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Investors & landlords
Maybe. If all of the following apply, you don't need to report it. Otherwise you do have to report it.
- You lived in the home as your main home for at 2 of the 5 years preceding the sale.
- Your "net" profit from the sale is less than $250,000 ($500,000 if Married Filing Jointly).
- You didn't take depreciation deduction on the home or use it for business during the time you owned it.
- You didn't rent it out at any time that you owned it.
- You didn’t receive a Form 1099-S.
Where to enter the sale of your home (if required) in TurboTax: While inside the software and working on your return, type sale of home in the Search at the top of the screen (you may see a magnifying glass there). There will be a popup that says Jump to sale of home. Select that to get to the general area.
Sales expenses are listed in the sellers column of your settlement statement and include:
- commissions
- appraisal fees
- broker's fees
- legal fees
- advertising fees
- home inspection reports
- title insurance
- transfer taxes or fees
- geological surveys
- loan charges (points) or other fees paid on the buyer's behalf
- any fees for a service that helped you sell your home without a broker (listing fees, promotional fliers, etc.)
Sales expenses do not include:
- mortgage payoffs
- home equity loan payoffs
- rent-back costs
- payoff to creditors
- property taxes
- home owner association fees
Is the Sale of My Main Home Taxable?
https://ttlc.intuit.com/replies/3300213
June 4, 2019
2:05 PM
1,002 Views