 |
Home :: Attorneys :: Dorothy L. Korszen :: November 2008
Law Change Alert: IRS Limits Income Tax Exclusion On Capital Gains
From Homestead Property Sale
By: DOROTHY L.
KORSZEN
November, 2008
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has long offered an income tax
exclusion from capital gains on the sale of homestead property: a
single person could exclude up to $250,000 of capital gains from
taxable income -- $500,000 if married and filing a joint return --
when he or she sold the primary residence if he or she had owned and
used the property for two years out of the last five years.
Internal Revenue Code § 121.
To qualify, the taxpayers must have
sold their principal residence (read: the home where they spent the
majority of time), and they must have owned and used that property as
their principal residence for two of the last five years. If the seller
met the IRS’s rules, they would not pay capital gains tax on $250,000 of
gain ($500,000 if they are married and file a joint income tax return)
upon the sale of their primary residence.
This year, Congress passed the Housing
Assistance Tax Act of 2008, P.L. 110-289. This Act limits the exclusion
for homestead property sold after December 31, 2008, for certain periods
of “nonqualified use.” Nonqualified use is any time during the last two
out of five years when the property was not used as the taxpayer’s
primary residence.
Often, investors or vacationers visit
beautiful, sunny Florida, purchase property here, and use it as
investment property or vacation home. Later, perhaps after retirement,
they may move to Florida for good and convert the property to their
primary residence. This new restriction may limit the exclusion from
income tax on capital gains realized from such sales.
For sales after December 31, 2008, the
two-out-of-five rule will not be considered met for periods of
nonqualified use. Subject to some restrictions, IRS rules allocate gain
to periods of nonqualified use based on the ratio of nonqualified use
time to the total time the taxpayer has owned the property. To
illustrate:
Ratio for Nonqualified Use =
Nonqualified Use Time
Time Property was Owned by Taxpayer
Both the prior law and these new
provisions include exceptions for periods of temporary absence (not to
exceed an aggregate of two years) due to change of employment, health
conditions, or unforeseen circumstances as may be specified by the
Secretary of the IRS. In addition, under the new provisions, there is
an exception from nonqualified use time for any portion of the five year
period that falls after the date that the taxpayer or the taxpayer’s
spouse stopped using the property as a principal residence. It is
expected that the IRS will allow time for nonqualified use to be
expressed in days or months as it is for the two-out-of-five year
calculation.
As an illustration of these new
provisions, say a single person bought a house in 2009 for $400,000,
then used it as rental property for two years, after which he converted
it to his principal residence. After two years he moves out, and then a
year later he sells the home for $700,000. In this example, he has
realized a $300,000 gain, he has used this property as his primary
residence for two of the last five years, and he has owned the property
for five years. Under the old law, he would have been able to exclude
paying income tax on $250,000 of the capital gain because he had owned
and used the property as his principal residence for two out of the last
five years.
Under the new law, 40% of the $300,000
gain ($120,000), representing his 2 years of “nonqualified” use as a
rental property, divided by the five years he has owned the property,
would not be allowed as an income tax exclusion from capital gain tax,
leaving the remaining $180,000 gain as an allowable exclusion. So, this
taxpayer would pay capital gains taxes on an additional $70,000 of gain,
at the current long term capital gains rate of 15%, for a tax due in the
amount of $10,500.
Another example of nonqualified use
could be the time a buyer spends remodeling a property before moving in
and making it his primary residence. If, instead of renting the
property to tenants, the taxpayer in the prior example was remodeling
the home for the first two years, the same result would apply.
The earlier IRS rule and these new
changes include several exceptions and additional provisions. Your tax
advisor and your attorney can advise you how this law will apply to
capital gains on the sale of your home to ensure that you do not face an
unexpected surprise in your tax bill.
Our e-newsletters are on a wide range of informative
legal topics.
If you have received this e-mail by accident,
please e-mail us at info@farr.com and we will take
you off our confidential e-mail list.
Statement required by U.S. Treasury Department: To the extent this message contains tax advice, the U.S. Treasury Department requires us to inform you that any advice in this letter is not intended or written by our firm to be used, and cannot be used by any taxpayer, for the purpose of avoiding any penalties that may be imposed under the Internal Revenue Code. Advice from our firm relating to Federal tax matters may not be used in promoting, marketing or recommending any entity, investment plan or arrangement to any taxpayer.
|
 |
 |