Welcome to the staging ground for new communities! Each proposal has a description in the "Descriptions" category and a body of questions and answers in "Incubator Q&A". You can ask questions (and get answers, we hope!) right away, and start new proposals.
Are you here to participate in a specific proposal? Click on the proposal tag (with the dark outline) to see only posts about that proposal and not all of the others that are in progress. Tags are at the bottom of each post.
Post History
No, because you get to account for the basis. If you bought a house at \$300k and later sold it for \$500k, then only the $200k profit is under consideration for income taxes. Further, the federa...
Answer
#2: Post edited
- No, because you get to account for the basis.
If you bought a house at $300k and later sold it for $500k, then only the $200k profit is under consideration for income taxes. Further, the federal government taxes regular income (like your salary) and longer-term investment income at different rates. I do not know if house-sale proceeds are long-term capital gains or a different category (it's been a while since I sold a house), but it's not the same rate as salary.- (I very much hope that someone will provide a better answer that supersedes this one.)
- In the common case of selling a house and buying a house (you still need a place to live, after all), you can also use the tax benefits from the purchase to mitigate the tax impact of the sale, if both events happen in the same tax year.
- No, because you get to account for the basis.
- If you bought a house at \\$300k and later sold it for \$500k, then only the $200k profit is under consideration for income taxes. Further, the federal government taxes regular income (like your salary) and longer-term investment income at different rates. I do not know if house-sale proceeds are long-term capital gains or a different category (it's been a while since I sold a house), but it's not the same rate as salary.
- (I very much hope that someone will provide a better answer that supersedes this one.)
- In the common case of selling a house and buying a house (you still need a place to live, after all), you can also use the tax benefits from the purchase to mitigate the tax impact of the sale, if both events happen in the same tax year.
#1: Initial revision
No, because you get to account for the basis. If you bought a house at $300k and later sold it for $500k, then only the $200k profit is under consideration for income taxes. Further, the federal government taxes regular income (like your salary) and longer-term investment income at different rates. I do not know if house-sale proceeds are long-term capital gains or a different category (it's been a while since I sold a house), but it's not the same rate as salary. (I very much hope that someone will provide a better answer that supersedes this one.) In the common case of selling a house and buying a house (you still need a place to live, after all), you can also use the tax benefits from the purchase to mitigate the tax impact of the sale, if both events happen in the same tax year.