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Business
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Taxation of Individuals and Business Entities
Quiz 14: Tax Consequences of Home Ownership
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Question 1
True/False
A taxpayer who rents out a home for at least one day and does not use a home for personal purposes for at least 15 days during the year is ineligible to deduct any qualified residence interest expense on a loan secured by the home.
Question 2
True/False
A taxpayer who sells a principal residence that has been used (or is being used) as a rental property will not be allowed to exclude the portion of the gain attributable to depreciation even if the taxpayer meets the ownership and use tests and the gain realized on the sale is lower than the maximum exclusion amount.
Question 3
True/False
For tax purposes a dwelling unit is a residence if the taxpayer's number of personal use days of the unit is more than ten days.
Question 4
True/False
When determining the number of days a taxpayer has rented a home during the year, any day when the home is available for rent but not actually rented out counts as a day of rental use.
Question 5
True/False
Jacoby purchases a home for $1,500,000 by making a $150,000 down payment and by borrowing the remaining $1,350,000 with a loan secured by the home. Jacoby can deduct interest expense on $1,100,000 of the loan principal.
Question 6
True/False
For determining whether a taxpayer qualifies to exclude gain on the sale of a principal residence, the periods of ownership and use need not be continuous nor do they need to cover the same two-year period.
Question 7
True/False
The tax laws place a fixed dollar limit on the amount of qualified residence interest a taxpayer may deduct in a particular year.
Question 8
True/False
In general terms, the tax laws favor taxpayers who own a principal residence relative to those who rent a principal residence.
Question 9
True/False
When determining the number of days a taxpayer has rented a home during the year, any day when the home is available for rent but not actually rented out counts as a day of personal use.
Question 10
True/False
A taxpayer may be required to pay tax on a gain the taxpayer realizes when she sells her principal residence.
Question 11
True/False
To be allowed to exclude gain on the sale of a principal residence, the taxpayer selling the home must be using the home as a principal residence at the time of the sale.
Question 12
True/False
A married couple filing a joint tax return is eligible to exclude up to $500,000 of gain realized on the sale of a personal residence if both spouses meet the ownership test and at least one spouse meets the use test.