LdiJ
Senior Member
I disagree wih LdiJ that you do "nothing" with the Form 1099-A. The foreclosure acts as a sale of the home, on which you realized either a gain or (more likely) a loss. So you report the gain or loss on the sale of the home as if you'd sold it yourself, using the figures from the Form 1099-A. I assume the lender only gave you credit on the loan for the $74k market value it put on the Form 1099-A, which means that is the amount realized in the sale. Your gain or loss is determined by subtracting your adjusted basis from that amount. If you have a loss and this was your personal residence that loss is not deductible. But at least you'd have no tax due on the home.
If the remaining debt from the loan after the foreclosure was canceled/forgiven then the amount that is forgiven/discharged is taxable income to you unless an exception applies. LdiJ mentioned the two most common exceptions: the one for discharge of debt on a personal residence and the insolvency exception. The lender is supposed to send you a Form 1099-C when that happens. If you didn't get a Form 1099-C but know for certain that the lender discharged the remaining debt, you still need to report that discharge. Otherwise, you wait to see if you get the Form 1099-C before dealing with that part of it.
See IRS publication 4681 for all the details of reporting a foreclosure.
I disagree that the "sale" of the home should be reported as a gain or loss if this was their personal residence. I was under the assumption from his wording, that it was his personal residence. I would agree that one would report the "sale" of the residence if it were a rental property or an investment property.