Loan proceeds are not included in income when received because there is an offsetting obligation to repay. However, if the debt is cancelled in part or full in a foreclosure proceeding, you will have COD income equaling the difference between the unpaid amount of the debt and the FMV of the property you transfer to the lender or a third party to discharge that debt. For example, if your debt prior to foreclosure was $200,000 and the FMV of the property was $170,000, you would have $30,000 of COD income.
Note: If you borrow money from a friend or relative and he or she cancels all or part of the debt, the cancellation often is treated as a gift from the lender to you. Gifts, including gifts of cancelled debts, are excludible from income. However, the cancellation of debt by a commercial lender is not a gift.
Can the amount of COD income be affected by other liabilities relating to the property?
The existence of other liabilities, such as property taxes, can either increase or reduce the amount of your COD income. For example, there may be unpaid property taxes that are treated as imposed on you for federal tax purposes. If you have not provided funds to pay the property taxes, the taxes generally either remain as unpaid charges against the property after foreclosure or must be satisfied from the sales proceeds from the foreclosed property prior to any application of such proceeds to satisfaction of the debt. The unpaid liabilities reduce the amount of the FMV of the property that is available for satisfaction of the debt and must be taken into account in computing the amount of COD income.
For example, suppose your debt prior to foreclosure was $200,000 and the FMV of the property was $170,000, but you had $10,000 of unpaid property taxes. In this situation, because the FMV of the property available to satisfy the debt would be only $160,000 ($170,000 FMV less $10,000 unpaid taxes), the COD income would be $40,000 ($200,000 debt less $160,000 FMV).
On the other hand, if you pay property taxes that for federal income tax purposes are treated as imposed on the owner of the property, this may reduce the amount of your cancelled debt income. Thus, if you paid $10,000 of property taxes that for federal income tax purposes are imposed on the owner of the property after the foreclosure, your FMV would be $180,000 ($170,000 plus $10,000) and your COD income would be $20,000 ($200,000 debt less $180,000 FMV).