We have incurred substantial repairs to our rental property: new
roof, gutters, windows, furnace, and outside paint. What are the IRS rules
concerning depreciation?
Replacements of roof, rain gutters, windows, and furnace on a residential
rental property are capital improvements to the structure because they materially
add to the value of your property or substantially prolong its life. The items
would be in the same class of property as the rental property to which they
are attached. Since the property is residential rental property, the items
are generally depreciated over a recovery period of 27.5 years using the straight
line method of depreciation and a mid-month convention.
Repairs, such as repainting the residential rental property, are currently
deductible expenses. A repair keeps your property in good operating condition.
It does not materially add to the value of your property or substantially
prolong its life. Repainting your property inside or out, fixing gutters or
floors, fixing leaks, plastering, and replacing broken windows are examples
of repairs. If you make repairs as part of an extensive remodeling or restoration
of your property, the whole job is an improvement. In that case, you should
capitalize and depreciate the repair costs as the same class of property that
you have restored or remodeled as discussed above. For more information, refer
to Publication 527, Residential Rental Property, and Publication 946, How to Depreciate Property.
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