Rev. date: 01/01/2011
Generally you may deduct casualty and theft losses relating to
your home, household items and vehicles on your Federal income tax return. You
may not deduct casualty and theft losses covered by insurance unless you file a
timely claim for reimbursement, and you must reduce the loss by the amount of
any reimbursement.
A casualty loss can result from the damage, destruction or loss
of your property from any sudden, unexpected, or unusual event such as a flood,
hurricane, tornado, fire, earthquake or even volcanic eruption. A casualty does
not include normal wear and tear or progressive deterioration.
A theft is the taking and removing of money or property with
the intent to deprive the owner of it. The taking must be illegal under the law
of the state where it occurred and it must have been done with criminal intent.
If your property is personal-use property or is not completely
destroyed, the amount of your casualty or theft loss is the lesser of:
- The adjusted basis of your property, or
- The decrease in fair market value of your property as a result
of the casualty or theft
.
If your property is business or income-producing property, such
as rental property, and is completely destroyed, and the fair market value of
the property before the casualty is less than the adjusted basis of the
property, then the amount of your loss is your adjusted basis.
The loss, regardless of whether it is a casualty or theft loss,
must be reduced by any salvage value and by any insurance or other reimbursement
you receive or expect to receive. The adjusted basis of your property is usually
your cost, increased or decreased by certain events such as improvements or
depreciation. For more information about the basis of property, refer to
Tax Topic 703, or
Publication 547,
Casualties, Disasters, and Thefts. You may determine the decrease in fair market value by appraisal,
or if certain conditions are met, by the cost of repairing the property. For
more information, refer to Publication 547.
Individuals are required to claim their casualty and theft losses
as an itemized deduction on Form 1040, Schedule A (or Form 1040NR, ScheduleA, if
you are a nonresident alien). For property held by you for personal use, once
you have subtracted any salvage value and any insurance or other reimbursement,
you must subtract $100 from each casualty or theft event that occurred during
the year. Then add up all those amounts and subtract 10% of your adjusted gross
income from that total to calculate your allowable casualty and theft losses for
the year.
Casualty and theft losses are reported on
Form 4684,
Casualties and Thefts. Section A is used for personal-use property, and Section B
is used for business or income-producing property. If personal-use property was
damaged, destroyed or stolen, you may wish to refer to
Publication 584,
Casualty, Disaster, and Theft Loss Workbook (Personal-Use Property). For losses involving business-use property, refer to
Publication 584-B, Business Casualty, Disaster, and Theft Loss Workbook.
Casualty losses are generally deductible in the year the casualty
occurred. However, if you have a casualty loss from a federally declared
disaster that occurred in an area warranting public or individual assistance (or
both), you can choose to treat the loss as having occurred in the year
immediately preceding the tax year in which the disaster happened, and you can
deduct the loss on your return or amended return for that preceding tax year.
Theft losses are generally deductible in the year you discover the property was
stolen or destroyed unless you have a reasonable prospect of recovery through a
claim for reimbursement. In that case, no deduction is available until the
taxable year in which it can be determined with reasonable certainty whether or
not such reimbursement will be received.
If your loss deduction is more than your income, you may have
a net operating loss. You do not have to be in business to have a net operating
loss from a casualty. For more information, refer to
Publication 536,
Net Operating Losses for Individuals, Estates, and Trusts.