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Capital Gains Taxes Vanish

If you own assets that have gone up in value (a home, stocks, etc.) you need to know about capital gains, cost basis and stepped-up basis. If you own a home, you also need to know about the residence exclusion from capital gains tax. We hope that the following example and explanation, using the fictitious Jack and Jill Hill, helps you feel more comfortable with these important concepts. Follow up with a qualified advisor if you have questions about your specific situation.

The Facts:

Jack and Jill Hill, married in 1950, bought their home in 1960 for $30,000. They took title as 50%-50% joint tenants (with right of survivorship).
Jack and Jill added a room and made other improvements to the home that cost them an additional $20,000.
Jack died in 1996. At that time, Jill had the home professionally valued, and found that she could receive $400,000 if she sold it (fair market value).
After Jack’s death, Jill filed the necessary paperwork with the County Recorder, so she’s now a 100% owner of the home.
Jill still lives in the home, but now wishes to sell it. When she sells it, she’ll receive $460,000.
The home is a capital asset. When Jill sells it, the gain will be subject to the capital gains tax rules.

The Question: When Jill sells the home, how much capital gains tax will be due?

The Answer: The correct answer is $0. No capital gains tax will be due. See Rule #1 above. The calculations:

Item

Amount

Comments

Sale proceeds (net)   $460,000 What Jill receives at sale
Subtract:
Jill’s 50% of cost basis
Jack’s 50% of cost basis
Combined Basis
$25,000
$200,000
$225,000 Jill’s share of original cost plus improvements
The "stepped-up basis" for Jack’s share
Jill’s Capital Gain   $235,000 Equals proceeds minus combined basis
Subtract:
Residence Exclusion
  $235,000 Up to $250,000 for a single person, $500,000 for a couple; if residence for two of last five years
Jill’s Taxable Capital Gain   $0 No capital gains tax is due

Stepped-Up Basis

The net proceeds from the sale of the home is the starting point for determining capital gains. Then, subtract the cost basis (usually original cost plus the cost of improvements). The result is the amount of capital gain.

Capital assets owned by a person when the person dies, however, obtain a new cost basis (called "stepped-up basis" in this case) for capital gains tax purposes. The new cost basis equals the fair market value of the owner’s interest at the date of death. Here Jack had a 50% interest in the home, so Jack’s share gets a stepped-up basis for capital gains purposes of $200,000 (50% of the $400,000 fair market value).

Jack’s stepped-up basis passed to Jill, along with Jack’s share of the home. When added to Jill’s share of original cost plus improvements (50% of $50,000), that means that Jill’s current combined basis for the home is $225,000.

Note that this same concept applies to stocks and other capital assets. Note also that, where an asset has gone down in value, it actually gets a new "stepped-down basis" (again based on the fair market value of the asset at the owner’s death). One last thought on this: if the home were able to be treated as community property, the basis step-up would have applied not only to Jack’s 50% share, but also to Jill’s.

The Residence Exclusion

In 1997, Congress changed the law so that a single person can exclude up to $250,000 (and a married couple filing jointly, $500,000) of capital gains on the sale of a principal residence owned and lived in two of the last five years.

At the same time, Congress did away with the one-time age 55+ exclusion ($125,000) and the "two-year rollover rule" that allowed capital gains taxation to be delayed if another residence was purchased within two years of the sale of the old.

[From our January / February 2000 Newsletter]



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