Inherited 50% of house a couple decades ago, and inherited the other half interest about 15 years ago. This is primary home. So have owned the whole house for 15 years. I know the appraised value for the first half, but an appraisal was not done for the second half, since it was not needed for the small estate with sole heir--just a title transfer.
As an example, the first half interest had a basis of about $40K and the second half interest would have likely had a basis of say $50K or so if an appraisal had been done at the time. Current value of whole house is about $110K. That would be a gain of about $20K if using fully-appraised basis from the 2 prior events.
I realize I could pay $200-300 to have it appraised retroactively, but since the gain would only be approx. $20K when fully appraised, is there any reason to do so? Even if I only used the first half value of $40K and ignored the second half basis, the gain would be $70K.
Since this is preliminary at the moment, I don't know if I will get a 1099-S or not. I'm hoping I can talk them into not submitting one. I don't think they have to give submit one for a primary home with these value amounts, do they?
In summary, is there any need to pay for a back appraisal? Am I likely to get a 1099-S?
Thanks.
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If you did not live in the home as your main home for any period of time in 2009 or later, you have a period of "unqualified use" and some of your gain is taxable despite the exclusion. Or, if you ever used part of the home for business (rental, home office) and took or could have taken depreciation, then part of your gain may be taxable.
However, barring those circumstances, if you qualify for the exclusion, the exclusion is larger than your gain under any scenario, and you would only need to report the sale if you get a 1099-S. You would have to ask your closing agents whether issuing the 1099-S is common in your real estate market. It may not be, especially for residential real estate. (not rentals, not commercial, etc.)
Note that if audited, the IRS only has to award any basis you can prove. But if you have an estimate of the FMV from other resources (Zillow, etc.) you might take a chance on using that as your basis, and only paying for the retroactive appraisal if you are audited. You don't send any appraisals or proof of basis with your tax return, even if you report the sale on schedule D. But keep copies of all your records for at least 6 years after the sale.
If you did not live in the home as your main home for any period of time in 2009 or later, you have a period of "unqualified use" and some of your gain is taxable despite the exclusion. Or, if you ever used part of the home for business (rental, home office) and took or could have taken depreciation, then part of your gain may be taxable.
However, barring those circumstances, if you qualify for the exclusion, the exclusion is larger than your gain under any scenario, and you would only need to report the sale if you get a 1099-S. You would have to ask your closing agents whether issuing the 1099-S is common in your real estate market. It may not be, especially for residential real estate. (not rentals, not commercial, etc.)
Note that if audited, the IRS only has to award any basis you can prove. But if you have an estimate of the FMV from other resources (Zillow, etc.) you might take a chance on using that as your basis, and only paying for the retroactive appraisal if you are audited. You don't send any appraisals or proof of basis with your tax return, even if you report the sale on schedule D. But keep copies of all your records for at least 6 years after the sale.
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