Owning and renting timeshares.

AuthorEllentuck, Albert B.
PositionCase Study

Facts: Willie Walters owns weeks 25 and 26 in unit #110 at the Mountain Chalet Timeshare Resort. Last year, he rented out week 25 and used week 26 for a family vacation. * Willie's timeshare weeks cost $22,000, partly financed by a $15,000 mortgage loan arranged through the developer. Willie's interest expense is $1,750; his annual maintenance fee is $800 ($300 of which is for property taxes). He incurs $125 in advertising expense to rent week 25 for $1,050. * Willie finds from his conversations with other owners that apparently, units are rented approximately half the year and used by the owners for the other half. Issue: How does Willie report the income and expenses from his timeshares?

Analysis

Like other dwelling units, the tax treatment of timeshares depends on how owners use the property. However, the rules are complicated; timeshare ownership often limits the owner to only one or two weeks a year. Guidance is lacking on the proper tax treatment of timeshare rental income and expenses. The Code and regulations have to be analyzed in view of the owner's use of the unit to determine how he or she should report the income and expenses on a return.

Unit Not Rented

If a taxpayer uses a timeshare unit and it is not rented out (or held out for rent), he or she could deduct property taxes on Schedule A, under Sec. 164(a)(1). Because such taxes may be buried in the annual "maintenance fee," the management company should be contacted if the amount is not broken out. Other components of the maintenance fee (e.g., utilities and association membership charges) are nondeductible personal expenses. Mortgage interest on an unrented timeshare unit is fully deductible on Schedule A, according to Sec. 163(h)(4)(A)(iii), provided the Sec. 163(h)(3) requirements are met.

Unit Rented

A timeshare owner who rents a unit for some or all of his or her allotted time is generally subject to the Sec. 280A vacation home rules, which limit deductions and require expense allocations. The Sec. 280A(d)(1) 14-day/10% test is applied to the unit as a whole, counting the personal days of all the unit's owners during the year. Thus, personal use will almost always be sufficiently substantial to cause all of a unit's owners to be subjected to the Sec. 280A vacation home rules.

Prop. Regs. Sec. 1.280A-3(f)(5) appears to require timeshare owners to allocate expenses between personal and rental uses based on all the units' owners' use during the year (i.e., the personal and...

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