Part 5: NJ Divorce Tax Traps That Cost Thousands

Avoid costly tax mistakes when dividing vacation homes and rental properties in NJ divorce. Learn about capital gains, depreciation recapture, and more.

Divorce Lawyer

Divorce Attorney

New Jersey Divorce

Post Divorce

high net worth divorce This is Part 5 of our series on dividing vacation homes and rental properties in New Jersey divorce. By now, we’ve discussed classification, valuation, and settlement options, but even a “fair” agreement on paper can produce an unfair result after taxes. Real estate is uniquely tax-sensitive, and overlooking capital gains, depreciation, basis, or passive losses can dramatically alter the true value of a settlement. In this section, we examine the tax issues that can quietly shift thousands, or even tens of thousands of dollars from one spouse to the other.

Two settlement options can look equal on paper, but be wildly different after taxes. Real estate is especially tax-sensitive.

Here are the big tax themes that often come up with vacation homes and rental properties in NJ divorces:

A) Transfers Between Spouses and Basis Issues

In many divorce-related transfers, a spouse who receives a property may also receive the original tax basis. That matters later when selling, because basis affects capital gains.

B) Capital Gains and Depreciation Recapture (Rentals)

Rental properties often include depreciation taken during ownership. When the property is sold, depreciation may be “recaptured,” creating a tax hit that surprises people.

C) Primary Residence Exclusion vs. Second Homes

A primary residence can qualify for capital gain exclusions if IRS requirements are met.

Vacation homes usually don’t —unless they were used as a primary residence for the required period.

D) Passive Losses, Suspended Losses, and Carry-forwards

Rental real estate can generate paper losses that are “suspended” under passive activity rules. In divorce, who gets the property—and who gets the benefit of any suspended losses—can matter.

E) Property Taxes, Mortgage Interest, and Deductions

Who claims what, and when, should be coordinated with the settlement terms—especially if you are separating mid-year.

Best practice:

In complex property cases, legal strategy and tax strategy should align. A settlement that ignores tax realities can become expensive later.

Practical Safeguards for Real Estate Portfolio Divorces

If your divorce involves vacation homes, rentals, or multiple properties, consider these steps early:

Document everything:

deeds, closing statements, mortgage statements, HELOC records Gather rental records:

leases, rent rolls, bank deposits, expense receipts Confirm ownership and title:

individual vs. joint vs. LLC ownership Clarify management roles:

who collects rent, who approves repairs, who talks to tenants Get accurate valuations:

appraisal(s) and income analysis where appropriate Plan for refinance or sale:

build deadlines and enforcement into the agreement Address ongoing expenses:

taxes, insurance, maintenance, capital repairs Why This Matters in Somerset and Hunterdon County Divorces Real estate values and rental demand vary widely across Somerset and Hunterdon County communities. A fair plan must account for:

local market conditions property-specific rental realities carrying costs that can differ dramatically by township the financial feasibility of keeping versus selling Whether you’re protecting a long-built portfolio or trying to secure a stable post-divorce financial future, the details matter.

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