Capital
Gains Tax Rates on Property
Taxes
on Property Appreciation and Deprecation
When you sell real estate you are taxed on both the appreciation
and the depreciation. Each has its own tax rate. The capital
gains tax rate (now 15%) is applied to the appreciation (or
gain in market value). The second tax (25%) is on the deprecation
taken by the taxpayer. The gain due to deprecation is usually
higher than the gain due to appreciation, especially if the
property was held for a long time.
How
to Defer All Taxes
Some investors defer all capital gains taxes using a 1031
exchange. The principles are similar to the 401k and IRA
programs used by stock market investors. In 1984 tax codes
changed making 1031 exchanges more flexible and popular. Still,
many property investors and real estate agents haven't heard
about 1031 exchanges and end up pay taxes that could have
been deferred.
Two
Examples of How to Calculate Taxes on a Property Sale
Tom and Mary buy an apartment building in 1984 for $200,000.
They set up the standard 80/20 depreciation allowance on a
30 year schedule taking $5,300 of depreciation each year.
20
years later, they sell the property for $600,000, their tax
liability is $85,000.
$600,000 sale price
-100,000 adjusted basis
$500,000 gain
How
to calculate the gain:
$100,000 depreciation recapture
$400,000 appreciation
$500,000 gain
The
tax consequences:
$100,000 depreciation recapture X 25% tax rate = $25,000
$400,000 appreciation X 15% tax rate = $60,000
$85,000
total tax
This is
equal to a 17% blended rate ($85,000/500,000 = 17%)
If
they sold after 7 years instead of 20 years, their tax would
be $18,700:
$263,000
sale price
-163,000 adjusted basis
$100,000 gain
How
to calculate the gain:
$ 37,000 depreciation recapture
$ 63,000 appreciation
$100,000 gain
The
tax consequences:
$37,000 depreciation recapture X 25% tax rate = $ 9,250
$63,000 appreciation X 15% tax rate = $ 9,450
$18,700
total
This is
equal to a 18.7% blended rate ($18,700/$100,000 = 18.7%)
Using
a 1031 exchange it's possible that all of the taxes in both
examples could be deferred.
[Capital
Gains Tax Rates] [How to
Choose a 1031 Exchange Facilitator] [Reporting
a 1031 Exchange to the IRS] [Use
Real Estate to Accumulate Wealth]
If you
are considering selling property contact
us today or ask an expert on-line
to find out if you can defer the taxes.
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