Hello,
I need some help determining the tax percentage that I will have to pay when selling a house I have only owned for 1 year.
We live in Washington state and purchased our house for $250,000 and are now selling it for $285,000.
The above being the case, we were told that we would have to pay a large tax amount because we have not owned the house for more than 2 years. The IRS site is hard to fallow and doesn't say if the tax rate is on the total sale or the gained amount.
What will our tax percentage be and will it be on the total of $285,000 or on the gain of $35,000? Also, will we pay the taxes at sale or at the beginning of the next year for the previous years taxes?
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If you have to pay tax on the gain from the sale of your house, the rate will depend on whether your owned the home for over a year or less than one year. If the home was owned for more than a year, the gain will be taxed at capital gain rates. Those rates will be either 0% (you qualify for this rate if your income including the gain is within the 15% regular tax bracket) 15%, or 20%. If the home was owned less than one year, the rate will be the same as your ordinary tax rate between 10% and 39.6%.
However, there may be the possibility that you can qualify for some of the home sale exemption that would have been available if you would have lived in the home for more than 2 years. You may qualify for this reduced exclusion if one from any from a number of listed unforeseen occurred.
The reduced exclusion percentage is calculated by dividing the number of days that you lived in the home divided by the number of days in two years. That percentage is multiplied by the full exclusion amount of 250,000 dollars (or 500,000 dollars for married joint filers).
The listed unforeseen events are as follows:
Work-related move. You meet the standard requirements if any of the following happened during the time you owned and lived in the home you sold:
You took or were transferred to a new job in a work location at least 50 miles farther from home than your old work location.
You had no previous work location and you began a new job at least 50 miles from home.
Either of the above is true of your spouse, a co-owner of the home, or anyone else for whom the home was his or her residence.
Health-related move. You meet the standard requirements if any of the following happened during the time you owned and lived in the home you sold.
You moved to obtain, provide, or facilitate diagnosis, cure, mitigation, or treatment of disease, illness, or injury for yourself or a family member.
You moved to obtain or provide medical or personal care for a family member suffering from a disease, illness, or injury.
Family includes:
Parent, grandparent, stepmother, stepfather;
Child, grandchild, stepchild, adopted child, eligible foster child;
Brother, sister, stepbrother, stepsister, half-brother, half-sister;
Mother-in-law, father-in-law, brother-in-law, sister-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law;
Uncle, aunt, nephew, niece, or cousin.
A doctor recommended a change in residence for you because you were experiencing a health problem.
The above is true of your spouse, a co-owner of the home, or anyone else for whom the home was his or her residence.
Unforeseeable events. You meet the standard requirements if any of the following happened during the time you owned and lived in the home you sold.
Your home was destroyed or condemned.
Your home suffered a casualty loss because of a natural or man-made disaster or an act of terrorism. (It doesn’t matter whether the loss is deductible on your tax return.)
You, your spouse, a co-owner of the home, or anyone else for whom the home was his or her residence:
Died;
Became divorced or legally separated;
Gave birth to two or more children from the same pregnancy;
Became eligible for unemployment compensation;
Became unable, because of a change in employment status, to pay basic living expenses for the household (including expenses for food, clothing, housing, medication, transportation, taxes, court-ordered payments, and expenses reasonably necessary for making an income).
An event is determined to be an unforeseeable event in IRS published guidance.
If any of these apply, TurboTax can walk you through reporting this situation in the section for reporting the sale of a home
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