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Tax basis and capital gains on sale of land when family shares involved

After my parents died, me (S1) and my 6 siblings inherited a piece of land. I bought the piece of land for $60,000 in 2014, however, I did not have $60,000 at the time. Two of my siblings, S2 and S3, graciously allowed me to not pay them their 1/7th of the land share (valued at roughly $8,571 based on the $60,000 purchase price), which meant I only had to pay about $34,286 at the time ($60,000 - ($8,571x3), their two shares and my own 1/7th). In 2024, 10 years after I bought the land, I sold the land for $265,000. With the proceeds of the sale, I paid back S2 and S3 their original share, roughly $8,571 each.

When filing my taxes for 2024, assuming for easy math that there were no expenses that I paid on the sale of the land in 2024, other than the $8,571 I repaid to S2 and S3, what is the capital gain that I need to report for 2024?

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Accepted Solutions
AmeliesUncle
Level 14
Intuit Approved! This answer has been verified for accuracy by an Intuit expert employee

Tax basis and capital gains on sale of land when family shares involved

You paid six siblings $8,571 each right (four when you first received it, then the other two basically had a loan with you and you paid them after you sold it).

 

Paying six siblings $8,571 each is buying the property for a total of $51,426.

 

But you are correct that my original response did not include your 1/7th ownership.  If the Fair Market Value on the Date of Death was $60,000, then your 1/7th Basis was also $8,571-ish, so your total Basis would be $60,000.

 

Paying your last two siblings is still part of your Basis (cost), not a sales expense.

 

If your Basis is $60,000, you enter that as your 'cost'.   Then enter the sales price of $265,000, for a gain of $205,000.

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4 Replies

Tax basis and capital gains on sale of land when family shares involved


@Smithers45 wrote:

After my parents died, me (S1) and my 6 siblings inherited a piece of land. I bought the piece of land for $60,000 1/7th of the land share (valued at roughly $8,571 

 

I sold the land for $265,000.


 

Do you mean you paid $51,426 for the land?  You already owned 1/7th of it.

 

If you paid $51,426 for the land and sold it for $265,000, that is a gain of $213,574.

 

 

Tax basis and capital gains on sale of land when family shares involved

@AmeliesUncle No, if you read my full post, I paid $34,286 at the time ($60,000 - ($8,571x3)) which subtracts my 1/7th and the 1/7th shares of two of my siblings, S1 and S2, which graciously allowed me to forgo paying them their fair share so that I would be able to afford the purchase. 

I get that its possible then that my basis is $34,286, but since I paid back S1 and S2 their $8,571 after the sale of the property, I'm wondering if I can consider that $8,571 payment to them as an expense of the sale so that overall my taxable long term gain is the same as if I had paid them $8,571 at the initial purchase 10 years ago.

AmeliesUncle
Level 14
Intuit Approved! This answer has been verified for accuracy by an Intuit expert employee

Tax basis and capital gains on sale of land when family shares involved

You paid six siblings $8,571 each right (four when you first received it, then the other two basically had a loan with you and you paid them after you sold it).

 

Paying six siblings $8,571 each is buying the property for a total of $51,426.

 

But you are correct that my original response did not include your 1/7th ownership.  If the Fair Market Value on the Date of Death was $60,000, then your 1/7th Basis was also $8,571-ish, so your total Basis would be $60,000.

 

Paying your last two siblings is still part of your Basis (cost), not a sales expense.

 

If your Basis is $60,000, you enter that as your 'cost'.   Then enter the sales price of $265,000, for a gain of $205,000.

Tax basis and capital gains on sale of land when family shares involved

Thanks for the clarification!

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