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A recent decision by the
Internal Revenue Service could provide considerable relief to many homeowners
facing huge price gains when they sell.
The sharp appreciation of
house prices in recent years means that many people could face steep
capital-gins taxes. But in late January, the IRS put forth new guidelines that
allow certain homeowners to defer paying taxes on a significant portion of
those gains.
The new break doesn’t apply
to all homeowners, only to those who have home offices, or those who convert
their house-or a portion of it-into a rental. The deferral applies only to the
portion of the house used for commercial purposes.
Still, that’s a substantial
amount of people. According to the IRS, the number of individual tax returns
filed claiming deductions for home offices rose to about 2.5 million in 2002,
the latest data available, up from about 1.7 million in 1997. And in a 2004
survey, the National Association of Realtors found that 12.3% of respondents
said they were buying other houses, but keeping their existing homes-presumably
for investment purposes.
Some observers say that the
IRS’s move will lead more people to rent their homes or set up a home office-or
lead people who already have such offices to report them. “People in the past
would always question whether it was worth it to deduct a home office”, say
Julie A. Welch, an accountant and director of the tax department at Meara, King
& Co, a Kansas City,
MO, auditing and accounting firm. “But now
with this new pro taxpayer guidance, it makes a whole lot more sense. If you
structure it right, you can exclude or defer gain in almost all cases.”
Next week, the IRS is scheduled
to formally publish the new guidelines. Previously, homeowners weren’t sure
which circumstance allowed them to defer or exclude the gains from the”
commercial” parts of their residence.
The guidance comes at a time
when many homeowners, especially those who have lived in their houses for a
number of year, are sitting on huge price gains. Home prices in the U.S. have risen 63.1% between the third quarter
of 1999 and the third quarter of 2004, according to home price research company
Fiserv CSW Inc, of Cambridge,
Mass. But a number of housing
markets have seen increases far beyond that.
Given the complexity of the
guidelines, known as Revenue Procedure 2005-14, it makes sense to consult with
a lawyer or tax adviser before attempting to take advantage of them.
For one thing, the IRS has
complex rules on how to qualify to claim expenses for business use of your
home. In general, you must use part of the home “exclusively and regularly” as
your principal place of business, or exclusively and regularly as a place to
meet or deal with patients, clients or customers in the normal course of
work-or for rental use. If you’re an employee, your business use must be for
your employer’s convenience, not yours.
Additionally, in order to
take advantage of the deferral, the owner must purchase another property
through what’s called a 1031 “like-kind” exchange, and it must be either a
commercial property or have a commercial component equal or greater to the
value of the commercial portion of the property being sold.
For people selling a home,
the top capital –gains rate, currently 15%, typically applies to profits of
more than $250,000 for most single people and $500,000 for married couples
filing jointly. For owners who bought in fast appreciating markets five years
ago, the profits from a sale could easily exceed those limits, meaning they
would have to pay capital gains taxes. When the current limits were set in
1997, lawmakers assumed few people would cross the profit threshold.
Here’s how it works: If a
married couple sells for $900,000 a house that cost, say, $200,000, the couple
can exclude $500,000 of their $700,000 gain.
Assuming they had rented the entire house before the sale, they could
defer paying taxes on their remaining $200,000 gain by buying a replacement
commercial property costing at least that much through a 1031 exchange.
If the couple had instead
maintained a home office that was valued at $75,000, they could defer paying
taxes on that amount if they purchased a commercial property of the same or
greater value.
“It’s a good thing for
homeowners who also have a home business because it clarifies that they can
later sell the house and still use the principal residence exclusion for the
entire house, even if they were using part of it for business”, say Randy
Markowitz, an accountant and partner with FGMK LLC, in Bannockburn, Il.
Another benefit: The couple
can also defer back taxes on any depreciation deduction they took earlier on
the commercial part of the property. Gains from depreciation deductions are
taxed at 25%, much higher than the 15% capital-gains tax.
While the new guidance
benefits homeowners, it can also open up a legal and accounting minefield.
“Trouble could come from trying to claim the home-office treatment when it’s
not eligible, claiming too large a percentage of a residence as a home office,
or not satisfying the highly technical 1031 rules, “ says Louis S. Weller, of
Deloitte & Touche LLP’s national real-estate tax services group in San
Francisco.
Some homeowners may find the
road to qualifying for this new break a little daunting. For example, when
trying to sell a home and defer the gains on the commercial, portion, it’s no
longer simply selling a house but structuring an exchange transaction, which
means filling out more tax forms and adhering to strict deadlines and rules.
It’s more akin to being a commercial investor than a homeowner.
If a 1031 exchange, the replacement property has to be
identified within 45 days, and the exchange has to completed within 180 days,
or the tax deferral is forfeited. A specialized 1031 intermediary has to be
retained to handle the transaction. Fees for intermediaries run up to $1,000. |