Ask questions via Twitter. Tweet any question to @AskFiLife and we will respond with an answer. More.

FiLife - In partnership with The Wall Street Journal

Your Financial LifelineTM

In partnership with The Wall Street Journal
 
 

Disclaimer

FiLife is a great place to get your finances in shape, and the expert advice in the community can help you address specific or general problems. But very often you’ll also need one-on-one advice from a professional, especially since rules and laws maybe specific to your state or country. Remember that investments and other financial transactions come with risk, and you should consult an independent, qualified professional before making financial commitments.

Stop Showing this Message

Question

Paul Kennard
Staff

Paul Kennard asked 8 months ago in Income Tax

If I rent a room out in my house to a friend, is this considered income?

I am interested in buying a house and would like to find a roommate, do I consider their portion of the mortgage payment as income?

Was this question interesting?

Yes

(1)

No

(0)

Permalink | Abuse

FiLife Recommends

Answer this Question
  • Share:
  •  

3 Answers

Sort by:
Howard
Bronze
Reply

Not sure about the situation overseas. However, in the US, regardless of whether you receive payment in cash or you provide a receipt, if you have income as is clearly the case here, then you are liable for paying taxes on that income.

There have been a number of high-profile cases here where wealthy/well-known people would pay their nanny's in cash and try to get around employment/tax regulations. When the IRS caught up with them, they had to make amends all around and additionally pay penalties.

Again, just because you don't leave a paper trail does not mean that you aren't liable. Can you get away with not paying the tax - certainly, but if you're caught you are guaranteed that you are going to be paying much more than you owed and additionally have your tax returns scrutinized for a fair amount of time thereafter.

Is this helpful?

Yes

(0)

No

(0)

Permalink | Abuse

fasturn
Newcomer
Reply

I have been renting a room including some food and washing since 2004 at £200 per week. All payments have been cash and I have given no recipets am I liable for tax

Is this helpful?

Yes

(0)

No

(0)

Permalink | Abuse

Mark Kantrowitz
FiLife Contributor
Reply

If you are the sole owner of the house, any rent you receive from the roommate is considered income. The only exception is if you rent the room less than 15 days a year. If you and the roommate jointly own the house, the roommate's share of the mortgage payments is not considered income.

See IRS Publication 17, www.irs.gov/publications/p17/ch09.html, where it says: "You generally must include in your gross income all amounts you receive as rent. Rental income is any payment you receive for the use or occupation of property. In addition to amounts you receive as normal rent payments, there are other amounts that may be rental income."

The rental income is reported on Schedule E. You may be able to offset some of the rental income with expenses associated with the rental and depreciation.

Is this helpful?

Yes

(0)

No

(0)

Permalink | Abuse

Answer this Question

Generic User Image

Ask a Question

140 characters

Tips

  • Be specific and clear.
  • Be courteous and thoughtful.
  • Share some details about your situation (age, relationship, etc)

Login or Join

or login with

Ask a Question

140 characters

Expert Partners

Stacker Poll of the Day

What age should you start your child's allowance?

Avg 8.5
 
Avg 8.5
 
248 responses