I have a question regarding Capital Gains taxes. My parents changed the deed to their house in 2005. Adding myself and 2 other siblings on the deed I believe this is considered a gift. . My parents passed in Late December of 2017. We are in the process of selling the house. My understanding is that Capital Gains will need to be paid for the Fair Market Value in 2005 against the sale price. Based on Tax reciords the property Value in 2005 was $450,000, we sold the house for $900,00, so we owe Capital Gains on the $450,000. And since the proceeds will be divided by 3 than we each owe Capital Gains taxes on $150,000 each.Am I under the right assumption? As a follow up question, If I use my proceeds from the sale $300,000 to pay off my primary resident Mortgage off, do I still owe the capital gains tax? I can pay off my present mortgage which is $2000,000. Thank you for your response
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Sorry for your loss.
First off taking the proceeds and paying off your mortgage has no affect on whether you owe capital gains on the sale of your parent's house. Sorry.
You are correct that your parents gifted you a share of the house in 2005. However you are not right about the gain. It is much more complicated.
What was the form of the title? Were you joint owners or tenants in common?
This is fairly complicated and I would recommend seeking the professional advice of a estate/probate/tax attorney.
Assuming joint ownership with three children and two parents you would have owned 1/5 = 20% of the property in 2005. The tax records are not really good enough to find the FMV. You really need to have had done a professional appraisal. (Tax assessments in many towns do not reflected reality). You could try to use that but it might not hold up. Again that is a good question for your attorney to answer.
When you think and report what you own or sold think of it is 20% or 25% or whatever of the house at 123 main st. Just like if you own stock you own a certain number of shares. You report what you get and what you owned. X% of the total.
Your capital gain is the amount you get for selling (gross proceeds - costs of sale like commissions, transfer taxes, etc.) - your adjusted basis.
The general rule (see below for some twists) is that Adjusted basis is purchase cost (including expenses) + improvements (e.g. adding a room).
Going with the $450k valuation, in 2005 each kid received a gift of 20% x $450k = $90k. Your parents were required to file a Gift Tax return (Form 709) in 2005. No actual gift tax would be paid unless your parents made total lifetime gifts through 2005 of more than $1M. [The state might have a gift tax with different rules.] The receiver of a gift does not pay income tax on it, so that is not a problem.
However your basis in the property is not $90k. Instead it is 20% of your parent's basis. Yes you have to go back to their records of purchase and improvements over the years to find that number. Let's call that your gift basis.
When your first parent died (assuming joint ownership again), each of the owners (including your surviving parent) splits his or her 20%. So then you own 20% + 1/4 of 20% = 25% of the house.
The basis is "stepped up" to the FMV on the date of death for the % owned by the decedent.Your basis at that point is your gift basis + 5% of the FMV at the date of death. [Your siblings and surviving parent get the same thing, so the overall basis is stepped up by 20% of FMV].
Upon the death of your second parent you do that calculation again except that parent's share is 25% of the house just like yours. Your basis becomes your gift basis + first step up + 1/3 of 25% of the FMV at the time your second parent passed away. You then own 1/3 of the house.
Just for others reading this, if there had not been the gifting, then basis in the hands of the inheriting kids would have been 100% stepped up and there would be no gain, maybe a loss, unless the market moved between date of death and sale. There are other considerations of course. (medicare, asset protection, etc.)
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