5 Sweet Tax Deductions When Selling a Home: Did You Take Them All?
Many of us are now at home, either
telecommuting for now, or not working, not sure when our places of business
will reopen. If you haven’t yet filed your taxes, now is a good time to sit
down and take care of it. If you sold your home in 2019, this article I read
recently on www.realtor.com is worth checking
out.
Here it is...
5 Sweet Tax Deductions When Selling a Home: Did You Take Them All?
By Margaret Heidenry | Feb 24, 2020
You
may be wondering if there are tax deductions when selling a home. And the
answer is: You bet!
Sure,
you may remember 2018's new tax code—aka the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act—changed some
rules for homeowners. But rest assured that if you sold your home last year (or
are planning to in the future), your tax deductions when you file with the IRS
can still amount to sizable savings.
Want a full rundown of all
the deductions (as well as tax exemptions or other write-offs) at a home
seller's disposal? Check out this list to make sure you miss none of them.
1. Selling costs
These
deductions are allowed as long as they are directly tied to the sale of the
home, and you lived in the home for at least two out of the five years
preceding the sale. Another caveat: The home must be a principal residence and
not an investment property.
“You
can deduct any costs associated with selling the home—including legal
fees, escrow fees, advertising costs, and real estate agent
commissions,” says Joshua
Zimmelman, president of Westwood Tax and Consulting in
Rockville Center, NY.
This
could also include home
staging fees, according to Thomas J.
Williams,
a tax accountant who operates Your Small Biz Accountant in Kissimmee,
FL.
Just
remember that you can’t deduct these costs in the same way as, say, mortgage
interest. Instead, you subtract them from the sales price of your home, which
in turn positively affects your capital gains tax (more on that below).
2. Home improvements and repairs
Score
again! If you renovated a few rooms to make your home more marketable (and so
you could fetch a higher sales price), you can deduct those upgrade costs as
well. This includes painting the house or repairing the roof or water heater.
But
there’s a catch, and it all boils down to timing.
“If
you needed to make home improvements in order to sell your home, you can deduct
those expenses as selling costs as long as they were made within 90
days of the closing,” says Zimmelman.
3. Property taxes
This
deduction is capped at $10,000, Zimmelman says. So if you were dutifully paying
your property taxes up to the point when you sold your home, you can deduct the
amount you paid in property taxes this year up to $10,000.
4. Mortgage interest
As
with property taxes, you can deduct the interest on your mortgage for the
portion of the year you owned your home.
Just
remember that under the 2018 tax code, new homeowners (and home sellers) can
deduct the interest on up to only $750,000 of mortgage debt, though homeowners
who got their mortgage before Dec. 15, 2017, can continue deducting up to the
original amount up to $1 million, according to Zimmelman.
Note
that the mortgage interest and property taxes are itemized deductions. This
means that for it to work in your favor, all of your itemized deductions need
to be greater than the new standard deduction, which the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
nearly doubled to $12,200 for individuals, $18,350 for heads of household, and
$24,400 for married couples filing jointly. (For comparison, it used to be
$12,700 for married couples filing jointly.)
5. Capital gains tax for sellers
The capital
gains rule
isn't technically a deduction (it's an exclusion), but you’re still going to
like it.
As
a reminder, capital gains are your profits from selling your
home—whatever cash is left after paying off your expenses, plus any
outstanding mortgage debt. And yes, these profits are taxed as income. But
here's the good news: You can exclude up to $250,000 of the capital
gains from the sale if you’re single, and $500,000 if married. The
only big catch is you must have lived in your home at least two of
the past five years.
However,
look for the rules of this exemption to possibly change in a future tax bill.
Ralph DiBugnara, vice president at Cardinal Financial, says
lawmakers might push to change this so that homeowners would have to live in
the property for five of the past eight years, instead of two out of five.
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