Selling your Home
If you sold your main home, you may be able to exclude up to $250,000 of gain
($500,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly) from your federal tax return.
This exclusion is allowed each time that you sell your main home, but generally
no more frequently than once every two years.
To be eligible for this exclusion, your home must have been owned by you and
used as your main home for a period of at least two out of the five years prior
to its sale. You also must not have excluded gain on another home sold during
the two years before the current sale.
If you and your spouse file a joint return for the year of the sale, you can
exclude the gain if either of you qualify for the exclusion. But both of you
would have to meet the use test to claim the $500,000 maximum amount.
To exclude gain, a taxpayer must both own and use the home as a principal residence
for two of the five years before the sale. The two years may consist of 24
full months or 730 days. Short absences, such as for a summer vacation, count
as periods of use. Longer breaks, such as a one-year sabbatical, do not.
If you do not meet the ownership and use tests, you may be allowed to exclude
a reduced maximum amount of the gain realized on the sale of your home if you
sold your home due to health, a change in place of employment, or certain unforeseen
circumstances. Unforeseen circumstances include, for example, divorce or legal
separation, natural or man-made disaster resulting in a casualty to your home,
or an involuntary conversion of your home. Send us a message for
more!