Tax Considerations When Selling Your Home (Capital Gains Explained)
Understanding the Home Gain Exclusion when selling your home:
One of the largest tax breaks available to most individuals is the ability to exclude up to $250,000 ($500,000 married) in capital gains on the sale of your personal residence. Making the assumption that this gain exclusion will always keep you safe from tax can be a big mistake. Here is what you need to know if you’re thinking about selling your home this year.
Capital Gains Tax Rules When Selling Your Home
As long as you own and live in your home for two of the five years before selling your home, you qualify for this capital gain tax exclusion. In tax-speak you need to pass three hurdles:
- Main home. This tax term defines what a main home is. It can be a traditional home, a condo, a houseboat, or mobile home. Main home also means the place of primary residence when you own two or more homes.
- Ownership test. You must own your home during two of the past five years.
- Residence test. You must live in the home for two of the past five years.
Key Exceptions to the Home Sale Tax Exclusion
- You can pass the ownership test and the residence test at different times.
- You may only use the home gain exclusion once every two years.
- You and your spouse can be treated jointly OR separately depending on the circumstances.
When You May Owe Taxes on a Home Sale
- You have been in your home for a long time. The longer you live in your home the more likely you will have a large capital gain. Long-time homeowners should check to see if they have a capital gains tax problem prior to selling their home.
- You have old home gain deferrals. Prior to the current rules, home-gains could be rolled into the next home purchased. These old deferred gains reduce the cost of your current home and can result in capital gain exposure.
- Two homes into one. Often newly married couples with two homes have potential tax liability as both individuals may pass the required tests on their own property but not on their new spouse’s property. Prior to selling these individual homes, you may wish to create a plan of action that reduces your tax exposure.
- Selling a home after divorce. Property transferred as a result of a divorce is not deemed a sale of your home. However, if the ex-spouse that retains the home later sells the home, it may have an impact on the amount of gain exemption available.
- You are helping an older family member. Special rules apply to the elderly who move out of a home and move into assisted living and nursing homes. Prior to selling property it is best to review options and their related tax implications.
- You do not meet the five-year rule. In some cases you may be eligible for a partial gain exclusion if you are required to move for work, disability, or unforeseen circumstances.
- Other situations. There are a number of other exceptions to the home gain exclusion rules. This includes foreclosure, debt forgiveness, inheritance, and partial ownership.
Get Help With Home Sale Taxes
Selling a home is one of the biggest financial decisions you’ll make, and the tax implications can be complex. At Tax Advisors of Cary, we help homeowners understand capital gains rules, maximize exclusions, and reduce tax liability.
📞 Contact us today at 1 919 463 7588 to schedule a consultation and make sure you keep more of your home sale profit