How to Handle Eviction Costs on Your Mobile Home Park Taxes
How to Handle Eviction Costs on Your Mobile Home Park Taxes
Evictions are an unavoidable part of operating a mobile home park. Whether you’re dealing with chronic non-payment, lease violations, or abandonment, the process costs real money — and most of that money is deductible.
But the tax treatment of eviction-related costs isn’t as straightforward as it looks. The timing rules differ depending on your accounting method. How you handle unpaid rent depends entirely on whether you’re a cash-basis or accrual-basis taxpayer. And the documentation you keep today determines whether you can defend every deduction later.
This post covers everything an MHP owner needs to know about eviction costs, bad debt treatment, and how eviction patterns affect the financial picture you show lenders and buyers.
Which Eviction Costs Are Deductible?
The IRS allows a deduction for any ordinary and necessary business expense under IRC §162. Eviction proceedings — initiated to protect your business asset and enforce your lease agreement — qualify. Here’s a breakdown of every cost you’re likely to incur:
Attorney Fees
Legal fees paid to an attorney to handle an eviction proceeding are fully deductible as an ordinary business expense. This includes initial consultation fees specific to the case, drafting of notices, court representation, and any appeals. MHP eviction law is state-specific and often complex — if you’re using an attorney for your evictions, those fees belong on your tax return.
If your attorney handles a mix of eviction and non-eviction matters, request itemized billing so you can allocate the fees correctly.
Court Filing Fees
Filing fees paid to the court to initiate an eviction proceeding (unlawful detainer, dispossessory warrant, or whatever your state calls it) are deductible in the year paid. These are direct costs of enforcing your lease and protecting your property rights.
Process Server Costs
Fees paid to a process server or sheriff to serve notice on a tenant are deductible as a direct eviction cost. In states where the sheriff’s office handles service and charges a fee, that fee is treated the same way.
Locksmith Fees After Writ of Possession
Once you have a court-ordered writ of possession, the cost to change locks and secure the premises is deductible. This is a necessary step in regaining control of a business asset that was being used without authorization. Document the invoice and the date the writ was executed.
Lot and Unit Restoration Costs
After an eviction, the lot or POH frequently requires cleanup, repairs, or restoration before it can be re-rented. Here the rules split depending on the nature of the work:
- Cleaning costs — deductible as ordinary maintenance and repair
- Repairs that restore the property to its prior condition — deductible under the IRS tangible property regulations as repair and maintenance expenses
- Improvements that add value, adapt the property to a new use, or restore a major component — must be capitalized and depreciated, not expensed immediately
Most post-eviction restoration is routine cleanup and minor repairs — fully deductible. If you’re replacing an entire HVAC system or making significant structural improvements after a bad tenant trashes a POH, that’s a capital expenditure.
The Timing of Eviction Cost Deductions
When you deduct eviction costs depends on your accounting method — cash basis or accrual basis.
Cash-basis taxpayers deduct eviction costs when paid. If your attorney sends a bill in December and you pay it in January, it’s a next-year deduction. Simple and predictable.
Accrual-basis taxpayers deduct expenses when the liability is established and the amount is known with reasonable certainty — not necessarily when cash changes hands. If you receive a court judgment for attorney fees in December, the deduction occurs in December even if the invoice isn’t paid until January.
Most smaller MHP operators use cash-basis accounting. If you’re unsure which method your business uses, check with your CPA — switching methods requires IRS consent and has its own implications.
How Unpaid Rent Is Treated on Your Tax Return
This is where most MHP owners get confused — and where cash vs. accrual makes a dramatic difference.
Cash-Basis Taxpayers (Most MHP Operators)
If you’re on cash-basis, you only recognize income when you actually receive it. That means unpaid lot rent from a resident who never paid is simply never included in your income. You don’t need to “write it off” as a bad debt — you never recognized it as income in the first place.
This is the most common situation for MHP operators and eliminates the bad debt issue entirely. You didn’t get paid, you didn’t report the income, and there’s nothing to deduct.
Accrual-Basis Taxpayers
Accrual-basis taxpayers recognize income when it’s earned, not when it’s collected. That means if a resident owes $650 in lot rent for March, you recognized that $650 as income in March — even if they never paid it.
When it becomes clear the rent won’t be collected, accrual-basis taxpayers can claim a bad debt deduction under IRC §166. The key requirement: the debt must be “worthless.” This generally means you’ve exhausted collection efforts, the judgment is uncollectable, or the debtor has no assets. You can’t deduct the bad debt simply because the tenant is behind — it must be genuinely uncollectable.
Document your collection efforts: demand letters, phone records, and the final eviction outcome. If you obtained a judgment but the former tenant has no assets to collect from, that supports the worthlessness determination.
Cash-basis: No income recognized → no bad debt deduction needed.
Accrual-basis: Income recognized when earned → bad debt deduction available when debt is worthless under IRC §166.
For most MHP operators, cash-basis is simpler and eliminates this issue. Consult your CPA before switching methods.
Eviction Frequency and NOI Normalization
When you sell your MHP or refinance, buyers and lenders normalize your net operating income (NOI) by reviewing your trailing financial statements. Eviction costs show up in your operating expenses — and they tell a story.
A park with consistently high eviction-related legal fees signals one of several things to a buyer: a tenant quality problem, a lease enforcement problem, or a market-rate pricing problem. Any of those will result in a downward adjustment to the price they’re willing to pay.
This is why tracking and categorizing eviction costs separately from general legal fees matters. When you can show a buyer that eviction costs represent a manageable and declining expense — and that you’ve tightened your screening process — you can defend your NOI more effectively.
Tenant Turnover vs. Eviction: The Distinction That Matters
Not every vacancy results from an eviction, and the two should be tracked separately.
Voluntary turnover — a resident leaves at the end of a lease, moves out, or skips — creates vacancy but may not generate significant eviction costs. The lot becomes available for re-leasing without court involvement.
Eviction — a court-supervised removal — generates the legal fees, filing fees, and process costs described above. It also tends to generate higher restoration costs because the tenant left involuntarily.
On your internal reporting, track eviction costs as a separate line item under legal and professional expenses. This gives you visibility into the actual cost of your collection enforcement policy and allows you to present clean, credible financials to lenders and buyers.
| Cost Type | Deductible? | When Deducted (Cash Basis) | Documentation Needed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Attorney fees — eviction | Yes | Year paid | Itemized invoice, check/payment record |
| Court filing fees | Yes | Year paid | Court receipt |
| Process server fees | Yes | Year paid | Invoice and payment record |
| Locksmith after writ | Yes | Year paid | Invoice, date of writ execution |
| Lot/unit cleanup | Yes | Year paid | Invoice, before/after photos |
| Major improvements post-eviction | Capitalize | Depreciated over MACRS life | Invoice, depreciation schedule |
| Unpaid rent (cash basis) | No deduction needed | Never recognized as income | N/A |
| Unpaid rent (accrual basis) | Yes, when worthless | Year deemed worthless | Collection attempts documented |
Internal Links for MHP Tax Planning
Understanding eviction costs is just one piece of your MHP tax strategy. See also our guides on accounting for vacant lots, management fee deductibility, and passive activity rules for MHP owners.
Are attorney fees for MHP evictions tax deductible?
Do I need to write off unpaid rent as a bad debt if I’m a cash-basis taxpayer?
When can an accrual-basis MHP operator deduct unpaid rent as a bad debt?
Are post-eviction lot cleanup and repair costs deductible?
How do eviction costs affect NOI when selling my mobile home park?
Evictions Are Expensive. Are You Recovering Every Deduction?
From attorney fees to lot restoration, most MHP owners are not capturing the full deduction for their eviction costs. At The MHP Accountant®, we specialize exclusively in mobile home park tax returns — we know exactly where these deductions live and how to document them correctly.
Harry Shurek, EA | 844-PARK-TAX | info@themhpaccountant.com
Disclaimer: This content is provided for general educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax laws change frequently and individual circumstances vary. Consult a qualified tax professional before making any decisions based on this information. The MHP Accountant® provides tax services — not legal advice.
About the Author
Harry Shurek, EA
Harry Shurek is an Enrolled Agent and the founder of The MHP Accountant — the only CPA firm built exclusively for mobile home park owners. He specializes in MHP tax strategy, cost segregation, 1031 exchanges, entity structure, and exit planning for park investors nationwide. Learn more →