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New Federal Tax Rules Clarify Capital Gains Exclusions
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After nearly three years of uncertainty, the IRS has now delivered the answers to questions that have bedeviled home sellers, Realtors and professional tax advisers. In year-end regulations, the IRS clarified its rules on capital gains exclusions for profits on home sales. The largest category of people affected are
those who sell their homes prior to the standard two-year holding period
required for the maximum capital gains exclusions of $250,000 (single
filers) and $500,000 (married, joint filers). The standard rules allow
sellers to exclude up to those maximum amounts of sale profits provided
they have owned and used their property as a principal residence for an
aggregate two out of the five years preceding the sale. Any profits beyond
the exclusion amounts are taxed at capital gains rates.
For taxpayers who sell after ownership and
use of less than two years, Congress created a partial exclusion or
shelter back in 1997-1998: You can claim a portion of the maximum
exclusion if you sell early because of a change in employment, a change in
health, or because of "unforeseen circumstances." For example, a
single homeowner who sold his property for a profit after just one year
because of a corporate transfer could claim one half of the full $250,000
standard exclusion--$125,000.
In the absence of formal regulatory
guidance from the IRS interpreting employment change, health change and
"unforeseen circumstances," many taxpayers have been reluctant
to use the partial exclusion. The IRS itself warned taxpayers not to claim
"unforeseen circumstances" on their returns until the agency
itself spelled out precisely what circumstances qualify.
Now the IRS has done so with interim rules,
opening the door to partial exclusion claims for tax year 2002 and any
prior year's returns where a refund may be available under the new rules.
(For such situations, taxpayers can file for refunds using Form 1040X.)
On
"unforeseen circumstances," the IRS lists seven major categories
that create a "safe harbor" that automatically makes the claim
eligible:
Death of the
taxpayer, a spouse, a co-owner or any member of the taxpayer's
household.
Divorce or
legal separation.
A job loss
that results in eligibility for unemployment compensation.
A change in
employment that leaves the taxpayer unable to pay the mortgage or
basic living expenses.
Multiple
births from the same pregnancy;
Damage to the
residence resulting from a natural or man-made disaster, or an act of
war or terrorism.
Condemnation,
seizure or other involuntary conversion of the property. The regulations also give the IRS
commissioner the discretion to determine other circumstances that qualify
as unforeseen.
On employment changes that trigger early
sales, the IRS rule is straightforward: "A home sale will be
considered related to a change in employment if a qualified person's new
place of work is at least 50 miles farther from the old home than the old
workplace was from that home." This is the same distance rule that
applies for the moving expense deduction. The employment change must occur
during the taxpayer's ownership and use of the home as a residence.
The new rules allow a partial
exclusion for health if "the primary reason is related to a disease,
illness or injury" of the home seller or member of the household. If
a physician recommends a change in residence for health reasons, that will
be sufficient to claim the exclusion.
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Rod Rawlings (941) 713-4446 |
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Rod Rawlings, Broker, practices equal opportunity housing and maintains active membership with the Manatee, Florida and National Associations of Realtors®. Licensed to practice real estate in the State of Florida. |
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