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Tax time is coming – Here is a spreadsheet to help you track your rental expenses

Tax time is closer than you think.  Instead of waiting till the last minute and handing your accountant a box of receipts, you can use this handy spreadsheet to organize your income and expenses.  My accountant said she would love to have all her landlord clients using something like this, so here is one small step to making that happen.

The spreadsheet is flexible enough to let you add lots of entries and extra expense categories.  But, if you want the password (its there to help keep you from accidentally breaking the functions), just leave a comment and I’ll send it to you.

Good luck and good organizing!

 

Posted in: Landlording, Real estate investing Tagged: accounting, landlord, profit and loss statement, rentals, spreadsheet, taxes

What happens if I default on a commercial lease?

Commercial leases are generally much longer than a typical residential lease. The tenant is making a much larger financial commitment. In fact, the financial commitment is so large that new accounting rules were put in place to make sure that financial reporting by public companies reflected this commitment. For details see this NY Times article: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/23/realestate/commercial/23fasb.html?_r=0

For people new to commercial leases, it is important to understand the consequences of not meeting this obligation, or in other words, defaulting on the lease.  The exact consequences will depend on the terms of the lease, local law, and common business practices in your community.  That is one reason why it is so important to review your lease terms with an attorney before signing. And, if you think you may default, you should review the possible consequences with your attorney again.

I’ll cover two scenarios that I’ve seen expressed in commercial leases. One is more common than the other.

Can I get out of my lease without defaulting?

There are ways of avoiding default when you either can’t, or don’t want, to continue paying your lease through the end of the term.  The two primary options are subletting or assigning the lease. In both cases, you find another tenant to pay some or all of the lease.

When subletting, you continue paying your lease to your landlord, but you lease the space to a new tenant, who pays you. Most leases will only allow this with the landlord’s permission.  It is possible to make a profit doing this if the rent you charge is higher than the rent you pay. Your lease may or may not allow you to pocket the difference.

When assigning the lease, you find a tenant to take your place in the lease and they become the new tenant, accepting the original terms of the lease and paying the full rent.  This is most common when selling a business that occupies leased space. In most cases the landlord will ask that you remain secondarily responsible for paying the lease if the new tenant defaults.

In both cases, there will likely be some charge by the landlord to cover their time and expense in reviewing and approving the arrangement.

Scenario 1

Now, what happens when you default instead of finding a new tenant?  Most often we see a lease that describes the tenant and landlord responsibilities like this:  The tenant is responsible for the payments for the remaining term of the lease, but the landlord is required to try and find a replacement tenant. Once the landlord finds a new tenant, then they deduct the income from the new tenant, over the course of the remaining original lease, from the amount owed by the original tenant.  The landlord is allowed to deduct the costs of acquiring the new tenant, such as commissions or Tenant Improvement costs, or repair costs from damage caused by the original tenant, from the new tenant income, before subtracting it from the amount owed before totalling the number.  (Or, I look at it as they can add the cost to the amount owed).

The  ‘math’ looks like this:

Amount owed on remaining lease
-Amount that will obtained from replacement lease (rent)
+Cost of obtaining the replacement lease (commissions, TIs, etc.)
—————————————————————————-
Amount defaulting tenant owes

The logic here is straightforward. The landlord would have received x amount of dollars if tenant did not default. They have a right to collect the money. This is offset by their ability to collect from a new tenant (its not fair if they collect from both).  However, there is an expense associated with obtaining that new tenant, so its considered fair for them to deduct that expense from the amount recovered (or in my math, add it to the amount owed… equivalent math).

On a 10 year lease where the tenant pays $40,000 a year, if the tenant defaults in year 5, there is 5 years, or $200,000 remaining on the lease

If the landlord is able to get a new tenant at the 12 month mark, and gets them at a lower rent of  $40,000 per year, then they will obtain $160,000 on the replacement.

If the landlord has to pay $5000 in commissions, and provide $15,000 in TIs to get that replacement tenant the math would be like this:

$200,000 owed
-$160,000 replacement
+ $20,000 in leasing costs
—————————–
$60,000 owed by defaulting tenant

Scenario 2

The other way I’ve seen this done is for the landlord to say that the defaulting tenant owes the amount of the remaining lease, plus any ‘unamortized’ lease up costs from their lease, less the amount received from a new lease.  This concept of “unamortized costs” is a bit of a misnomer, as the costs are fully amortized for tax purposes in year one.  But, most landlords view it as an expense recovered over the term of the lease.  That is why most landlords are willing to do expense TIs for longer leases vs. shorter leases.  For a 10 year lease, with $20,000 in lease up costs , the landlord would figure those costs are $2000 per year.

If the tenant stays the whole, term they’ve recovered all of their costs.  If they leave in year 5, there is $10,000 in costs they have not recovered.

I think leases end up with this scenario through negotiations. In scenario 1, the tenant may feel they are at the landlords mercy during default and they have no control over the amount of TI allowance or commision the landlord pays out at the time of that new lease.  So, with this scenario, the amount they owe is more directly associated with their own lease.   The math looks like this:

Amount owed on remaining lease
-Amount that will be obtained from replacement lease
-Unamortized lease up costs for your lease (TIs/Commissions)
—————————————————————————
Amount defaulting tenant owes

So, using the same example from above (and assuming an original $20,000 in lease up costs), we get:

$200,000 owed
-$160,000 replacement
+$10,000 in unamortized expenses
——————————————–
$50,000 owed by defaulting tenant

Capping the default amount

These numbers can look pretty scary.  And, most landlords will require a personal gurantee of the lease by the business owner, so the protection of an LLC or Corporation does not protect the owner from the debt.  As a result, most tenants will want to try and negotiate some cap to the total default amount.  In many cases, this amount will vary over the term of the lease, with a higher cap earlier in the lease than later. For example, in a 10 year, lease the landlord may ask for a guarantee of the first 2 or 3 years of the lease, and then after than ask for a guarantee of only up to 1 year.  This is a point of negotiation.  The landlord would always want a guarantee of the full lease.  Its up to the tenant to ask for a cap on the guarantee.

I hope this was helpful and if you need help negotiating your next lease, please contact us.

Posted in: Commercial real estate, Landlording Tagged: commercial, defaulting, landlord, Lease, lease assignment, sublease, tenant

RHA Call to Action – Oppose B & O Tax on rental income

I thought I’d share this call to action from the Rental Housing Association.  If you, like I, own rental properties in Washington State.  It is important to fight this tax increase.  If you are a renter, I think you should fight it also.  In the end, these costs will get passed to you.  Effectively, as a renter, you will be paying a property tax that homeowners don’t pay.

AT A GLANCE

 

Governor
Jay Inslee seeks to assess a new B&O tax against rental income

 

 

Contact Your State Legislators

 

Members can
find their legislative district and legislators’ contact information
 HERE.

 

Sample
Letter for submission to S
tate Legislators.

 

 

Governor Inslee Contact Information:

Ph: 360-902-4111

 

Email Governor Inslee OPPOSING his B&O tax increase
proposal

 

***click here for online email submission form

 

Sample Letter
for submission to Governor Inslee

 

Mail:

Governor
Jay Inslee

Office of the
Governor

PO Box 40002

Olympia, WA
98504-0002

 

Rental Housing Association

2414 SW
Andover St, D207

Seattle, WA
98106

 

PLEASE CONTACT
YOUR STATE LEGISLATORS & GOVERNOR INSLEE IMMEDIATELY OPPOSING A
PROPOSAL TO ASSESS A NEW B&O TAX ON RENTAL INCOME

 

Governor Jay
Inslee’s newly released budget proposal includes a repeal of B&O
tax exemption for long-term rental of commercial real estate.
Repeal of the
exemption would enact a new B&O tax at the service and other
activities rate on income derived from all long-term (30 days or more)
rentals of commercial real estate
, including:

  • Rental of Apartments,
    commercial buildings, mini-storage facilities, and leased
    departments.

It is vital
that all RHA members contact their State Legislators and
Governor Inslee
and voice their opposition to enacting a new tax on rental housing. RHA
asks that you send in emails, and make phone calls to your legislators and
the Governor’s office, and encourage anyone else you know to do the
same in opposing the creation of a B&O tax on rental income.

 

Why does RHA oppose this proposal?

 

Rental Housing
Owners provide a precious asset to all communities; safe and affordable
housing. Increasing taxes on the rental housing industry would only
serve to increase costs and reduce affordability to tenants. Tax
increases in lieu of greater government efficiencies and effective
spending of current resources is ineffective and the wrong way to fund
our State’s budget. RHA opposes this proposal for the following
reasons:

 

Uniformity of taxation

  • RHA opposes taxes that
    discriminate against rental housing, such as business taxes and
    regulatory fees that are imposed on rental housing to raise
    revenue. The State Constitution includes a uniformity clause,
    which provides that “taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of
    property within the territorial limits of the authority levying
    the tax…All real estate shall constitute one class.” This means
    that taxes must be the same on real property of the same market
    value. Uniformity requires both an equal rate of tax and equality
    in valuing the property taxed.
  • While other states have
    differential tax rates or different value standards that depend
    upon the separate classifications of property, such a system would
    not be constitutional in Washington. A 1960 Washington State
    Supreme Court ruling found the State Legislature’s 1959 extension
    of the B&O tax to the rental of real estate was an
    unconstitutional, non-uniform property tax.
  • Imposing a B&O tax
    against properties already subject to local and state property
    taxes amounts to double-taxation for the same services received by
    other types of real property. This is discriminatory against
    rental housing.

Increases the costs of housing

  • The practical impact of
    increasing taxes on rental housing is that rents will increase to
    cover the new costs imposed under Gov. Inslee’s proposal. Such a
    tax increase would negatively impact those who can
    least
    afford increased housing costs.

Sample letter to Legislature & Governor Inslee***PLEASE NOTE – personalized letters are strongly
recommended in lieu of using the sample provided below.

 

Honorable <insert name of legislator>,

 

I am writing
you to voice my strong opposition to the proposal within your budget
which would enact a new B&O tax against income generated by rental
housing.

 

In 1960 our
State Supreme Court ruled that an extension of the B&O tax to the
rental of real estate is an unconstitutional, non-uniform property tax.
I oppose taxation which discriminates against rental housing, and which
amounts to double-taxation of a property which receives no additional
benefits not received by other types of real property.

 

Additionally,
any tax increase upon rental housing will hit tenants in the form of
increased rents and other charges to cover the costs of operating
rental housing. Tenants represent a large population which can least afford
increased housing and living costs.

 

I respectively
ask that you withdraw your proposal to increase taxes upon rental
housing through the creation of a B&O tax on rental income.

 

Thank you for
your consideration.

 

Sincerely,

 

<insert name
here>

 

Posted in: Landlording, Real estate investing Tagged: B&O, landlord, rental income, RHA, taxes

About Us

Welcome to Tellus Realty! We’re is committed to helping you make informed and rewarding decisions whether your or looking to buy and sell real estate, or in search of a new home for your license. Tellus Realty provided a more personal, one-on-one experience. We are not affiliated with a big-box or franchise where agents and clients are viewed as a statistic or number. Our team focuses on service and quality.

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Contact Us

PO Box 1113 Duvall, WA 98019

Office@TellusRE.com
877-413-7325
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