What Are Deductible Investment Interest Expenses?
In general, you can deduct interest paid on money you borrow to invest, although there are restrictions on how much you can deduct and which investments actually qualify you for the deduction.
Key Takeaways
- Deductible investment interest expenses refer to the interest paid on money borrowed to invest in assets that produce taxable investment income or appreciate in value allowing you to sell at a future gain.
- The deduction for investment interest expenses is limited to the amount of taxable investment income earned in the same year.
- Investment interest can only be claimed by itemizing deductions on Schedule A and filing Form 4952.
- Interest incurred from a 'passive activity' investment generally does not qualify for the investment interest deduction.
Investment interest
The federal tax code includes a number of incentives to encourage investment. Among them is the deduction for investment interest expenses. In general, you can deduct interest paid on money you borrow to invest, although there are restrictions on how much you can deduct and which investments actually qualify you for the deduction.
Definition of an investment interest expense
When you borrow money to buy property for investment purposes, any interest you pay on that borrowed money becomes an "investment interest expense." For example, say you take out a $5,000 loan against your home equity and use the money to buy stock. The interest on that loan is investment interest. (It wouldn't be deductible as mortgage interest because you didn't use the money to buy, build or improve your home.) If you use only part of the borrowed money for investments, you can deduct only a proportional amount of the interest you pay.
What qualifies for deduction
The deduction applies to interest on money borrowed to buy property that will produce investment income—interest, dividends, annuities or royalties—or that you expect to appreciate in value, allowing you to sell it at a gain in the future. However, you can't deduct interest when the property you buy produces nontaxable income, such as tax-exempt bonds.
In any year, you cannot deduct more in investment interest than you earned in investment income. However, you can carry forward your "disallowed" investment interest to the next year.
TurboTax Tip:
The interest on a loan taken to buy a house to rent out is not deductible as investment interest but can usually be deducted as an expense item for operating costs of the rental property on Schedule E.
Passive activity
Interest incurred for an investment in a "passive activity" generally doesn't qualify for the investment interest deduction. A passive activity is a business or trade in which you hold an ownership interest but in which you don't actually participate.
For example, say you borrowed $20,000 to buy a 10 percent stake in a friend's car wash. That stake is certainly an investment, but unless you were there washing cars (or doing some other work), it's a passive activity, because you're not materially involved running the business. Thus, you couldn't deduct the interest on the $20,000 loan as investment interest. However, you could use the interest to offset income you received from the passive activity.
Also, under the tax code, rental activity generally counts as passive activity, so if you borrowed money to buy a house to rent out, the interest isn't deductible as investment interest. But in this case, you could use the interest as an expense item for operation of the rental property on Schedule E.
Taking the deduction
To actually claim the deduction for investment interest expenses, you must itemize your deductions. Investment interest goes on Schedule A, under "Interest You Paid." You may also have to file Form 4952, which provides details about your deduction. You don't have to file this form if you meet three conditions: interest is the only investment expense you're deducting; you're not carrying forward any disallowed interest from the previous year, and your investment interest doesn't exceed your investment income from interest and ordinary dividends.
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