How To Lower Your Taxes
by Maximizing Depreciation
This is a tutorial on how to increase your "depreciable base".
What this means is you can lower your taxes by exchanging property you
already own into a new property where you will get a higher depreciation
writeoff. Here's an example:
Let's say you own an investment property in Carlsbad. You paid $300,000
for it 7 years ago, and now it's worth $600,000. You did great on the
appreciation, and now you can put that equity to work to increase your
tax writeoff. Here's how it looks right now:
Tax writeoff = $200,000 depreciable at 3.636% a year = $7272. At a
40% tax rate, you're saving $2,908.80 a year in taxes. (This calculation
uses a 2/3 value for the improvements, 1/3 for the land.)
Now lets say you exchange that property and use the $300,000 equity
to put 20% down on $1,500,000 worth of real estate. This property could
be an apartment building, or several single family residences, or any
combination. The point is, you now can depreciate $1,000,000. So the
numbers now look like this:
Tax writeoff = $1,000,000 depreciable at 3.636% a year = $36,360. At
a 40% tax rate, you're saving $14,544 a year in taxes!
This is called increasing your depreciable base.
Disclaimer! I'm not
qualified to give tax advice. You need to check with your tax professional
to see if it really would work this way in your situation. Some people
have limits on the amount of depreciation allowed. This is only an example
to show you the possibilities.
If you'd like to discuss some strategies for your real estate investments,
call me any time at 800-469-6391.
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