![]() |
|
The Tax Implications of Selling Your Home: Homeowners can realize significant tax benefits on the sale of their home. Careful planning is the key to keeping most of the profit from the sale of your residence. Under current law, a married couple filing a joint return can exclude from income up to $500,000 of the gain made on the sale of their principal residence. For a single person, the amount of tax-free gain can be up to $250,000. The magnitude of this tax break makes it critical that you plan your home sale carefully to ensure that you qualify. In the past, you were only eligible for a tax break if you rolled the gain realized on the home you sold into your next residence and the sales price of the residence sold exceeded the cost of the new residence. The new provision is more generous in other ways, too. Now, in addition to the $500,000/$250,000 exclusion, you no longer have to wait until you are 55 years old, to elect to exclude all or part of the gain nor are you limited to taking advantage of this tax break only and you can take advantage of this tax break more than once in your lifetime. In fact, the exclusion rules apply even if you previously took a "once-in-a-lifetime" exclusion of income on capital gains resulting from the sale of your residence. QUALIFYING FOR THE EXCLUSION: WHAT IF YOU HAVE TO MOVE SOONER? CALCULATING YOUR GAIN: Unfortunately, if your gain exceeds the exclusion amount, there is no way to avoid a tax bill. Rolling over your gain into a new residence is no longer an option. You must report your non-excludable gain on your tax return and compute your tax bill at the long-term capital gains rate, which, for most taxpayers, is 15 percent. CONSULT WITH A TAX PROFESSIONAL: Source: Money Management is a column on personal finance prepared and distributed by CPAs and state CPA societies. Although current at the time of distribution, any information included in this article may be subject to change. (AKPsi e-Bulliten 9-02-2004)
|