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Understanding Capital Gains
in Real Estate
When you sell a stock, you owe taxes on your gain—the difference
between what you paid for the stock and what you sold it for. The
same is true with selling a home (or a second home), but there are
some special considerations.
How to Calculate Gain
In real estate, capital gains are based not on what you paid for the
home, but on its adjusted cost basis. To calculate this:
1. Take the purchase price of the home: This is the sale price, not
the amount of money you actually contributed at closing.
2. Add Adjustments:
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Cost of the
purchase—including transfer fees, attorney fees, inspections,
but not points you paid on your mortgage.
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Cost of
sale—including inspections, attorney's fee, real estate
commission, and money you spent to fix up your home just prior
to sale.
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Cost of
improvements—including room additions, deck, etc. Note here that
improvements do not include repairing or replacing something
already there, such as putting on a new roof or buying a new
furnace.
3. The total of
this is the adjusted cost basis of your home.
4. Subtract this adjusted cost basis from the amount you sell your
home for. This is your capital gain.
A Special Real Estate Exemption for
Capital Gains
Since 1997, up to $250,000 in capital gains ($500,000 for a married
couple) on the sale of a home is exempt from taxation if you meet
the following criteria
You have lived in the home as your principal residence for two out
of the last five years.
You have not sold or exchanged another home during the two years
preceding the sale.
Also note that as of 2003,
you may also qualify for this exemption if you meet what the IRS
calls "unforeseen circumstances" such as job loss, divorce, or
family medical emergency.
Reprinted from
REALTOR® Magazine (http://www.realtor.org/realtormag)
with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.
Copyright 2005. All rights reserved."
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