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September 20, 2021
Question

Selling my home, less than 2 years, by 1 week

  • September 20, 2021
  • 3 replies
  • 0 views

Hello,

 

I am selling a personal home that I purchased on November 8th of 2019, I will sell it on November 1st of 2021. I cannot change the closing date. The profit will be 30k, if I reinvest into another home, will I have to still pay capitol gains as it is within the same months to almost be 2 years? I am moving for work and it will be over 200 miles away

    3 replies

    Employee
    September 20, 2021

    @millere201 wrote:

    ....if I reinvest into another home, will I have to still pay capitol gains...


    Reinvesting in another home will have absolutely no impact on any capital gains tax that may be due as a result of the sale of your current home. That rule was eliminated over 20 years ago and is no longer in effect.

     

    However, you may qualify for a partial exclusion since your move was work-related.

     

    See https://www.irs.gov/publications/p523#en_US_2020_publink100073097

     

     

     

    You can calculate your partial exclusion by completing the worksheet at the IRS web site (link below).

     

    https://www.irs.gov/publications/p523#en_US_2020_publink100073100

     

     

    September 20, 2021

    This is helpful, due to not profiting over 250K, due to exclusion being lowered 239K, and only making 30K, i am in the safe zone.  THANK YOU!

    September 20, 2021

    Because you are moving for work and it is more than 50 miles from your home, you qualify for partial exclusion.   

    Here is a link to the IRS site with explanation and a worksheet to compute your exclusion.

     

    Capital Gains Exclusion on Sale of Personal Residence

    DoninGA
    Employee
    September 20, 2021

    Reinvesting the gains from the sale of personal residence on a new personal residence to defer the gains on the sale was removed form the tax code in 1997.

     

    Gain or Loss equals Sales Price minus Selling Costs minus Adjusted Basis of the home (Purchase price plus the cost of improvements prior to the sale)

     

    You will have a partial exclusion since you are selling the home due to a work-related move and will not owe capital gains taxes on the gain.

    See IRS Publication 523, Selling Your Home page 6 - https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p523.pdf#pqge=6

    Use Worksheet 1 on page 7 to determine your exclusion.