A second home, or a timeshare, used as a vacation home is a personal use capital asset. A gain on the sale is reportable income, but a loss is NOT deductible.
You may receive IRS Form 1099-S Proceeds from Real Estate Transactions for the sale of your vacation home. You would report the transaction on Form 8949 and Schedule D by entering the data on Form 1099-B Proceeds from Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions in the TaxAct® program.
To enter the sale of your vacation home in TaxAct:
If the result of the sale of your vacation home is a loss, then you will need to adjust the basis so no loss is reported. On the screen titled Investment Sales - Adjustment Code(s), select L - Other Non-Deductible Loss (including Personal Loss) from the drop-down list, and enter the adjustment amount equal to the loss.
If the second home was held for investment purposes, a loss on the sale would be deductible, so an adjustment would not be necessary. The sale of a second home held for investment can be entered using the steps above.
If the second home was used for rental purposes, or if you previously claimed depreciation on the property, the sale would be reported on IRS Form 4797 Sales of Business Property. The sale of a second home used for rental purposes would be entered in the TaxAct program within the applicable section of the Q&A (Schedule C, Schedule E, or Schedule F). See IRS Publication 527 Residential Rental Property for additional information.
See IRS Publication 544 Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets for more information regarding the sale of vacation homes.