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The Great American Tax Shelter
Legal Tax Angles:
How to Save Taxes Without Going to Jail
The Tax Relief Act of 1997 included a huge tax break for
owners of highly appreciated homes who want to sell and move to a rental
property or to a smaller home. For sales after May 6, 1997, up to $250,000 of
gain on the sale of a principal residence is tax free for single taxpayers and
up to $500,000 for couples filing a joint return. This new rule replaces the
previous rule that provided a one time tax free gain of up to $125,000 for the
sale of a principal residence for taxpayers over the age of 55 and the tax free
rollover of gain from one residence to another.
The new exclusion is available every two years. Sales
prior to May 7, 1997 are not taken into account in determining whether a home
has been sold in the past two years.
There are no age requirements any more. The main
requirement is that the taxpayer must have owned and occupied the property as
his or her principal residence for at least two of the five years preceding the
sale of the home.
The $500,000 exclusion for married couples requires that
both spouses must meet the use test but only one spouse needs to meet the
ownership test. If only one spouse meets the use test, that spouse may still
use the $250,000 exclusion.
The tax deferred roll-over of gain by re-investing the
proceeds from one home in a home of equal or greater value is repealed.
There aren’t any new rules relating to the deductions for
interest on a home mortgage, which will most likely encourage many families to
buy the biggest home they can buy, with the maximum amount of debt that they
can afford. The interest on loans of up to $1 million will be deductible (until
the congress changes the rules) and any gain on the property will be tax free.
Thus, there is a great incentive to leverage the home with as much debt as
possible in order to buy the biggest possible home. However, the astute home
owner will want to be sure that the annual increase in the market value of the
home is at least as great as the after tax cost of the interest on the home.
For example, if you are in the 28% federal tax bracket
and the 5% state income tax bracket, 1/3 of your interest would be offset by
tax savings. Thus, if you have to pay 6.0% interest on a home loan, the after
tax cost of that interest is 4%. In order to come out ahead with the debt, the
value of the home would have to increase by at least 4% each year - even though
the future gain would be tax free.
If a home is sold for a gain of more than $250,000
($500,000 for a married couple), the excess gain would be treated as a long
term capital gain as long as the property was owned for more than 12 months.
Vern Jacobs
Copyright, 2003
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