Skip to main content
Level 6
March 17, 2025

Client paid a contractor for home improvements that were never made - is this non business bad debt?

  • March 17, 2025
  • 4 replies
  • 19 views

Hi, client paid a contractor $100K+ for primary residence capital improvements. The contractor is bankrupt and this money is deemed lost. Would this be a capital loss as non-business bad debt. Or would it add to the house basis?

 

4 replies

Level 10
March 17, 2025

Have you read the Internal Revenue Code?

sjrcpa
Level 15
March 17, 2025

I don't see basis here if no improvements were actually built.

The more I know the more I don’t know.
IRonMaN
Level 15
March 17, 2025

"Have you read the Internal Revenue Code?"

I've never read the whole book, but I have read parts.  I was hoping to be like George Costanza and watch the movie instead of reading the whole thing 😬

Slava Ukraini!
BobKamman
Level 15
March 17, 2025

I had a client many years ago who (on a return I didn't prepare) claimed the same thing as a bad debt.  He was audited, and it wasn't challenged.  So I avoid questions on the same topic.  Same thing for adjustment to basis, that's a good question.  At least we don't have to worry about casualty loss (theft of services), do we?  

ptax255Author
Level 6
March 19, 2025

Theft losses would  be if the intent was for profit and that wasn't the case. 

When you say "it wasn't challenged" do you mean the IRS was ok with claiming it as bad debt capital loss?

Thank you!

BobKamman
Level 15
March 19, 2025

Is a home never an investment for profit?  "I just live there to make sure no one breaks in."  But I agree, casualty loss probably doesn't work.  Yes, IRS had no problem accepting it as a nonbusiness bad debt.