2000 Tax Help Archives  

Chapter 16 - Selling Your Home

Excluding the Gain

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You may qualify to exclude from your income all or part of any gain from the sale of your main home. This means that, if you qualify, you will not have to pay tax on the gain up to the limit described under Maximum Amount of Exclusion, next. To qualify, you must meet the ownership and use tests described later.

You can choose not to take the exclusion. In that case, you will have to pay tax on your entire gain.


Maximum Amount of Exclusion

You can exclude the entire gain on the sale of your main home up to:

  1. $250,000, or
  2. $500,000 if all of the following are true.

    1. You are married and file a joint return for the year.
    2. Either you or your spouse meets the ownership test.
    3. Both you and your spouse meet the use test.
    4. During the 2-year period ending on the date of the sale, neither you nor your spouse excluded gain from the sale of another home.


Reduced Maximum Exclusion

You can claim an exclusion, but the maximum amount of gain you can exclude will be reduced, if either of the following is true.

  1. You did not meet the ownership and use tests for a home you sold due to:

    1. A change in health,
    2. Place of employment, or
    3. Unforeseen circumstances, to the extent provided in regulations (as discussed below).
  2. Your exclusion would have been disallowed because of the rule described in More Than One Home Sold During 2-Year Period , later, except that you sold the home due to:

    1. A change in health,
    2. Place of employment, or
    3. Unforeseen circumstances, to the extent provided in regulations (as discussed below).

Use Worksheet 3 on page 13 to figure your reduced maximum exclusion.

Unforeseen circumstances. The IRS has not issued regulations defining unforeseen circumstances. You cannot claim an exclusion based on unforeseen circumstances until the IRS issues final regulations or other appropriate guidance.


More Than One Home Sold During 2-Year Period

You cannot exclude gain on the sale of your home if, during the 2-year period ending on the date of the sale, you sold another home at a gain and excluded all or part of that gain. If you cannot exclude the gain, you must include it in your income.

However, you can still claim an exclusion if you sold the home due to:

  1. A change in health,
  2. Place of employment, or
  3. Unforeseen circumstances, to the extent provided in regulations (as discussed above).

The maximum amount you can exclude is reduced. See Reduced Maximum Exclusion, earlier.


Ownership and Use Tests

To claim the exclusion you must meet the ownership and use tests. This means that during the 5-year period ending on the date of the sale, you must have:

  1. Owned the home for at least 2 years (the ownership test), and
  2. Lived in the home as your main home for at least 2 years (the use test).

Exception. If you owned and lived in the property as your main home for less than 2 years, you can still claim an exclusion if you sold the home due to a change in health or place of employment. The maximum amount you can claim will be reduced. See Reduced Maximum Exclusion , earlier.

Period of ownership and use. The required 2 years of ownership and use during the 5-year period ending on the date of the sale do not have to be continuous. You meet the tests if you can show that you owned and lived in the property as your main home for either 24 full months or 730 days (365 × 2) during the 5-year period ending on the date of sale. Short temporary absences for vacations or other seasonal absences, even if you rent out the property during the absences, are counted as periods of use. See Ownership and use tests met at different times, later.

Example. Professor Paul Beard, who is single, bought and moved into a house on August 30, 1997. He lived in it as his main home continuously until January 5, 1999, when he went abroad for a 1-year sabbatical leave. During part of the period of leave, the house was unoccupied, and during the rest of the period, he rented it out. On January 5, 2000, he sold the house at a gain. Because his leave was not a short temporary absence, he cannot include the period of leave to meet the 2-year use test. He cannot exclude any part of his gain, unless he sold the house due to a change in health or place of employment, as explained under Reduced Maximum Exclusion, earlier. Even if he did sell the house due to a change in health or place of employment, he cannot exclude the part of the gain equal to the depreciation he claimed while renting the house. See Depreciation for business use after May 6, 1997 , later.

Ownership and use tests met at different times. You can meet the ownership and use tests during different 2-year periods. However, you must meet both tests during the 5-year period ending on the date of the sale.

Example. In 1991, Helen Jones lived in a rented apartment. The apartment building was later changed to a condominium and she bought her apartment on December 1, 1997. In 1998, Helen became ill and on April 14 of that year she moved to her daughter’s home. On July 10, 2000, while still living in her daughter’s home, she sold her apartment.

Helen can exclude gain on the sale of her apartment because she met the ownership and use tests. Her 5-year period is from July 11, 1995, to July 10, 2000, the date she sold the apartment. She owned her apartment from December 1, 1997, to July 10, 2000 (over 2 years). She lived in the apartment from July 11, 1995 (the beginning of the 5-year period), to April 14, 1998 (over 2 years).

Cooperative apartment. If you sold stock in a cooperative housing corporation, the ownership and use tests are met if, during the 5-year period ending on the date of sale, you:

  1. Owned the stock for at least 2 years, and
  2. Lived in the house or apartment that the stock entitles you to occupy as your main home for at least 2 years.

Exception for individuals with a disability. There is an exception to the use test if, during the 5-year period before the sale of your home:

  1. You become physically or mentally unable to care for yourself, and
  2. You owned and lived in your home as your main home for a total of at least 1 year.

Under this exception, you are considered to live in your home during any time that you own the home and live in a facility (including a nursing home) that is licensed by a state or political subdivision to care for persons in your condition.

If you meet this exception to the use test, you still have to meet the 2-out-of-5-year ownership test to claim the exclusion.

Gain postponed on sale of previous home. For the ownership and use tests, you may be able to add the time you owned and lived in a previous home to the time you lived in the home on which you wish to exclude gain. You can do this if you postponed all or part of the gain on the sale of the previous home because of buying the home on which you wish to exclude gain.

In addition, if buying the previous home enabled you to postpone all or part of the gain on the sale of a home you owned earlier, you can also include the time you owned and lived in that earlier home.

Previous home destroyed or condemned. For the ownership and use tests, you add the time you owned and lived in a previous home that was destroyed or condemned to the time you owned and lived in the home on which you wish to exclude gain. This rule applies if any part of the basis of the home you sold depended on the basis of the destroyed or condemned home. Otherwise, you must have owned and lived in the same home for 2 of the 5 years before the sale to qualify for the exclusion.


Married Persons

If you and your spouse file a joint return for the year of sale, you can exclude gain if either spouse meets the ownership and use tests. (But see Maximum Amount of Exclusion, earlier.)

Example 1 - one spouse sells a home. Emily sells her home in June 2000. She marries Jamie later in the year. She meets the ownership and use tests, but Jamie does not. She can exclude up to $250,000 of gain on a separate or joint return for 2000.

Example 2 - each spouse sells a home. The facts are the same as in Example 1 except that Jamie also sells a home. He meets the ownership and use tests on his home. Emily and Jamie can each exclude up to $250,000 of gain.

Death of spouse before sale. If your spouse died before the date of sale, you are considered to have owned and lived in the property as your main home during any period of time when your spouse owned and lived in it as a main home.

Home transferred from spouse. If your home was transferred to you by your spouse (or former spouse if the transfer was incident to divorce), you are considered to have owned it during any period of time when your spouse owned it.

Use of home after divorce. You are considered to have used property as your main home during any period when:

  1. You owned it, and
  2. Your spouse or former spouse is allowed to live in it under a divorce or separation instrument.


Business Use or Rental of Home

You may be able to exclude your gain from the sale of a home that you have used for business or to produce rental income. But you must meet the ownership and use tests.

Example. On May 30, 1994, Amy bought a house. She moved in on that date and lived in it until May 31, 1996, when she moved out of the house and put it up for rent. The house was rented from June 1, 1996, to March 31, 1998. Amy moved back into the house on April 1, 1998, and lived there until she sold it on January 31, 2000. During the 5-year period ending on the date of the sale (February 1, 1995 - January 31, 2000), Amy owned and lived in the house for more than 2 years as shown in the table below.

Five Year Period Used as Home Used as Rental
2/1/95 - 5/31/96 16 months
6/1/96 - 3/31/98 22 months
4/1/98 - 1/31/00 22 months
38 months 22 months

Amy can exclude gain up to $250,000. But she cannot exclude the part of the gain equal to the depreciation she claimed for renting the house after May 6, 1997, as explained next.

Depreciation for business use after May 6, 1997. If you were entitled to take depreciation deductions because you used your home for business purposes or as rental property, you cannot exclude the part of your gain equal to any depreciation allowed or allowable as a deduction for periods after May 6, 1997. If you can show by adequate records or other evidence that the depreciation deduction allowed was less than the amount allowable, the amount you cannot exclude is the smaller figure.

Example. Micah sold his main home in 2000 at a $30,000 gain. He meets the use and ownership tests to exclude the gain from his income. However, he used part of the home for business in 1999 and claimed $500 depreciation. He can exclude $29,500 ($30,000 - $500) of his gain. He has a taxable gain of $500.

Property used partly as your home and partly for business or rental during the year of sale. In the year of sale you may have used part of your property as your home and part of it for business or to produce income. Examples are:

  • A working farm on which your house was located,
  • An apartment building in which you lived in one unit and rented out the others,
  • A store building with an upstairs apartment in which you lived, or
  • A home with a room used for business or to produce income.

If you sell the entire property you should consider the transaction as the sale of two properties. The sale of the part of your property used for business or rental is reported on Form 4797, Sales of Business Property . For more information, see Property used partly as your home and partly for business or rental during the year of sale under Business Use or Rental of Home , in chapter 2 of Publication 523.


Special Situations

This section explains certain situations that may affect your exclusion.

Expatriates. You cannot claim the exclusion if the expatriation tax applies to you. The expatriation tax applies to U.S. citizens who have renounced their citizenship (and long-term residents who have ended their residency) if one of their principal purposes was to avoid U.S. taxes. See chapter 4 of Publication 519, U.S. Tax Guide for Aliens, for more information about expatriation tax.

Home destroyed or condemned. If your home was destroyed or condemned, any gain (for example, because of insurance proceeds you received) qualifies for the exclusion.

Any part of the gain that cannot be excluded (because it is more than the limit) may be postponed under the rules explained in:

  • Publication 547, Casualties, Disasters, and Thefts (Business and Nonbusiness), in the case of a home that was destroyed, or
  • Chapter 1 of Publication 544, Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets, in the case of a home that was condemned.

Sale of remainder interest. Subject to the other rules in this chapter, you can choose to exclude gain from the sale of a remainder interest in your home. If you make this choice, you cannot choose to exclude gain from your sale of any other interest in the home that you sell separately.

Exception for sales to related persons. You cannot exclude gain from the sale of a remainder interest in your home to a related person. Related persons include your brothers and sisters, half-brothers and half-sisters, spouse, ancestors (parents, grandparents, etc.), and lineal descendants (children, grandchildren, etc.). Related persons also include certain corporations, partnerships, trusts, and exempt organizations.


Reporting the Gain

Do not report the 2000 sale of your main home on your tax return unless:

  • You have a gain and do not qualify to exclude all of it, or
  • You have a gain and choose not to exclude it.

If you have any taxable gain on the sale of your main home, report the entire gain realized on Schedule D (Form 1040). Report it on line 1 or line 8 of Schedule D, depending on how long you owned the home. If you qualify for an exclusion, show it on the line directly below the line on which you report the gain. Write "Section 121 exclusion" in column (a) of that line and show the amount of the exclusion in column (f) as a loss (in parentheses).

Tax rate on capital gains. Your net capital gain is taxed at a rate of 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, or 28%, depending on your situation. See Chapter 17.

Installment sale. Some sales are made under arrangements that provide for part or all of the selling price to be paid in a later year. These sales are called installment sales. If you finance the buyer’s purchase of your home yourself, instead of having the buyer get a loan or mortgage from a bank, you probably have an installment sale. You may be able to report the part of the gain you cannot exclude on the installment basis.

Use Form 6252, Installment Sale Income , to report the sale.

Seller-financed mortgage. If you sell your home and hold a note, mortgage, or other financial agreement, the payments you receive generally consist of both interest and principal. You must report the interest you receive as part of each payment separately as interest income. If the buyer of your home uses the property as a main or second home, you must also report the name, address, and social security number (SSN) of the buyer on line 1 of either Schedule B (Form 1040) or Schedule 1 (Form 1040A). The buyer must give you his or her SSN and you must give the buyer your SSN. Failure to meet these requirements may result in a $50 penalty for each failure. If you or the buyer does not have and is not eligible to get an SSN, see Social Security Number in chapter 1.

More information. For more information on installment sales, see Publication 537, Installment Sales.


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