New tax rules could cost 2nd-home ownersWritten By Kay Bell, Tax Consultant
Jan. 1, 2009, was not a good day for owners of
multiple homes. That was the day that the rules changed when it comes
to how much profit you might be able to keep out of IRS hands when you
sell your properties.
One of
the most cherished parts of the U.S. tax code is the provision that
allows sellers to exclude up to $250,000, or $500,000 if they file a
joint return, of profit they make when they sell their homes. Not to
worry. That's still around if you own just one property and have lived
in it as your primary for at least two of the five years before you
sell it.
But
a provision of the Housing Assistance Act of 2008, the bill designed
primarily to provide relief to some homeowners facing foreclosure, will
cost some folks who have a vacation or other type of second property.
Under the new law, even if they convert their second piece of real estate to their primary home, they'll owe tax on part
of the sale money based on how long the house was used as a second, rather than their main, residence.
How it used to work
The reason the law was changed? Money. The U.S. Treasury generally lost
some every time a second home was sold by owners who took advantage of
the primary-home sale exclusion.
Under the old rules, if you owned your main home and
a place in the mountains (or beach or wherever) that you used for
family vacations, you could sell both and keep up to $250,000 (or
$500,000) in profit out of IRS hands as long as you sold them in
the correct order.
First,
you would sell your primary residence and pocket that profit. Then you
would move into the vacation place, live there for two years and then
sell it. Because it had been your primary residence, you could exclude
profit from that subsequent sale, too.
There was no limit on the number of properties for
which you could use the home sale exclusion. As long as you were
able to make each place your primary residence and not claim the
tax break for at least two years between each sale, you were in
the tax clear.
How it now works
With the closure of the conversion loophole, now the seller of a second
home, even if it's converted to primary residence status, will owe
taxes for the time that the home was a second property after Jan. 1,
2009.
Updated: Feb. 5, 2009 Page |
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