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Filing your taxes

Casualty and Theft Losses

Claiming disaster losses on your taxes

A casualty loss is the loss or damage of property from a presidentially declared disaster. 

Can I claim casualty and theft loss deductions on my tax return?

The TCJA changed these rules about casualty losses. Between the 2018 and the 2025 tax years, the ability to claim any theft losses and every casualty loss has been eliminated. However, you can still deduct qualified disaster-related casualty losses if they occur within a federally declared disaster area – like the aftermath of a flood, fire, hurricane, or tornado. To calculate the deduction during this time, you do not have to itemize deductions and subtract $100 per loss and 10% of AGI. Instead, subtract $500 from each major disaster and add the loss to your standard deduction if you aren’t itemizing deductions.

Tip/Help

There is a special way to claim casualty losses if you live in a federally declared major disaster area for the period of January 1, 2018, through December 31, 2025. Those losses can be added to your standard deduction after subtracting $500.

Prepare for a potential disaster loss now.

Make an inventory list of all the items in your home, or video all your belongings inside and the outside of your home and your vehicles, or do both. Make sure you either save a copy by:

  • Uploading the video and/or inventory list to a cloud storage account,

  • Giving it to a trusted family member or friend

  • Putting it in a safety deposit box in a different area

Make sure your insurance is up to date, and be sure to have a go-bag ready. This is a waterproof bag with important documents such as birth certificates, Social Security cards, marriage licenses, passports, and even divorce decrees. There are many other papers that you can put into this go-bag, but most can easily be accessed via an online account such as your insurance information.

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Tip/Help

You can only deduct your casualty losses that occur in a federally declared disaster area.  Theft losses are no longer deductible. This new law currently expires 12/31/2026.

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