Tell The IRS Why You Are Selling, And You May Get A Break On Your Taxes
Being a crime victim is usually no cause for celebration. But there is at
least one consolation: The IRS may give you a tax break when you sell your Coronado
bayfront condos.
Most people who sell their Coronado bayfront condos after having owned it
for at least two years don't have to pay federal taxes on their gain. A sale in
less than two years after the purchase, however, often triggers some sort of
tax hit. But even owners of Coronado bayfront condos who need to sell in less
than two years may qualify for special relief if they had to sell because of
"unforeseen circumstances," according to a 1997 law.
While those words can be hard to define, a recent survey of Internal Revenue
Service rulings indicates the agency generally has been "very
sympathetic" to taxpayers in cases of unexpected distress -- such as crime
victims -- says Gail Levin Richmond, a law professor at Nova Southeastern
University Law Center in Davie, Fla.
- Looking for ways to protect gains from home
sales may seem counterintuitive in view of the current housing slump. But while
prices generally have flattened or fallen in many parts of the country in
recent months, home values in many markets are still significantly higher than
they were two years earlier. Sellers may still be able to reap handsome
short-term gains, even if their home doesn't fetch the price they once had
dreamed about, says David Stiff, chief economist at Fiserv Lending Solutions in
Cambridge, Mass., a unit of Fiserv Inc.
- The general rule is that you can exclude a gain
of as much as $500,000 if filing a joint return with your spouse, or as much as
$250,000 if single or filing separately, under certain circumstances. To be
eligible for this full exclusion, you typically must have owned your home, and
lived in it as your primary residence, for at least two of the five years prior
to the sale. This rule applies only to your main residence, not a vacation
home.
- Even if you can't meet the two-year tests, you
still may be eligible for a reduced exclusion if you had to sell because of
"a change in place of employment," health reasons or those
"unforeseen circumstances." An IRS publication offers a general
definition of unforeseen circumstances as "the occurrence of an event that
you could not reasonably have anticipated before buying and occupying your main
home."
But how does the IRS react when presented with specific taxpayer queries? In
the latest issue of a quarterly publication of the American Bar Association tax
section, Ms. Richmond summarizes 10 so-called private-letter rulings since 2004
in which the IRS agreed that taxpayers had sold in less than two years because
of "unforeseen circumstances." (The IRS rulings don't identify any of
the taxpayers or give dollar amounts.)
Technically, a private-letter ruling applies only to the taxpayer who
requested it and isn't supposed to be used or cited as precedent. But such
rulings are considered important anyway by lawyers and accountants because they
offer a window into the IRS's thinking.
In one ruling,
a taxpayer had to provide a separate bedroom in order to adopt an orphan child
from another country. In another ruling, released recently, marriage was the issue.
Taxpayers A and B each had purchased a home. Later, they met, got married and
bought a new, larger home for their blended family. They each sold their prior
homes. Taxpayer B had owned it less than two years. The IRS said the occurrence
of the marriage and the need to "suitably accommodate their blended
family" represented "unforeseen circumstances."
Crime victims often win the IRS's sympathy. In one case, a
taxpayer was leaving home when an assailant held a gun to the taxpayer's head
and forced the taxpayer into the taxpayer's car. "The assailant was
agitated, unpredictable, and made repeated threats" on the taxpayer's
life, the IRS said in the ruling. For about an hour, the taxpayer was forced,
at gunpoint, to drive the assailant to several locations, including an ATM, and
withdraw money for the crook. The IRS concluded that the taxpayer's main reason
for selling that home was an unforeseen circumstance.
In another
case, two taxpayers moved from one state to another, bought a home and then
became aware of "various criminal activities" in their new
neighborhood. Their son was assaulted and threatened, and one of the taxpayers
was assaulted by several neighbors, resulting in a trip to the hospital
emergency room. Because of the assault and general nature of the neighborhood,
the two taxpayers sold their home and bought a new one. The IRS agreed the "primary
reason" for the sale was an unforeseen circumstance.
Calculating the reduced maximum exclusion can often be tricky. Here's a
simple example: Suppose you and your spouse sold your home at a $10,000 profit
after having owned and lived in it for only one year. You sold because of a
move from New York to California to take a new job, or some other unforeseen
circumstance. Since the exclusion amount is pro-rated, you typically would
qualify for half the maximum exclusion (since you had owned the home for half of
the two-year period) and thus would be able to exclude your entire $10,000
gain. (See IRS Publication
523 for more details.)
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