You often hear the term "tax shelter" with respect to tax planning.
A tax shelter is an investment that usually requires substantial investment with a
degree of risk. It often involves losses to produce future gains. An investment in low
income property that provides depreciation benefits is one example of a legitimate tax
shelter. Generally, the amount of your deductions or losses from most activities is
limited to the amount that you have at risk. You are considered at risk for an activity
to the extant of the sum of the following amounts:
- The amount of cash you invested in an activity,
- The adjusted basis of other property you contributed to the activity, and
- The amount you borrowed to invest in the activity, to the extent that you are
personally liable on the loan or have pledged unrelated property as security.
Note: The losses or credits are often considered passive.
They can be used to offset income from passive activities only. They cannot be
used against other income such as wages, salaries, professional fees, and
portfolio income, such as interest and dividends. The limitations are computed on
Form 8582,
Passive Activity Loss Limitations.
The excess passive losses and credits generated from tax shelters can be
carried forward until you use them up or until you dispose of the tax shelter.
For more information on passive income and losses, refer to
Topic 425, or refer to
Publication 925.
Abusive tax shelters are often marketed in terms of how much you can write
off in relation to how much you invest. This "write off ratio" is frequently
much greater than one-to-one. An "Abusive Tax Shelter" is a marketing scheme
that involves artificial transactions with little or no economic foundation.
Generally, you invest money to make money. An abusive tax shelter you inflated
tax savings based on large write- offs and credits. It is often out of proportion
to your investment. An abusive tax shelter exists solely to reduce taxes
unrealistically. A legitimate tax shelter exists to reduce taxes fairly and
also produce income. As in any investment, a real tax shelter involves risks,
while an abusive tax shelter involves little risk, despite outward appearances.
A series of tax laws has been designed to halt abusive tax shelters.
These include requiring sellers of tax shelters to register them and maintain
a list of investors, and requiring investors to report the tax shelter registration
number on their tax return using
Form 8271,
Investor Reporting of Tax Shelter Registration Number.
Investors in abusive tax shelters whose returns are examined may incur
large amounts of penalty and interest. Also, promoters of abusive tax shelters
may be liable for significant penalties.
There are several other investments you can make that will defer income until
a later date, such as Individual Retirement Arrangements, retirement plans for
self-employed individuals, and deferred annuities. But these are not considered
tax shelters because they do not usually involve tax losses. For more information
concerning tax shelters, including questions to consider before investing, refer to
Publication 550,
Investment Income and Expenses. Publications and forms may be
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