Capital gains and your home sale
When you sell your primary residence, you can make up to $250,000 in profit if you’re a single owner, twice that if you’re married, and not owe any capital gains taxes.
When the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 became law, the rollover or once-in-a-lifetime options were replaced with the current per-sale exclusion amounts.
You don’t have to buy another home with your sale proceeds. You can use the money as you wish.
Better yet, there’s no limit on the number of times you can use the home-sale exemption. In most cases, you can make tax-free profits of $250,000, or $500,000 depending on your filing status, every time you sell a home.
Qualifying Requirements:
- First, the property you’re selling must be your principal residence. That means you live in it. This tax break doesn’t apply to a house or other property that you have solely for investment purposes. In those cases, the usual capital gains rules apply.
- You also must live in that principal residence for 2 of the 5 years before you sell. This is known as the use test. It also means, practically speaking, each sale must be at least 2 years apart.
- That still leaves you room to make some money on several properties. You can sell your residence this year, pocket any gain within the tax limits and buy a new residence. Then 2 years later, you can do the same thing, again and again, every 2 years.
It’s just about that easy.
Shameless disclaimer: I am not a tax attorney, accountant or CPA. Always seek the property authorities for the proper
advice. Until then this will have to do.
Marty Gale
5 Reasons Enticing Me to Buy a Home Before 2025 Ends
Slide 1 Mortgage rates dropped to around 6%, down from the 7.79% peak in 2023. Slide 2 Housing supply rose 15.7% in 2025, giving buyers 1.55 million homes to choose from. Slide 3 Home prices are still high but rising slower, with just 2.9% annual growth mid-2025....
22 Real Estate Investment Strategies
Real estate investing offers strategies for wealth building, passive income, and portfolio diversification, including buy-and-hold, fix-and-flip, REITs, and rental property diversification. REITs have shown stability and often outperform stocks over time, while...
Housing Market’s Next Chapter: Second Half 2025
Borrowing costs set to ease, boosting affordability and enticing sidelined buyers back into the market. Sales expected to strengthen modestly, with fall poised to show the year’s best momentum. Prices likely to rise gradually, reflecting steady demand and limited...