This is an issue that has had me irritated for years. A landlord of commercial property wants to raise rents. The current tenant can't make the new rent and moves out. The property then remains vacant for months/years on end. Surely there must not be a tax benifit to the landlord. Can they really write off a vacancy?
I ask this because Copperfields used book store has not been replaced by another tenant. If there is somehow a tax benifit to having a vacancy instead of renting at the market rate then it amounts to a price support for commercial property. If that is the case I'm opposed to this intervention in the rental market. Its not the first time I've witnessed this. Having been an apartment manager for 13 years my job was to find good tenants and keep vacancies to an absolute minimum. You don't make money with frequent turnover.
Could someone please enlighten me.


I don't know the answer but I wouldn't be Surprised if that would be within a "Capital Gains Loss" tax deduction clause of some sort. 

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