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left arrowPrevious Page: Publication 17 - Your Federal Income Tax - Selling Your Home
right arrowNext Page: Publication 17 - Your Federal Income Tax - Excluding the Gain
Use  left arrowright arrow to find additional occurrences of topic items. Index for this Publication

taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP0ef3b721
Figuring Gain or Loss(p102)


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To figure the gain or loss on the sale of your main home, you must know the selling price, the amount realized, and the adjusted basis. Subtract the adjusted basis from the amount realized to get your gain or loss.
    Selling price  
  Selling expenses  
    Amount realized  
       
    Amount realized  
  Adjusted basis  
    Gain or loss  


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP198b0be6
Selling Price(p102)


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The selling price is the total amount you receive for your home. It includes money; all notes, mortgages, or other debts assumed by the buyer as part of the sale; and the fair market value of any other property or any services you receive.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP6e1cf275
Payment by employer.(p102)


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You may have to sell your home because of a job transfer. If your employer pays you for a loss on the sale or for your selling expenses, do not include the payment as part of the selling price. Your employer will include it as wages in box 1 of your Form W-2 and you will include it on Form 1040, line 7.


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Option to buy.(p102)


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If you grant an option to buy your home and the option is exercised, add the amount you receive for the option to the selling price of your home. If the option is not exercised, you must report the amount as ordinary income in the year the option expires. Report this amount on Form 1040, line 21.


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Form 1099-S.(p103)


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If you received Form 1099-S, Proceeds From Real Estate Transactions, box 2 (gross proceeds) should show the total amount you received for your home.

However, box 2 will not include the fair market value of any property other than cash or notes, or any services, you received or will receive. Instead, box 4 will be checked to indicate your receipt or expected receipt of these items.

If you can exclude the entire gain, the person responsible for closing the sale generally will not have to report it on Form 1099-S. If you do not receive Form 1099-S, use sale documents and other records to figure the total amount you received for your home.


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Amount Realized(p103)


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The amount realized is the selling price minus selling expenses.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP181304ad
Selling expenses.(p103)


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Selling expenses include:


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP2197ef54
Adjusted Basis(p103)


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While you owned your home, you may have made adjustments (increases or decreases) to the basis. This adjusted basis must be determined before you can figure gain or loss on the sale of your home. For information on how to figure your home's adjusted basis, see Determining Basis, later.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP74616bcb
Amount of Gain or Loss(p103)


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To figure the amount of gain or loss, compare the amount realized to the adjusted basis.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP45c02069
Gain on sale.(p103)


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If the amount realized is more than the adjusted basis, the difference is a gain and, except for any part you can exclude, generally is taxable.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP2ace253d
Loss on sale.(p103)


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If the amount realized is less than the adjusted basis, the difference is a loss. A loss on the sale of your main home cannot be deducted.


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Jointly owned home.(p103)


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If you and your spouse sell your jointly owned home and file a joint return, you figure your gain or loss as one taxpayer.


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Separate returns.(p103)
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If you file separate returns, each of you must figure your own gain or loss according to your ownership interest in the home. Your ownership interest is determined by state law.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP07ebd8d1
Joint owners not married.(p103)
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If you and a joint owner other than your spouse sell your jointly owned home, each of you must figure your own gain or loss according to your ownership interest in the home. Each of you applies the rules discussed in this chapter on an individual basis.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP75652447
Other Dispositions(p103)


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The following rules apply to foreclosures and repossessions, abandonments, trades, transfers to a spouse, and involuntary conversions (such as when your home is destroyed or condemned).


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP54111462
Foreclosure or repossession.(p103)


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If your home was foreclosed on or repossessed, you have a sale.

You figure the gain or loss from the sale in generally the same way as gain or loss from any sale. But the selling price of your home used to figure the amount of your gain or loss depends, in part, on whether you were personally liable for repaying the debt secured by the home. See Publication 523 for more information.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP4557596c
Form 1099-A and Form 1099-C.(p103)
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Generally, you will receive Form 1099-A, Acquisition or Abandonment of Secured Property, from your lender if your home is transferred in a foreclosure. This form will have the information you need to determine the amount of your gain or loss and any ordinary income from cancellation of debt. If your debt is canceled, you may receive Form 1099-C, Cancellation of Debt.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP6afb81c7
Abandonment.(p103)


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If you abandon your home, you may have ordinary income. If the abandoned home secures a debt for which you are personally liable and the debt is canceled, you have ordinary income equal to the amount of the canceled debt. See Publication 523 for more information.


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Trading homes.(p103)


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If you trade your old home for another home, treat the trade as a sale and a purchase.


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Example.(p103)

You owned and lived in a home with an adjusted basis of $41,000. A real estate dealer accepted your old home as a trade-in and allowed you $50,000 toward a new home priced at $80,000. This is treated as a sale of your old home for $50,000 with a gain of $9,000 ($50,000 – $41,000).

If the dealer had allowed you $27,000 and assumed your unpaid mortgage of $23,000 on your old home, your sales price would still be $50,000 (the $27,000 trade-in allowed plus the $23,000 mortgage assumed).


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP55030a08
Transfer to spouse.(p103)


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If you transfer your home to your spouse, or to your former spouse incident to your divorce, you generally have no gain or loss. This is true even if you receive cash or other consideration for the home. Therefore, the rules in this chapter do not apply.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP1b20bd48
More information.(p103)
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If you need more information, see Transfer to spouse in Publication 523 and Property Settlements in Publication 504, Divorced or Separated Individuals.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP603718ae
Destruction or condemnation.(p103)


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You have a sale when your home is destroyed or condemned and you receive other property or money in payment, such as insurance or a condemnation award. You may be able to exclude all or part of any gain from the destruction or condemnation of your home as explained later in the discussion about a home that was destroyed or condemned under Special Situations.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP1e493de9
Determining Basis(p103)


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You need to know your basis in your home to determine any gain or loss when you sell it. Your basis in your home is determined by how you got the home. Your basis is its cost if you bought it or built it. If you got it in some other way (inheritance, gift, etc.), its basis is either its fair market value when you got it or the adjusted basis of the person you got it from. See Publication 523 for a discussion of basis other than cost.

While you owned your home, you may have made adjustments (increases or decreases) to your home's basis. The result of these adjustments is your home's adjusted basis, which is used to figure gain or loss on the sale of your home. See Adjusted Basis, later.

You can find more information on basis and adjusted basis in chapter 13 of this publication and in Publication 523.


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Cost As Basis(p103)


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The cost of property is the amount you pay for it in cash, debt obligations, other property, or services.


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Purchase.(p103)


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If you buy your home, your basis is its cost to you. This includes the purchase price and certain settlement or closing costs. Generally, your purchase price includes your down payment and any debt, such as a first or second mortgage or notes you gave the seller in payment for the home. If you build, or contract to build, a new home, your purchase price can include costs of construction, as discussed in Publication 523.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP5cc8e810
Settlement fees or closing costs.(p103)


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When you bought your home, you may have paid settlement fees or closing costs in addition to the contract price of the property. You can include in your basis some of the settlement fees and closing costs you paid for buying the home. You cannot include in your basis the fees and costs for getting a mortgage loan. A fee paid for buying the home is any fee you would have had to pay even if you paid cash for the home (that is, without the need for financing).

Chapter 13 lists some of the settlement fees and closing costs that you can include in the basis of property, including your home. It also lists some settlement costs that cannot be included in basis. Also see Publication 523 for additional items.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP7d54dfa5
Adjusted Basis(p103)


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Adjusted basis is your basis increased or decreased by certain amounts.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP021b29cb
Increases to basis.(p103)


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These include any:


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP37183566
Decreases to basis.(p103)


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These include any:


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP5af91b0b
Improvements.(p104)


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These add to the value of your home, prolong its useful life, or adapt it to new uses. You add the cost of additions and other improvements to the basis of your property.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP04b64658
Examples.(p104)

Putting a recreation room or another bathroom in your unfinished basement, putting up a new fence, putting in new plumbing or wiring, putting on a new roof, or paving your unpaved driveway are improvements. An addition to your house, such as a new deck, a sunroom, or a new garage, is also an improvement.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP3035aa44
Repairs.(p104)


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These maintain your home in good condition but do not add to its value or prolong its life. You do not add their cost to the basis of your property.


taxmap/pub17/p17-082.htm#TXMP4c6f4743
Examples.(p104)

Repainting your house inside or outside, fixing your gutters or floors, repairing leaks or plastering, and replacing broken window panes are examples of repairs.

Recordkeeping. You should keep records to prove your home's adjusted basis. Ordinarily, you must keep records for 3 years after the due date for filing your return for the tax year in which you sold your home. But if you sold a home before May 7, 1997, and postponed tax on any gain, the basis of that home affects the basis of the new home you bought. Keep records proving the basis of both homes as long as they are needed for tax purposes.

The records you should keep include:

left arrowPrevious Page:  Publication 17 - Your Federal Income Tax - Selling Your Home
right arrowNext Page:  Publication 17 - Your Federal Income Tax - Excluding the Gain
Use  left arrowright arrow to find additional occurrences of topic items. Index for this Publication