How much Will You Have To Pay In Capital Gains When you Sell
Your Coronado Cays Homes?
When your Coronado Cays home is your principal residence,
and you are selling it, the basic tax rule is that you can exclude gains of up
to $250,000 if you are a single taxpayer and $500,000 if you are a married
taxpayer filing jointly, provided the Coronado Cays home was your primary
residence in at least two of the preceding five years. This exclusion can be
used once every two years. While this rule seems fairly straightforward, there
are a number of special situations to keep in mind:
- Your gain also includes deferred gains from the sale of
previous homes.
Under previous tax law, you could sell your home and defer any gains by
purchasing a home of equal or higher value within a certain time period. Gains
could continue to be deferred as you bought and sold homes. Under current tax
law, when you sell your current home, you must recognize those deferred gains
as well as the gain on your current home. If your total gain exceeds $500,000
for joint filers or $250,000 for single filers, you would owe capital gains tax
on the excess.
- You did not live in the home for at least two of the preceding
five years.
If you are forced to move due to employment changes, health reasons, or
unforeseen circumstances, you can prorate the exclusion amount. For example, if
a married couple owns and uses their principal residence for one year and then
sells it because of a job change, they can exclude $250,000 of gain (one-half
of the exclusion amount of $500,000). To qualify for prorating the exclusion,
the Internal Revenue Service has indicated that unforeseen circumstances can
include divorce, death, multiple births from the same pregnancy, becoming
eligible for unemployment compensation, a change in employment status making
you unable to pay household costs, damage to your home from a natural or
manmade disaster or from an act of war or terrorism, and the condemnation or
seizure of the property. There is a safe harbor rule that assumes a change in
employment is the primary reason for your move if your new job is more than 50
miles farther from the home you sold than your prior job. The change in
employment can apply to anyone who lives in the household.
- Your spouse dies and you sell the home after the year of
his/her death.
Starting the year after your spouse's death, you must start filing as a single
taxpayer. If you sell your home after that, you are limited to a $250,000
exclusion. However, if the home was jointly owned and you inherit your spouse's
share, the basis of your spouse's share will be stepped up to market value at
the date of his/her death.
Even if you file a joint return, each party receives a $250,000 exclusion when
both individuals own a home. If one spouse has a large gain on his/her house,
however, the couple may want to live in the home for at least two years. Then,
if the sale occurs more than two years after the sale of the first house, the
couple will be eligible for the full $500,000 exclusion.
If you sell your principal residence prior to becoming divorced, you will be
eligible for the $500,000 exclusion. However, if only one spouse owns the home
after the divorce, the exclusion will be reduced to a $250,000 limit. In the
situation where both parties retain ownership but one party moves out, make the
arrangement a condition of the divorce decree. Then, when the home is sold, the
$500,000 exclusion will apply, even though one of the parties did not live in
the home in two of the preceding five years.
- Part of your home is used for business.
You no longer have to allocate the gain between home and business use
(including a home office or rental of a portion of your home) when selling your
home, as long as the portion used for business is part of your main dwelling
unit. Thus, all of your gain is eligible for exclusion. Previously, you had to
allocate the gain between the home and business use portions, paying taxes on
the gain attributable to the business use. If the business use portion is
separate from your main dwelling unit, such as a converted detached garage, you
must still allocate between business and home usage. In all cases, you still have
to pay tax on the portion of the gain related to post-May 6, 1997 depreciation
deductions. That gain is taxed as unrecaptured Section 1250 gain, subject to a
maximum tax rate of 25%.
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