This chapter explains the tax treatment of casualties, thefts, and
condemnations. A casualty occurs when property is damaged,
destroyed, or lost due to a sudden, unexpected, or unusual event. A
theft occurs when property is stolen. A condemnation
occurs when private property is legally taken for public use
without the owner's consent. A casualty, theft, or condemnation may
result in a deductible loss or taxable gain on your federal income tax
return. You may have a deductible loss or a taxable gain even if only
a portion of your property was affected by a casualty, theft, or
condemnation.
An involuntary conversion
occurs when you receive
money or other property as reimbursement for a casualty, theft,
condemnation, disposition of property under threat of condemnation, or
certain other events discussed in this chapter.
If an involuntary conversion results in a gain and you buy
qualified replacement property within the specified replacement
period, you can postpone reporting the gain on your income tax return.
For more information, see Postponing Gain, later.
Previous | First | Next
Publication Index | 2001 Tax Help Archives | Tax Help Archives | Home