Property Owners Face a New Federal Surtax - WSJ.com
The housing market may indeed be recovering, as many experts suggest,
but investors are still struggling to understand what, if any, taxes
they'll owe upon selling their homes.
At issue is how the new "Medicare tax" will apply to real-estate transactions.
Passed in 2010 to help fund the health-care overhaul, this 3.8% surtax
kicks in next year on many forms of investment income—including some
interest, dividends, rents and capital gains.
While its effect on home sales won't be as far-reaching as many fear,
the Medicare tax could pack a punch for certain investors. It is not a
sales tax. And it won't apply to home-sale gains excluded from income
under current law. But it could affect investors with outsize gains or
gains from the sale of a vacation home or investment property.
Determining whether you will be subject to the tax is no easy matter.
"The confusion lies in the fact that it's not a yes or a no," says
Melissa Labant, director of tax for the American Institute of Certified
Public Accountants. "It's a sometimes or a maybe."
"We're waiting for guidance from the IRS on a lot of specific issues," she adds. "We don't have all of the answers yet."
Here's what we do know:
The new tax will hit individuals with more than $200,000 in adjusted
gross income, and married couples with adjusted gross income above
$250,000 ($125,000 for married taxpayers filing separately). These
thresholds are not indexed for inflation, so more people may be affected
over time.
Specifically, the tax will apply to either your net investment income or
the amount that your adjusted gross income exceeds the
threshold—whichever is less.
Moreover, any gain from the sale of a principal residence that is less
than $250,000 (for individuals) or $500,000 (for married taxpayers
filing jointly) will continue to be excluded from income, and anything
that's excluded for income-tax purposes also is excluded for
Medicare-tax purposes.
So, the Medicare tax will apply primarily to higher-income earners who
realize gains that aren't sheltered by the exclusion amounts.
The National Association of Realtors provides these examples:
Primary residence
Say a married couple gets lucky and sells their principal residence for a
$530,000 profit. Their taxable gain would be $30,000 ($530,000 minus
$500,000). If their adjusted gross income, including the gain, is
$180,000, they won't owe any surtax because their income falls under the
$250,000 threshold.
If their adjusted gross income is $290,000, however, the surtax will be
assessed on the $30,000 gain, because that is less than the $40,000 that
their income exceeds the threshold ($290,000 minus $250,000).
What if their taxable gain on the sale of the house is $50,000? The
surtax will be assessed on the $40,000 excess above the threshold,
because $40,000 is less than $50,000.
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