If you sell your home, you might be able to pocket up to a half million dollars in gain from the sale without owing any federal income tax. How? By claiming the home sale gain exclusion. But various rules and limits apply, so it’s important to understand the ins and outs of this tax break.

Valuable tax savings

If you qualify, you can exclude up to $250,000 of gain — $500,000 if you’re married filing jointly — on the sale of your home from your income. The amount of gain is the difference between the sales price and your adjusted basis. Typically, adjusted basis is the amount paid for the home plus the cost of any home improvements. Therefore, it’s especially important to keep detailed records of improvements that could increase your basis.

To qualify for the exclusion, you must have owned and used the home as your principal residence for at least two of the five years prior to the sale. There’s no definitive definition of “principal residence” in the tax code. Generally, your principal residence is the place where you hang your hat most of the time and where you’ve established legal residency for other purposes.

Related Article: Understanding taxes on sales of real estate

The exclusion can’t be claimed for a second home. This may warrant a change in your living habits. For instance, if you spend seven months at a winter home in a warm climate and five months at a summer home, the winter home is considered to be your principal residence. So if you want to sell your summer home, you may first want to spend enough additional time there that it can qualify as your principal residence.

Additional home sale gain exclusion considerations

Here are some other key points about the home sale gain exclusion:

  • The exclusion isn’t allowed if you sold another qualified principal residence within the last two years.
  • Under the two-out-of-five-year rule, the years don’t have to be consecutive. Furthermore, you can meet the use and ownership requirements in different tax years.
  • To meet the use test, you must physically occupy the home, but short absences don’t count against you. Conversely, a longer absence, such as a one-year sabbatical by a college professor, doesn’t contribute to the time the home is used as your principal residence.
  • If you file a joint return, the maximum exclusion is available if 1) either spouse meets the ownership test, 2) each spouse meets the use test, and 3) neither spouse has elected the exclusion within the last two years. This is particularly significant if you’ve recently divorced or remarried.

If the home has been used for business rental or use — including use of a home office for which you’ve claimed a tax deduction — you must recapture depreciation deductions attributable to the period after May 6, 1997. The recaptured income is taxable at a maximum rate of 25%.

Related Article: Is your home office tax deductible? Here are the rules

Unforeseen circumstances

Even if you don’t meet the two-out-of-five-year rule, you may be eligible for a partial exclusion if you sell the home due to certain unforeseen circumstances, such as:

  • Death,
  • Health issues,
  • Divorce,
  • Loss of employment,
  • Workplace location change,
  • Multiple births from the same pregnancy, and
  • Damage from a disaster.

If a specific exception doesn’t apply, the IRS will examine the facts and circumstances of the case. The partial exclusion is equal to the available exclusion amount ($250,000 or $500,000, depending on your filing status) multiplied by the percentage of time for which you met the requirements.

Maximizing the tax benefits

The home sale gain exclusion is valuable enough that taking the steps necessary to ensure you meet the requirements can be well worth the effort. If you’re unsure whether your circumstances will qualify you for this tax break or what you can do to make the most of it, please contact us.

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DISCLAIMER

This blog post is designed to provide information about complex areas of tax law. The information contained in this blog post may change as a result of new tax legislation, Treasury Department regulations, Internal Revenue Service interpretations, or Judicial interpretations of existing tax law. This blog post is not intended to provide legal, accounting, or other professional services, and is provided with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting, or other professional services.

This blog post should not be used as a substitute for professional advice. If legal advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent tax advisor should be sought.