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Selling Your Home?
Here Are a Few Tips
Tax and Financial News
March 2007
Selling Your Home?
Here Are a Few Tips
Wherever the process ranks in terms of the level of stress youâre feeling, it certainly can be a hassle. There are, however, a few good tax breaks that could reduce that level quite a bit.
To begin with, letâs take a look at the rules about recognizing (or not recognizing) a gain on the sale of your home. As a general rule, you can exclude up to $250,000 ($500,000 if you are married filing jointly) of any gain on the sale of your primary residence. The calculation of the gain is rather simple: you take the sales price of your home, less any expenses (like commissions, closing costs, etc.) and subtract your basis in the home. The basis is the amount you originally paid for the home, including closing costs, plus the costs of any improvements.
Well, okay, that was simple - but a simple tax law is an oxymoron! The first hitch to âthe simple wayâ is that you must have lived in the home for two out of the last five years. Under normal circumstances, this particular legal wrinkle is not that difficult to meet - the average person resides in their home for about 7 years.
As it turns out, however, there are actually a good number of people who move before living in their home for two years. For this reason, Congress provided some exceptions to the general rule. If you do move before meeting the two-year requirement because of a change in employment, a change in health, or "unforeseen circumstances," you can qualify to exclude a portion of the $250,000 exemption. Example: you move after living in your home for 12 months, so you would divide 12 by 24 months and multiply it by $250,000.
For taxpayers who become physically or mentally unable to care for themselves, after living in their home for at least one year, the period of time during which they stay in a nursing home will be counted as if they had lived in their own home. Say your elderly relative lives in their home for one year, then must be moved to a nursing home. After residing in that care facility for one year, the two year requirement will have been met.
Do you use part of your home for business purposes? At one time, the business use of your home would cause major headaches, but the gain recognition law is very simple now. Say you use a room in your home as an office and you deduct $10,000 of depreciation as a home office deduction. If you sell the home for a $250,000 gain, all you will be required to include in income is the $10,000 in depreciation you deducted. Note: at one time, you would have been required to recognize a pro-rata portion of the gain in income.
Letâs switch gears a moment and assume you moved from a previous residence two years ago and turned it into a rental property. Common sense would lead you to believe that, if you sell the home for a gain, the whole gain is taxable. After all, you are then selling a business asset, not your home.
The good news is that, if you meet the two-out-of-five-year primary residence requirement, you can exclude the portion of the gain that isnât attributable to depreciation. Home builders often build a home, live in it for two years, and then sell it to realize a non-taxable gain.
What we have discussed in this article are some guidelines - and major exceptions - to recognizing gains on the sale of a primary residence. There are also some exceptions that apply in limited circumstances, and even some of those weâve discussed have a few quirks that could trip you up. In addition, people in the process of divorce need to be careful how and when they sell a marital home. In order to prevent turning a tax-free gain into a taxable one, itâs wise to discuss your situation with your financial planner or CPA. Donât have a CPA? Give us a call. Weâll be glad to help.
Have a great St. Patrickâs Day.
These articles are intended to provide general resources for the tax and accounting needs of small businesses and individuals. Service2Client LLC is the author, but is not engaged in rendering specific legal, accounting, financial or professional advice. Service2Client LLC makes no representation that the recommendations of Service2Client LLC will achieve any result. The NSAD has not reviewed any of the Service2Client LLC content. Readers are encouraged to contact their CPA regarding the topics in these articles.
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