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  5. What Is Form 6198: At-Risk Limitations

What Is Form 6198: At-Risk Limitations

Updated for Tax Year 2022 • June 2, 2023 08:43 AM


OVERVIEW

Most investors go into business expecting to make a profit. But, when business expenses exceed profits and a loss occurs, a tax deduction may be the only silver lining. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) usually allows taxpayers to deduct money spent on a business up to a certain limit. Tax form 6198 helps you to figure out the amount you can deduct when part of your investment falls into the "at-risk" category.


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What are at-risk limitations?

A tax deduction reduces your overall tax bill, potentially lessening losses in a business venture. Items such as insurance, property repairs and charitable donations can often be deductible at tax time if they helped you in the course of your business.

However, not all of the money you invest in a business is deductible, due to IRS at-risk limitations. The at-risk rules prevent taxpayers from deducting more than their actual stake in a business. This usually means that for tax purposes, only money you're personally liable for is considered "at risk," and, therefore, tax deductible.

Form 6198 breakdown

To determine the maximum amount you can deduct after suffering a business loss in the tax year, use Form 6198. The four-section form is a worksheet that allows you to:

  • Determine your losses for the current year
  • Calculate the amount that was at risk in the business
  • Compute any at-risk deductions from previous years that you can apply in the current year
  • Figure the total allowable deduction you can take for the current tax year

File a separate Form 6198 for each business activity, unless the businesses are S Corporations, in which case the IRS allows you to aggregate all of your investments on a single form.

You are required to file Form 6198 with your tax return if you experience a loss in an income-producing activity deemed by the IRS as at risk. Most business activities are subject to the at-risk limitations.

Reason for at-risk rules

Before the IRS implemented at-risk limitations, investors in certain business activities—especially real estate—stood to profit more from losses and tax deductions than from investments gains.

To prevent investors from benefiting from purposeful bad business deals and to promote investments in credible business ventures, Congress acted to limit the deductions investors could take when facing business losses.

A real-world real estate scenario

Real estate investment is a type of business in which you can invest as little or as much money as you'd like, due to mortgage financing options and nonrecourse loans.

Nonrecourse financing pledges a home as collateral, meaning the lender can foreclose on your home if you don't make the payments, but it can't come after you for any uncollected losses. Even though you aren't personally liable for a nonrecourse debt, it still falls under at-risk limits if the property secures the debt.

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