Tax season is one of my least favorite times of the year. They run all these television ads about all the great purchases you can make with your fat refund, but in reality, you spend hours with a calculator and a pile of crinkled receipts only to find you owe Uncle Sam. No one knows the pain of tax season more than a home seller who has to pay a capital gains on a house sale. The high sales price you were once elated about receiving- it turns out the IRS wants a piece too. So, what can you do to minimize or avoid capital gains on a house sale?
According to the IRS, almost everything you own can be considered a capital asset. Your house is no exception. If you sell something for more than your “basis”, or what you paid for it, the difference is a capital gain. Those capital gains have to be reported on your taxes as income.
What would you do with an extra 16 hours?
Spend more time on the things that matter most.
Luckily, no. The IRS is pretty nice when it comes to capital gains on real estate, allowing you to potentially exclude up to $250,000 of gains if you’re single and $500,000 if you’re married and filing jointly. But, hold on. You’re thinking to yourself that you have nothing to worry about, but there’s more.
That exclusion only applies if you meet a certain set of criteria. If any one of the following criteria is true, you’re subject to be taxed on the entire gain.
Let’s look at an example. You bought your home in 2018 for $230,000. It turns out you do, for whatever weird reason, want to live as close to your in-laws as possible. You decide to sell it the next year (in the best market ever) for $400,000. The $170,000 that you made would be taxable because you resided there for under two years.
Remember that “basis” we mentioned back in the definition of capital gains tax? Well, here’s where that comes in handy. It’s not just the amount you purchased the home for, but includes a litany of other fees and expenses for your home. If you made any additions or improvements that increased the value of the property (not including ordinary maintenance), those can be counted towards the basis. Maybe you added a deck, a fence for Fido, and did a HGTV number on your kitchen in the year that you lived there. Save your receipts.
Another thing to hang onto is the closing statement you received when you closed on the home. Things like recording fees and other costs can be used towards the adjusted cost basis and help you minimize capital gains tax on a house sale.
Back to our example, you paid $230,000 for the home originally, but you have receipts for $150,000 worth of additions, improvements and costs that increase your basis. Then only $20,000 of your gain would be taxable.
If you’re not sure whether you qualify for the exemption, you can contact a professional, such as a CPA. There are other considerations as well, like if you were forced to move due to illness, work, or an unforeseeable event (Moving in next door to your in-laws probably doesn’t count here) you may be exempt from the tax. If you used a 1031 exchange or are subject to an expatriation tax, it could also change how your capital gains are treated under the tax code.
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If you find that your capital gains on your house sale are fully taxable because you’re not eligible for the exemption and you’re unable to show your cost basis is as much as you sold for, it’s time to pay up. You’ll need to determine which capital gains tax rate applies- short-term rates or long-term rates. This is where your time in the house really matters. If it’s under a year, you’ll find the short term rates are much higher. Typically your ordinary income tax rate vs 0-20% for a long-term capital gains tax.
Know the tax law, or hire someone that does. Before you sell, make sure you can qualify under the criteria for the exemption, or calculate your cost basis to know exactly how much gain you’re likely to be taxed on. Don’t wait until the dreaded tax season comes and find out you’re not getting that fat refund after all.