Communities

Writing
Writing
Codidact Meta
Codidact Meta
The Great Outdoors
The Great Outdoors
Photography & Video
Photography & Video
Scientific Speculation
Scientific Speculation
Cooking
Cooking
Electrical Engineering
Electrical Engineering
Judaism
Judaism
Languages & Linguistics
Languages & Linguistics
Software Development
Software Development
Mathematics
Mathematics
Christianity
Christianity
Code Golf
Code Golf
Music
Music
Physics
Physics
Linux Systems
Linux Systems
Power Users
Power Users
Tabletop RPGs
Tabletop RPGs
Community Proposals
Community Proposals
tag:snake search within a tag
answers:0 unanswered questions
user:xxxx search by author id
score:0.5 posts with 0.5+ score
"snake oil" exact phrase
votes:4 posts with 4+ votes
created:<1w created < 1 week ago
post_type:xxxx type of post
Search help
Notifications
Mark all as read See all your notifications »
Incubator Q&A

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

71%
+3 −0
Incubator Q&A Income tax when selling a house

In US income tax system, your home is an asset referred to as "capital". When you sell your house, you might pay income tax based on your profit from the house. The tax terminology for that is "cap...

posted 1y ago by Stephen Ostermiller‭  ·  edited 1y ago by Stephen Ostermiller‭

Answer
#4: Post edited by user avatar Stephen Ostermiller‭ · 2023-08-09T12:40:08Z (over 1 year ago)
  • In US income tax system, your home is an asset referred to as "capital". When you sell your house, you might pay income tax based on your profit from the house. The tax terminology for that is "capital gains". So you aren't paying tax on the whole house, just on the difference between what you bought it for and what you sell it for. If you have made improvements to your home, such as additions or remodels, you can also subtract those from the profits.
  • There are two tax rates for capital gains: short-term and long-term. If you own something for more than a year, it qualifies for the lower long-term tax rate (20%). That should be the case for your primary residence, so the tax rate is lower than what you had been fearing.
  • There are also limited exceptions from capital gains for homes. Every two years, you can deduct \\$250,000 (single taxpayer), or $500,000 (married taxpayers) from the capital gains on a home sale. That means that majority of American taxpayers will never pay a cent of income tax from buying and selling homes to live in.
  • Here is a concrete example. Bob sold his home for \\$700,000. He had bought it 10 years before for \$300,000. He had installed a pool and finished the basement which cost him \\$100,000. The total price of his home (the "basis") is \$400,000. His capital gains are \\$300,000. Since he is is single, he can deduct \$250,000 from that which leaves him with \\$50,000 on which he needs to pay income tax. At the 20% long-term capital gains rate, he will owe $10,000 in income taxes.
  • In US income tax system, your home is an asset referred to as "capital". When you sell your house, you might pay income tax based on your profit from the house. The tax terminology for that is "capital gains". So you aren't paying tax on the whole house, just on the difference between what you bought it for and what you sell it for. If you have made improvements to your home, such as additions or remodels, you can also subtract those from the profits.
  • There are two tax rates for capital gains: short-term and long-term. If you own something for more than a year, it qualifies for the lower long-term tax rate (20%). That should be the case for your primary residence, so the tax rate is lower than what you had been fearing.
  • There are also limited exceptions from capital gains for homes. Every two years, you can deduct \\$250,000 (single taxpayer), or $500,000 (married taxpayers) from the capital gains on a home sale. That means that majority of American homeowners will never pay a cent of income tax from buying and selling homes to live in.
  • Here is a concrete example. Bob sold his home for \\$700,000. He had bought it 10 years before for \$300,000. He had installed a pool and finished the basement which cost him \\$100,000. The total price of his home (the "basis") is \$400,000. His capital gains are \\$300,000. Since he is is single, he can deduct \$250,000 from that which leaves him with \\$50,000 on which he needs to pay income tax. At the 20% long-term capital gains rate, he will owe $10,000 in income taxes.
#3: Post edited by user avatar Stephen Ostermiller‭ · 2023-08-09T12:35:23Z (over 1 year ago)
  • In US tax system, your home is an asset referred to as "capital". When you sell your house, you might pay income tax based on your profit from the house. The tax terminology for that is "capital gains". So you aren't paying tax on the whole house, just on the difference between what you bought it for and what you sell it for. If you have made improvements to your home, such as additions or remodels, you can also subtract those from the profits.
  • There are two tax rates for capital gains: short-term and long-term. If you own something for more than a year, it qualifies for the lower long-term tax rate (20%). That should be the case for your primary residence, so the tax rate is lower than what you had been fearing.
  • There are also limited exceptions from capital gains for homes. Every two years, you can deduct \\$250,000 (single taxpayer), or $500,000 (married taxpayers) from the capital gains on a home sale. That means that majority of American taxpayers will never pay a cent of income tax from buying and selling homes to live in.
  • Here is a concrete example. Bob sold his home for \\$700,000. He had bought it 10 years before for \$300,000. He had installed a pool and finished the basement which cost him \\$100,000. The total price of his home (the "basis") is \$400,000. His capital gains are \\$300,000. Since he is is single, he can deduct \$250,000 from that which leaves him with \\$50,000 on which he needs to pay income tax. At the 20% long-term capital gains rate, he will owe $10,000 in taxes.
  • In US income tax system, your home is an asset referred to as "capital". When you sell your house, you might pay income tax based on your profit from the house. The tax terminology for that is "capital gains". So you aren't paying tax on the whole house, just on the difference between what you bought it for and what you sell it for. If you have made improvements to your home, such as additions or remodels, you can also subtract those from the profits.
  • There are two tax rates for capital gains: short-term and long-term. If you own something for more than a year, it qualifies for the lower long-term tax rate (20%). That should be the case for your primary residence, so the tax rate is lower than what you had been fearing.
  • There are also limited exceptions from capital gains for homes. Every two years, you can deduct \\$250,000 (single taxpayer), or $500,000 (married taxpayers) from the capital gains on a home sale. That means that majority of American taxpayers will never pay a cent of income tax from buying and selling homes to live in.
  • Here is a concrete example. Bob sold his home for \\$700,000. He had bought it 10 years before for \$300,000. He had installed a pool and finished the basement which cost him \\$100,000. The total price of his home (the "basis") is \$400,000. His capital gains are \\$300,000. Since he is is single, he can deduct \$250,000 from that which leaves him with \\$50,000 on which he needs to pay income tax. At the 20% long-term capital gains rate, he will owe $10,000 in income taxes.
#2: Post edited by user avatar Stephen Ostermiller‭ · 2023-08-09T12:33:35Z (over 1 year ago)
  • In US tax system, your home is an asset referred to as "capital". When you sell your house, you might pay income tax based on your profit from the house. The tax terminology for that is "capital gains". So you aren't paying tax on the whole house, just on the difference between what you bought it for and what you sell it for. If you have made improvements to your home, such as additions or remodels, you can also subtract those from the profits.
  • There are two tax rates for capital gains: short-term and long-term. If you own something for more than a year, it qualifies for the lower long-term tax rate (20%). That should be the case for your primary residence, so the tax rate is lower than what you had been fearing.
  • There are also limited exceptions from capital gains for homes. Every two years, you can deduct $250,000 (single taxpayer), or $500,000 (married taxpayers) from the capital gains on a home sale. That means that majority of American taxpayers will never pay a cent of income tax from buying and selling homes to live in.
  • Here is a concrete example. Bob sold his home for $700,000. He had bought it 10 years before for $300,000. He had installed a pool and finished the basement which cost him $100,000. The total price of his home (the "basis") is $400,000. His capital gains are $300,000. Since he is is single, he can deduct $250,000 from that which leaves him with $50,000 on which he needs to pay income tax. At the 20% long-term capital gains rate, he will owe $10,000 in taxes.
  • In US tax system, your home is an asset referred to as "capital". When you sell your house, you might pay income tax based on your profit from the house. The tax terminology for that is "capital gains". So you aren't paying tax on the whole house, just on the difference between what you bought it for and what you sell it for. If you have made improvements to your home, such as additions or remodels, you can also subtract those from the profits.
  • There are two tax rates for capital gains: short-term and long-term. If you own something for more than a year, it qualifies for the lower long-term tax rate (20%). That should be the case for your primary residence, so the tax rate is lower than what you had been fearing.
  • There are also limited exceptions from capital gains for homes. Every two years, you can deduct \\$250,000 (single taxpayer), or $500,000 (married taxpayers) from the capital gains on a home sale. That means that majority of American taxpayers will never pay a cent of income tax from buying and selling homes to live in.
  • Here is a concrete example. Bob sold his home for \\$700,000. He had bought it 10 years before for \$300,000. He had installed a pool and finished the basement which cost him \\$100,000. The total price of his home (the "basis") is \$400,000. His capital gains are \\$300,000. Since he is is single, he can deduct \$250,000 from that which leaves him with \\$50,000 on which he needs to pay income tax. At the 20% long-term capital gains rate, he will owe $10,000 in taxes.
#1: Initial revision by user avatar Stephen Ostermiller‭ · 2023-08-09T12:31:31Z (over 1 year ago)
In US tax system, your home is an asset referred to as "capital". When you sell your house, you might pay income tax based on your profit from the house. The tax terminology for that is "capital gains". So you aren't paying tax on the whole house, just on the difference between what you bought it for and what you sell it for. If you have made improvements to your home, such as additions or remodels, you can also subtract those from the profits.

There are two tax rates for capital gains: short-term and long-term. If you own something for more than a year, it qualifies for the lower long-term tax rate (20%). That should be the case for your primary residence, so the tax rate is lower than what you had been fearing.

There are also limited exceptions from capital gains for homes. Every two years, you can deduct $250,000 (single taxpayer), or $500,000 (married taxpayers) from the capital gains on a home sale. That means that majority of American taxpayers will never pay a cent of income tax from buying and selling homes to live in.

Here is a concrete example. Bob sold his home for $700,000. He had bought it 10 years before for $300,000. He had installed a pool and finished the basement which cost him $100,000. The total price of his home (the "basis") is $400,000. His capital gains are $300,000. Since he is is single, he can deduct $250,000 from that which leaves him with $50,000 on which he needs to pay income tax. At the 20% long-term capital gains rate, he will owe $10,000 in taxes.