an amount you already deducted in an
- earlier year as a loss, you may have to include the amount recovered in your
- income for the year of receipt. If any part of the original deduction did not
- reduce your tax in the earlier year, you do not have to include that part
- of the recovery in your income. For more information on the taxability, see
- Recoveries in Publication 525.
-
- Casualty
-
- A casualty is the damage, destruction, or loss of property resulting from an
- identifiable event that is sudden, unexpected, or unusual.
-
- ∙ A sudden event is one that is swift, not gradual or progressive.
-
- ∙ An unexpected event is one that is ordinarily unanticipated and
- unintended.
-
- ∙ An unusual event is one that is not a day-to-day occurrence and that is
- not typical of the activity in which you were engaged.
-
- A casualty can also include a government-ordered demolition or relocation of
- a home unsafe to use because of a disaster. For more information, see Disaster
- Area Losses in Publication 547.
-
- Condemnations. You may have a gain or loss when your property is condemned or
- disposed of under the threat of condemnation and you receive other property
- or money in payment. Condemnation is the process by which private property
- is legally taken, without the owner's consent, for public use by the federal
- government, a state government, or a political subdivision in exchange for a
- reasonable amount of money or property. For information on how to figure a
- gain or loss from a condemnation, see Publication 544.
-
- Casualty losses. Deductible casualty losses may result from a number of
- different causes, including:
-
- Earthquakes
-
- Hurricanes
-
- Tornadoes
-
- Floods
-
- Storms
-
- Volcanic eruptions
-
- Shipwrecks
-
- Mine cave-ins
-
- Sonic boom
-
- Vandalism
-
- Fires. If you set the fire, you cannot deduct the resulting loss.
-
- Car accidents. The loss from an accident to your car is not a casualty
- loss if your willful negligence or willful act caused the accident, or if
- it was caused by the willful act or willful negligence of someone acting
- for you.
-
- Other accidents. A loss due to the accidental breakage of articles such
- as glassware or china under normal conditions is not a casualty loss.
- Neither is a loss due to damage done by a family pet.
-
- Nondeductible losses. There is no casualty loss deduction if the damage or
- destruction is caused by:
-
- Termites or moths.
-
- Disease. The damage or destruction of trees, shrubs, or other plants by
- a fungus, disease, insects, worms, or similar pests is not a deductible
- casualty loss. But, a sudden, unexpected, or unusual infestation by
- beetles or other insects may result in a casualty loss. If trees and
- shrubs are damaged by a storm, flood, or fire, the loss is a casualty.
-
- Progressive deterioration. If a steadily operating cause or a normal
- process damages your property, it is not considered a casualty. Thus, the
- steady weakening of a building due to normal wind and weather conditions
- is not a casualty. The rust and water damage to rugs and drapes caused by
- the bursting of a water heater qualifies as a casualty. The deterioration
- and damage to the water heater itself does not qualify.
-
- Drought. When drought causes damage through progressive deterioration, it
- is not a sudden event.
-
- Theft
-
- A theft is the unlawful taking and removing of money or property with the
- intent to deprive the owner of it. It includes, but is not limited to,
- larceny, robbery, and embezzlement.
-
- If money or property is taken as the result of extortion, kidnapping, threats,
- or blackmail, it may also be a theft. In these instances, you need only to
- show that the taking of your property was illegal under the law of the state
- where it occurred, and that it was done with criminal intent.
-
- Mislaid or lost property. The simple disappearance of money or property is
- not a theft. However, an accidental loss or disappearance of property may
- qualify as a casualty, if it results from an identifiable event that is
- sudden, unexpected, and unusual.
-
- Example. A car door is accidentally slammed on your hand, breaking the setting
- of your diamond ring. The diamond falls from the ring and is never found. The
- loss of the diamond is a casualty.
-
- Proof of Loss
-
- To take a deduction for a casualty or theft loss, you must be able to show
- that there was actually a casualty or theft, and you must be able to support
- the amount you take as a deduction.
-
- For a casualty loss, you should show:
-
- ∙ The type of casualty (car accident, fire, storm, etc.) and when it
- occurred,
-
- ∙ That the loss was a direct result of the casualty, and
-
- ∙ That you were the owner of the property or, if you leased the property
- from someone else, that you were contractually liable to the owner for
- the damage.
-
- For a theft loss, you should show:
-
- ∙ When you discovered that your property was missing,
-
- ∙ That your property was actually stolen, and
-
- ∙ That you were the owner of the property.
-
- Amount of Loss
-
- A casualty or theft loss is figured by subtracting any insurance or other
- reimbursement you receive or expect to receive from the smaller of the
- following two amounts:
-
- 1) The decrease in fair market value of the property as a result of the
- casualty or theft, or
-
- 2) Your adjusted basis in the property before the casualty or theft.
-
- The decrease in fair market value is the difference between the property's
- value immediately before and immediately after the casualty or theft.
-
- Fair market value (FMV). FMV is the price for which you could sell your
- property to a willing buyer, when neither of you have to sell or buy and
- both of you know all the relevant facts.
-
- Adjusted basis. Adjusted basis is your basis (usually cost) increased or
- decreased by various events, such as improvements and casualty losses.
-
- Theft. The FMV of property immediately after a theft is considered to be
- zero, since you no longer have the property. A theft loss is figured using
- the smaller of the stolen property's FMV or adjusted basis.
-
- Example. Several years ago, you purchased silver dollars at face value for
- $150. This is your adjusted basis in the property. Your silver dollars were
- stolen this year. The FMV of the coins was $1,000 when stolen, and they were
- not covered by insurance. Your theft loss is $150.
-
- Recovered property. If you get your stolen property back, your loss is
- measured like a casualty loss from vandalism. That is, you must consider the
- actual FMV of the property when you get it back. Your loss is figured using
- the smaller of:
-
- ∙ The decrease in the FMV of the property from the time it was stolen until
- the time it is recovered, or
-
- ∙ Your adjusted basis in the property.
-
- Leased property. If you are liable for casualty damage to property you lease,
- your loss is the amount you must pay to repair the property.
-
- Business or income-producing property. If you have business or income-
- producing property, and it is completely destroyed or lost because of a
- casualty or theft, your loss is:
-
- Your adjusted basis in the property
-
- MINUS
-
- Any salvage value
-
- MINUS
-
- Any insurance or other reimbursement
- you receive or expect to receive
-
- The decrease in FMV is not considered. See Chapter 26 in Publication 334.
-
- Separate computations. If more than one item of property was involved in a
- single casualty or theft, generally, you must figure the loss on each item
- separately. Then combine the losses to determine the total loss from that
- casualty or theft.
-
- Exception for real property. In figuring a casualty loss on nonbusiness real
- property, the entire property (including any improvements, such as buildings,
- trees, and shrubs) is treated as one item. The loss is figured using the
- smaller of:
-
- ∙ The decrease in FMV of the entire property, or
-
- ∙ The adjusted basis of the entire property.
-
- Decrease in fair market value. To figure the decrease in FMV because of a
- casualty or theft, you must make a determination of the actual price you could
- have sold your property for immediately before and immediately after the loss.
- An appraisal is the best way to make this determination.
-
- Items not to be considered. You generally should not consider the following
- items when attempting to establish the FMV of your property.
-
- Sentimental value. Do not consider sentimental value when determining your
- loss. If a family portrait, heirloom, or keepsake is damaged, destroyed, or
- stolen, you must base your loss only on its actual market value.
-
- General decline in market value. A decrease in the value of your property
- because it is in or near an area that suffered a casualty, or that might
- again suffer a casualty, is not a casualty loss. You have such a loss only
- for actual casualty damage to your property. However, if your home is in a
- federally declared disaster area and you are ordered by your state or local
- government to demolish or relocate the home, you might be able to deduct a
- casualty loss. See Disaster Area Losses in Publication 547.
-
- The cost of protection. The cost of protecting your property against a
- casualty or theft is not part of a casualty or theft loss. For example, you
- cannot deduct what you spend on insurance or to board up your house against a
- storm. These expenses are deductible only by businesses as business expenses.
-
- If you make permanent improvements to your property to protect it against a
- casualty or theft, the cost should be added to your basis in the property.
- An example would be the cost of a dike to prevent flooding.
-
- Related expenses. The incidental expenses you have due to a casualty or
- theft, such as expenses for the treatment of personal injuries, for temporary
- housing, or for a rental car, are not part of your casualty or theft loss.
-
- Repair and replacement costs. The cost of repairing damaged property or of
- replacing stolen or destroyed property is not part of a casualty or theft
- loss. Neither is the cost of cleaning up after a casualty.
-
- Example. You bought a new chair 4 years ago for $300. In April, a fire
- completely destroyed the chair. You estimated that it would cost $500 to
- replace it. If you had sold the chair before the fire, you estimate that you
- could have received only $100 for it because it was 4 years old. The chair was
- not insured. Your loss is $100, the FMV of the chair before the fire. It is
- not $500, the replacement value.
-
- Indication of decrease in fair market value. You can use the cost of cleaning
- up or of making repairs after a casualty as a measure of the decrease in FMV
- if you meet all the following conditions.
-
- 1) The repairs are necessary to bring the property back to its condition
- before the casualty.
-
- 2) The amount spent for repairs is not excessive.
-
- 3) The repairs take care of the damage only.
-
- 4) The value of the property after the repairs is not, due to the repairs,
- more than the value of the property before the casualty.
-
- Restoration of landscaping. The cost of restoring landscaping to its original
- condition after a casualty may be an indication of the decrease in FMV. You
- may be able to measure your loss by what you spend on the following:
-
- 1) Removing destroyed or damaged trees and shrubs minus any salvage you
- receive,
-
- 2) Pruning and other measures taken to preserve damaged trees and shrubs,
- and
-
- 3) Replanting necessary to restore the property to its approximate value
- before the casualty.
-
- Sources of information. It is often difficult to value your property before
- and after the casualty or theft. The following sources will be helpful in
- establishing these values.
-
- Photographs. Photographs taken after a casualty will be helpful in
- establishing the condition and value of the property after it was damaged.
-
- The costs of photographs obtained for this purpose are not a part of the loss,
- but can be claimed as a miscellaneous deduction subject to the 2% of adjusted
- gross income limit on line 20, Schedule A (Form 1040). The cost of the
- photographs is an expense of determining your tax liability.
-
- Cars. Books issued by various automobile organizations may be useful in
- figuring the value of your car, if your car is listed in the books. You can
- use the books' retail values and modify them by such factors as mileage and
- the condition of your car to figure its value. The prices are not "official,"
- but they may be useful in determining value and suggesting relative prices for
- comparison with current sales and offerings in your area. If your car is not
- listed in the books, you determine its value from other sources. A dealer's
- offer for your car as a trade-in on a new car is not usually a measure of
- its true value.
-
- Appraisals. The difference between the FMV of the property immediately before
- a casualty or theft and immediately afterwards should be determined by a
- competent appraiser. The appraiser must recognize the effects of any general
- market decline that may occur along with the casualty so that any deduction
- is limited to the actual loss resulting from damage to the property.
-
- The appraiser should be reliable and experienced. Several factors are
- important in evaluating the accuracy of an appraisal:
-
- ∙ The appraiser's familiarity with your property before and after the
- casualty or theft,
-
- ∙ The appraiser's knowledge of sales of comparable property in the area,
-
- ∙ The appraiser's knowledge of conditions in the area of the casualty, and
-
- ∙ The appraiser's method of appraisal.
-
- Appraisal fees. You can deduct your appraisal fees as a miscellaneous
- deduction subject to the 2% of adjusted gross income limit on line 20,
- Schedule A (Form 1040). The appraisal fee is an expense of determining
- your tax liability. It is not a part of the casualty loss.
-
- Records. It is important that you have records that will prove your deduction.
- If you do not have the actual records to support your deduction, you can use
- other satisfactory evidence that is sufficient to establish your deduction.
-
- Figuring the Loss
-
- Generally, you must figure your loss separately for each individual item
- stolen, damaged, or destroyed. However, for nonbusiness real property, an
- entire piece of real estate is considered one item.
-
- Real property. Real property is land, the plants and trees that grow on land,
- and the buildings and other structures that are placed on land. In figuring
- a loss to real property you own for personal use, all improvements, such as
- buildings and ornamental trees, are considered together. The loss is the
- smaller of the decrease in the fair market value of the entire property or
- its adjusted basis.
-
- Example. You bought your home a few years ago. You paid $50,000 ($10,000 for
- the land and $40,000 for the house). You also spent $2,000 for landscaping.
- This year your home was totally destroyed by fire. The fire also damaged the
- shrubbery and trees in your yard. The fire was your only casualty or theft
- loss this year. Competent appraisers valued the property as a whole at $75,000
- before the fire, but only $15,000 after the fire. (The loss to your household
- furnishings is not shown in this example but would be figured separately, as
- explained later.) You figure your casualty loss deduction as follows:
-
- 1) Adjusted basis of the entire property
- (cost of land, building, and landscaping) ... $52,000
- ==========
- 2) FMV of entire property before fire ......... $75,000
-
- 3) FMV of entire property after fire .......... 15,000
- __________
- 4) Decrease in FMV of entire property ......... $60,000
- ==========
- 5) Amount of loss
- (smaller of 1 or 4) ........................ $52,000
-
- Personal property. Personal property is generally any property that is not
- real property. If your personal property is stolen or is damaged or destroyed
- by a casualty, you must figure your loss separately for each item of property.
- The loss is the smaller of the decrease in the FMV of the property or its
- adjusted basis.
-
- Example. A fire in your home completely destroyed an upholstered chair, an
- oriental rug, and an antique table. You did not have fire insurance to cover
- your loss. (This was the only casualty or theft you had during the year.) The
- chair cost you $750, and you established that it had a FMV of $500 just before
- the fire. The rug cost you $3,000 and had a FMV of $2,500 just before the
- fire. You bought the table at an auction for $100, before discovering it was
- an antique. It had been appraised at $900 before the fire. You figure your
- loss on each of these items as follows:
-
- Chair Rug Table
- 1) Basis (cost) ................. $750 $3,000 $100
- ===========================
- 2) FMV before fire .............. $500 $2,500 $900
-
- 3) FMV after fire ............... ─0─ ─0─ ─0─
- ___________________________
- 4) Decrease in FMV .............. $500 $2,500 $900
- ===========================
- 5) Loss (smaller of 1 or 4) ..... $500 $2,500 $100
- ===========================
- 6) Total loss ................... $3,100
- ==========
-
- Both real and personal property. When a casualty involves both real and
- personal property, you must figure the loss separately for each type of
- property, as shown in the previous examples. But you apply a single $100
- reduction to the total loss. Then you apply the 10% rule. Both are explained
- later.
-
- Property used partly for business and partly for personal purposes. When
- property is used partly for personal (nonbusiness) purposes and partly for
- business or income-producing purposes, the casualty or theft loss deduction
- must be figured separately for the nonbusiness portion and for the business
- portion. You must figure each loss separately because the losses attributed
- to these two uses are figured in two different ways. The $100 rule and the
- 10% rule (explained later) apply only to the casualty or theft loss on the
- nonbusiness portion of the property.
-
- Insurance and Other Reimbursements
-
- If your property is covered by insurance, you should file a timely insurance
- claim for reimbursement of a loss. Otherwise, you cannot deduct this loss as
- a casualty or theft loss. But the portion of the loss not covered by insurance
- (for example, a deductible) is not subject to this rule.
-
- Example. You have a car insurance policy with a $500 deductible. Because the
- first $500 of an auto collision is not covered by insurance, the $500 would be
- deductible (subject to the $100 and 10% rules discussed later). This is true
- even if you do not file an insurance claim since your insurance policy would
- never have reimbursed you for it.
-
- Reduction of loss. If you receive insurance or another type of reimbursement,
- you must subtract the reimbursement when you figure your loss. You do not have
- a casualty or theft loss to the extent you are reimbursed.
-
- If you expect to be reimbursed, but have not yet received payment, you must
- still subtract the expected reimbursement. See When to Deduct a Loss, later.
-
- Gain from reimbursement. If your reimbursement is more than your basis in the
- property, you have a gain. This is true even if the decrease in the FMV of the
- property is more than its basis. If you have a gain, you may have to pay tax
- on it, or you may be able to postpone reporting the gain.
-
- See Publication 547 for more information on how to treat a gain from the
- reimbursement for a casualty or theft.
-
- Other reimbursements. Insurance is the most common way to be reimbursed for
- a casualty or theft loss. But you may be reimbursed in some other way. The
- following items are considered reimbursements:
-
- ∙ The forgiven part (the part you do not have to pay back) of a federal
- disaster loan under the Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act,
-
- ∙ The repayment and cost of repairs by the person who leases your property,
-
- ∙ The court awards for damages for a casualty or theft loss (the amount you
- are able to collect) minus lawyers' fees and other necessary expenses,
-
- ∙ The repairs, restoration, or cleanup provided by relief agencies, and
-
- ∙ Bonding company payment for a theft loss.
-
- Payments not reimbursements. Insurance, grants, gifts, and other payments you
- receive to help you after a casualty are considered reimbursement only if they
- are specifically designated to repair or replace your property. If the money
- you receive is designated for other purposes, or if there are no conditions on
- how you have to use it, the money is not a reimbursement even if you use it to
- restore your property.
-
- Payments for living costs. If an insurance company pays you for any of your
- living expenses after you lose the use of your home because of a casualty, the
- insurance payments are not considered a reimbursement. They do not reduce your
- casualty loss.
-
- You must report as income, insurance payments covering your normal living
- expenses. However, the part of insurance payments that compensates you for
- a temporary increase in the living expenses you and your family have during
- this period does not have to be reported as income. The same rule applies to
- insurance payments for living expenses if you are denied access to your home
- by government authorities due to a casualty or the threat of a casualty. The
- increase in your living expenses is the excess of your actual living expenses
- over your normal living expenses.
-
- Do not include in income the payment you received for your extra expenses
- for renting suitable housing and for transportation, food, utilities, and
- miscellaneous services during the period you are unable to use your home
- because of the casualty.
-
- Example. As a result of a fire, you vacated your apartment for a month and
- moved to a motel. You normally pay $525 a month rent. None was charged for
- the month the apartment was vacated. Your motel rent for this month was $1,200.
- You received $1,100 reimbursement from your insurance company for rental
- expenses.
-
- The part of the insurance payment that reimburses you for the temporary
- increase of your actual rent over your normal rent is $675 ($1,200 - $525).
- You do not include the $675 in income. But you do include in income the rest
- of the insurance received, $425 ($1,100 - $675).
-
- Disaster relief. Food, medical supplies, and other forms of assistance you
- receive do not reduce your casualty loss unless they are replacements for lost
- or destroyed property. These items are not taxable income to you.
-
- Deduction Limits
-
- After you have figured your casualty or theft loss and subtracted any
- reimbursements, you must figure how much of the loss you can deduct. If your
- loss was to property you had for your own or your family's personal use, there
- are two limits on the amount you can deduct for your casualty or theft loss:
-
- 1) You must reduce each loss by $100.
-
- 2) You must further reduce your loss by 10% of your adjusted gross income
- (line 32, Form 1040).
-
- $100 Rule. A single $100 reduction applies to each individual casualty or
- theft, no matter how many pieces of property are involved. This rule applies
- after all reimbursements have been subtracted from your total casualty or
- theft loss.
-
- Single event. Generally, events closely related in origin are considered a
- single casualty or theft. It is a single casualty when the damage is from two
- or more closely related causes, such as wind and flood damage caused by the
- same storm. A single casualty may also damage two or more widely separated
- pieces of property, such as a hail storm that damages both your home and your
- car parked downtown.
-
- More than one loss. If you have more than one casualty or theft loss during
- the tax year, you must reduce each loss by $100.
-
- Example. Your family car was damaged in an accident in January. Your loss
- after the insurance reimbursement was $75. In February, your car was damaged
- in another accident. This time your loss after the insurance reimbursement
- was $90. The $100 rule must be applied to each separate casualty loss. Since
- neither accident resulted in a loss of over $100, you are not entitled to any
- deduction for these accidents.
-
- 10% Rule. You must reduce the total of all your casualty or theft losses by
- 10% of your adjusted gross income (line 32, Form 1040). Apply this rule after
- you reduce each loss by any reimbursements and $100. If you had more than one
- casualty or theft loss during the year, this 10% limit applies to the total of
- all your losses after each was reduced. If you have casualty or theft gains,
- see Gains and losses, later in this discussion.
-
- Example. In June, you discovered that your house had been robbed. Your loss
- after insurance reimbursement was $2,000. Your adjusted gross income is
- $29,500. You first apply the $100 rule and then the 10% rule. Your theft
- loss is figured as follows:
-
- 1. Loss after insurance ........................ $2,000
-
- 2. Subtract $100 ............................... 100
- __________
- 3. Loss after $100 rule ........................ $1,900
- ==========
- 4. Subtract 10% of $29,500 AGI ................. 2,950
- __________
- 5. Theft loss deduction ........................ ─0─
- ==========
-
- When you apply the 10% rule, you find you do not have a casualty or theft loss
- deduction because your loss ($1,900) is less than 10% of your adjusted gross
- income ($2,950).
-
- Example. In March, you had a car accident that totally destroyed your car.
- You did not have collision insurance on your car, so you did not receive any
- insurance reimbursement. Your loss on the car was $1,200. In November, you had
- a fire that damaged your basement and totally destroyed the furniture, washer,
- dryer, and other items you had stored there. Your loss on the basement items
- after reimbursement was $1,700. Your adjusted gross income is $25,000. You
- figure your casualty loss deduction as follows:
-
- Car Basement
- 1. Loss ......................... $1,200 $ 1,700
- 2. Subtract $100 per incident ... 100 100
- ___________ _____________
- 3. Loss after $100 rule ......... $1,100 $ 1,600
- =========== =============
- 4. Total loss ............................. $ 2,700
- 5. Subtract 10% of $25,000 AGI ............ 2,500
- _____________
- 6. Casualty loss deduction ................ $ 200
- =============
-
- Gains and losses. If you had both gains and losses from casualties or thefts
- to nonbusiness property, special rules apply. If your total gains are less
- than your total losses, only the excess losses are subject to the 10% rule.
-
- However, if your total gains are more than your total losses, the difference
- (gains minus losses) will be treated as capital gain on Schedule D (Form
- 1040). None of the losses will be subject to the 10% rule.
-
- For more detailed explanations and examples, get Publication 547.
-
- When to Deduct a Loss
-
- A casualty usually is apparent when it happens. A theft may not be discovered
- until later. This affects the year in which you may deduct a casualty or a
- theft loss.
-
- Casualty losses. Generally, you may deduct casualty losses only in the tax
- year in which the casualty occurred. This is true even if the damaged property
- is not repaired or replaced until the next year.
-
- Loss on deposits. When you deduct a loss on deposits in an insolvent or
- bankrupt financial institution depends on the type of loss you choose to
- take on your return. See Loss on Deposits, earlier.
-
- Disaster area losses. If you have a casualty loss in a federally declared
- disaster area, you can choose to deduct the loss on your tax return for the
- year immediately preceding the year in which the disaster occurred. This may
- enable you to get an immediate refund of taxes you already paid. For more
- information, get Publication 547.
-
- Theft losses. You may generally deduct a theft loss only in the year you
- discover your property is missing. You must be able to show there was a theft,
- but you do not have to know when the theft took place. However, you should
- show when you discovered that your property was missing.
-
- Reimbursement Claims
-
- If there is a reasonable prospect you will be reimbursed for part or all
- of your loss, you must subtract the expected reimbursement when you figure
- your loss. You must reduce your loss even if you do not receive payment
- until a later tax year. You are believed to have a reasonable prospect of
- reimbursement if you have filed suit for damages.
-
- If you later receive less reimbursement than you expected, you include that
- difference as a loss with your other losses (if any) on your return for the
- year in which you can reasonably expect no more reimbursement.
-
- Example. Your personal car had a FMV of $2,000 when it was destroyed in a
- collision with another car in 1991. The accident was due to the negligence of
- the other driver. At the end of the year, there was a reasonable prospect that
- you would be fully reimbursed by the owner of the other car. Therefore, you do
- not have a deductible loss in 1991.
-
- In January 1992, the court awards you a judgment of $2,000, but in July, it
- becomes apparent that you will be unable to collect any amount from the other
- driver. Since this is your only casualty or theft loss, you can deduct the
- loss in 1992 that is more than $100 and 10% of your 1992 adjusted gross
- income.
-
- If you later receive more reimbursement than you expected, you may have to
- report the difference as income. If you have already taken a deduction for
- a casualty or theft loss in one year, and then in a later year you receive
- reimbursement, you must include it in your income for the later year to the
- extent your deduction reduced your tax for the earlier year.
-
- However, if any part of your original deduction for the loss did not actually
- lower your tax, you do not include that part of the reimbursement in your
- income. You do not refigure your tax for the year you claimed the deduction.
- For more information, see Recoveries in Chapter 13.
-
- Note. If the total of all the reimbursements you receive is more than your
- adjusted basis in the destroyed or stolen property, you will have a gain
- on the casualty or theft rather than a loss. Get Publication 547 for more
- information on how to treat a gain from the reimbursement of a casualty or
- theft.
-
- Worksheet. Publication 525 has a worksheet for you to use when only part of
- your original deduction reduced your tax in the earlier year.
-
- If you receive exactly the reimbursement you expected to receive, you may not
- have any amount to include in your income or any loss to deduct.
-
- Example. In December 1991, you had a collision while driving your personal
- car. Repairs to the car cost $950. You had $100 deductible collision insurance.
- Your insurance company agreed to reimburse you for the rest of the damage. As
- a result of your expected reimbursement from the insurance company, you do not
- have a casualty loss deduction in 1991.
-
- Due to the $100 rule, you cannot deduct the $100 you paid as the deductible.
- When you receive the $850 from the insurance company in 1992, you do not have
- to report it as income.
-
- Recovered property is your property that was stolen and later returned to
- you. If you recovered property after you have already taken a theft loss
- deduction, you must refigure your loss as follows:
-
- 1) Compare the property's adjusted basis (explained under Amount of Loss,
- earlier) to its decrease in value from the time it was stolen until the
- time it was recovered.
-
- 2) From the smaller of these amounts, subtract any reimbursements (such as
- insurance) you received.
-
- 3) Subtract $100 and 10% of your AGI of the loss year.
-
- This is your refigured loss. If this amount is less than the amount you
- deducted for the loss, you generally have to report the difference as income
- in the recovery year. But report the difference only up to the amount that
- reduced your tax.
-
- How to Report a Loss
-
- If you have a deductible casualty or theft loss from nonbusiness property,
- you can claim this loss only on Schedule A (Form 1040).
-
- Form 4684. Use Section A of Form 4684 to figure and report your gain or loss.
- Be sure to attach Form 4684 to your return.
-
- Section A - Personal Use Property. This section is for casualties and thefts of
- property NOT used in a trade or business or for income producing purposes. You
- must list each item or article for which you are reporting a casualty or theft
- on Form 4684. If more than four items of property were stolen or damaged in
- a single casualty or theft, attach additional Forms 4684 or sheets following
- the format of lines 1 through 9 of Form 4684. If you have to figure your
- loss on many different personal and household items, you may want to use the
- worksheets in Publication 584. Copies of these worksheets can be used in place
- of additional Forms 4684.
-
- More than one casualty or theft. If you had more than one casualty or theft
- during the year, you must complete lines 1 through 12 on separate Forms 4684
- for each casualty or theft. Use only one Form 4684 for lines 13 through 18.
-
- Losses. If you have only losses from nonbusiness property, transfer the amount
- from line 18 of Section A, Form 4684, to line 17 of Schedule A (Form 1040).
- Schedule A is used to itemize deductions. If you do not itemize deductions,
- you cannot deduct your casualty or theft loss.
-
- Gains. If you have only gains from nonbusiness property, this amount will
- be shown on line 15 of Section A, Form 4684. You may also have to complete
- Schedule D (Form 1040). For more information, get Publication 547.
-
- Gains and losses. If you have both gains and losses due to casualties in a
- single year, get Publication 547.
-
- Adjustments to basis. If you have a casualty or theft loss deduction, you must
- reduce your basis in the property by any deductible loss and any insurance
- or other reimbursements. The result is your adjusted basis in the property.
- Amounts you spend to restore your property after a casualty are added to your
- adjusted basis. See Adjusted Basis in Publication 551 for more information.
-
- Net operating loss. If your casualty or theft losses are more than your
- income, you may have a net operating loss. A net operating loss can be used
- to lower your taxes in an earlier year, allowing you to get a refund for taxes
- that you have already paid. Or it can be used to lower your taxes in a later
- year. You do not have to be in business to have a net operating loss from
- a casualty or theft. For more information on net operating losses, get
- Publication 536, Net Operating Losses.
-
-