Tenant-Owned Home Evictions: Financial and Tax Implications for MHP Operators
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TITLE: Tenant-Owned Home Evictions: Financial and Tax Implications for MHP Operators
SLUG: tenant-owned-home-evictions-financial-tax-implications
PRIMARY_KW: mobile home park TOH eviction taxes
CONTENT:
Tenant-Owned Home Evictions: Financial and Tax Implications for MHP Operators
Evicting a tenant-owned home (TOH) resident from your mobile home park is fundamentally different from evicting a tenant in an apartment building — and the financial and tax implications reflect that difference. When you evict a TOH tenant, you are not evicting someone from property you own. You own the land. They own the home sitting on it. That distinction controls everything about how you account for the event, how you handle the home afterward, and how the eviction affects your books and your NOI presentation.
Most general-practice accountants who are not familiar with the MHP structure mishandle TOH evictions on the books. They either ignore the home entirely (correct, if done for the right reason) or attempt to account for it as an asset recovery (wrong). Getting this right matters — not just for accuracy, but for the way your financials look to lenders and future buyers.
The Ownership Structure: Why It Changes Everything
In a tenant-owned home situation, the manufactured home is the tenant’s personal property. You, as the park operator, own the land beneath the home — the lot — and you charge the tenant lot rent for the right to position their home on your lot. The home itself is not on your books, not your asset, and not your responsibility under the basic TOH arrangement.
This is in contrast to a park-owned home (POH), where you own both the land and the home. POH eviction returns an asset to you — the home. You get it back, you can re-rent it or sell it, and it remains on your fixed asset schedule throughout the process. The accounting is completely different.
With a TOH eviction, there is no asset return. The home was never yours. When the tenant is evicted, the home remains the tenant’s property. You cannot sell it. You cannot take title to it. You cannot rent it to a new tenant. You must follow your state’s law on what happens to personal property left on your land by a former tenant.
What Happens to the Home After a TOH Eviction
After a successful TOH eviction, the former tenant’s home remains on your lot. Your options — and your obligations — depend on state law. Most states have statutory procedures governing abandoned personal property on leased land. The procedures typically require notice, a holding period, and either an opportunity for the tenant to remove the home or a process for the park to have it removed.
If the tenant removes the home voluntarily, the lot is cleared and can be re-rented to a new TOH tenant. This is the best outcome. If the tenant abandons the home — leaves it in place and does not respond to notice — the home may ultimately become subject to a state-law abandonment process that could allow the park to claim title, sell it, or arrange for demolition. The specifics vary significantly by state and this is an area where legal counsel familiar with your state’s MHP laws is essential. This guide addresses the financial and tax consequences, not the legal process — which is not legal advice.
The important financial point is this: during and after a TOH eviction, until the home is legally removed or title transferred under applicable state law, the home is not your asset. Do not put it on your books. Do not attempt to depreciate it. Do not treat the cleanup costs as asset acquisition costs.
Deductible Costs in a TOH Eviction
Even though a TOH eviction does not recover an asset, it does generate deductible costs. The following eviction-related expenditures are generally deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses for an MHP operator:
Legal costs. Attorney fees, court filing fees, and process server costs related to the eviction proceeding are deductible as legal and professional fees. Keep invoices from your eviction attorney with the file for each eviction case.
Court-ordered removal costs. If the court orders the home removed and you must arrange or pay for removal, the removal cost is a deductible expense — not a capital expenditure, because you are not acquiring or improving an asset. You are clearing a lot to restore its income-producing capacity.
Lot rehabilitation costs after eviction. Once the lot is cleared — either because the tenant moved the home, the home was removed under court order, or state law allowed disposal — you will typically incur costs to prepare the lot for a new tenant: leveling, filling utility hookup holes, removing old skirts or debris. These costs are expenses if they restore the lot to its prior condition. If you install new utility connections that represent improvements beyond what existed before, those improvements may need to be capitalized. The distinction follows the same repair versus CapEx framework that applies throughout the park.
Lost lot rent. The lot rent that was never collected from the evicted tenant is not a separate deduction — it was never income recognized on a cash basis return, so it was never included in taxable income and there is nothing to deduct. On an accrual basis return, the uncollected rent was recognized as income and can now be written off as a bad debt. Most MHP operators on cash basis will simply show lower income for the period when the lot was non-paying, without a separate bad debt deduction.
What Goes Back on the Books After the Lot Is Cleared
Once the lot is cleared and ready for a new tenant, it is simply a vacant lot available for lease. There is no asset to add to the books. The lot was always there; it was just occupied by someone else’s home. From a balance sheet perspective, nothing changes — the land value is what it was before.
If you invest in improvements to the cleared lot — new utility connections, landscaping, a concrete pad where none existed before — those improvements are capital expenditures that belong on the fixed asset schedule. They are not expenses, because they extend or improve the lot beyond its prior condition.
If you decide to acquire a home to place on the newly cleared lot — converting a TOH site to a POH site — the cost of the home is a new asset on the books, not a cost associated with the eviction. The eviction and the subsequent home acquisition are separate events with separate accounting treatment.
How TOH Eviction Patterns Affect NOI and Lender Presentation
A park with frequent TOH evictions has a problem that shows up in the financials in a specific way: high vacancy relative to market, elevated legal and eviction expense, and possibly a below-market occupancy rate that suppresses NOI and, by extension, appraised value.
When you present your financials to a lender or a prospective buyer, high eviction costs may be normalized out as non-recurring — a one-time legal and compliance event, not a run-rate expense. But if evictions are recurring — three, four, five per year — a sophisticated buyer will not normalize them out. They will treat them as a structural characteristic of the park’s tenant base and underwrite accordingly.
For this reason, the financial impact of TOH evictions is not just a tax and accounting question. It is a portfolio management question. A park with a high TOH eviction rate needs either a tenant quality improvement program or a strategic shift toward reducing the TOH concentration. Both are business decisions, but both have direct financial statement consequences that your MHP accountant needs to be accounting for correctly. Read our guide on presenting MHP financials to commercial lenders for how eviction patterns affect lender underwriting, and our overview of mobile home park NOI calculation for how vacancy from evicted lots feeds into your NOI.
Comparison Table: TOH Eviction vs. POH Eviction — Tax and Accounting Treatment
| Factor | TOH Eviction | POH Eviction |
|---|---|---|
| Who owns the home | Tenant (you never owned it) | Park (on your fixed asset schedule) |
| Asset recovery on eviction | None — vacant lot only | Home returned to park’s control |
| Depreciation impact | None — home was never on your schedule | Depreciation continues; home reclassified |
| Deductible eviction costs | Legal fees, removal, lot rehab | Legal fees, turnover repairs |
| Lost lot rent treatment (cash basis) | No deduction — never recognized as income | Same — never recognized on cash basis |
| Next step after eviction | Clear lot; re-rent to new TOH tenant or convert | Rehab home; re-rent or sell |
Can I depreciate a TOH tenant’s home if they abandon it on my lot?
Are the costs of removing a TOH home from my lot deductible?
Does unpaid lot rent from an evicted TOH tenant create a bad debt deduction?
How do I account for upgrading a TOH lot after the home is removed?
Should I convert evicted TOH lots to POH lots to improve occupancy?
TOH Evictions Affecting Your Books or Your NOI?
The MHP Accountant handles the financial and tax accounting of TOH and POH evictions correctly — and makes sure your NOI presentation reflects the right numbers for lenders and buyers. Schedule a call to review your current situation.
Schedule a Free 30-Minute Call
Call or text: 844-PARK-TAX | info@themhpaccountant.com
Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. State laws governing eviction of manufactured home residents and abandoned personal property vary significantly. Consult a qualified attorney in your state and a qualified tax professional for guidance on your specific situation.
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 →