I am trying to figure out if a partial capital gain exclusion is applicable in this case:
TP Purchased a primary residence in Jan. 2001. Lived in the residence until July 2005. Moved due to military PCS and converted the residence to a rental property. Never came back to the residence and sold in September of 2018.
I accounted for the 10 year suspension period which took the "sale" date back to Sep. 2008. The 5 year test period goes back to Sep. 2003. TP does not meet the 24month residency requirement (short by two months). Does a partial exclusion apply in this case? If so, is work-related move would be considered the basis for the partial exclusion?
Thank you.
Best Answer Click here
This discussion has been locked. No new contributions can be made. You may start a new discussion here
I stand corrected after reading the code, regs, and legislative history again. I agree with Bill that the taxpayer should be entitled to a partial exclusion pursuant to §121(c) and that §§1.121-3(c) is the subsection that governs the application.
When §§1.121-3T was published, it was stipulated in paragraph (b) that reduced exclusion would apply "only if the primary reason for the sale or exchange is... a change in place of employment..., health..., or unforeseen circumstances." The IRS was specific, with the promulgation of the final regulations, about their intent to remove the "primary reason" test where one of the safe harbors applies and that such sale or exchange will "be deemed to be by reason of a change in place of employment, health, or unforeseen circumstances." This means the facts and circumstance factors listed under §1.121-3(b) will not be relevant so long as the safe harbor rules are met.
Since the taxpayer in this case sold the home by reason of a change in place of employment should qualify for the safe harbor under §§1.121-3(c)(2), when read in conjunction with subparagraphs (1) and (3), the sale would be deemed to be by reason of a change in place of employment and the taxpayer should qualify for the reduced exclusion, taking into account the following periods (give or take a month since it is not clear whether the cutoff was end of Aug or sometime in Sep)-
In addition, we will need to consider §121(b)(5) for potential exclusion of gain for nonqualified use. By means of §121(b)(5)(c)(i) and (ii)(II), nevertheless, it would appear that there should not be any period of nonqualified use.
Note, however, any gain realized would still be subject to unrecaptured §1250.
I stand corrected after reading the code, regs, and legislative history again. I agree with Bill that the taxpayer should be entitled to a partial exclusion pursuant to §121(c) and that §§1.121-3(c) is the subsection that governs the application.
When §§1.121-3T was published, it was stipulated in paragraph (b) that reduced exclusion would apply "only if the primary reason for the sale or exchange is... a change in place of employment..., health..., or unforeseen circumstances." The IRS was specific, with the promulgation of the final regulations, about their intent to remove the "primary reason" test where one of the safe harbors applies and that such sale or exchange will "be deemed to be by reason of a change in place of employment, health, or unforeseen circumstances." This means the facts and circumstance factors listed under §1.121-3(b) will not be relevant so long as the safe harbor rules are met.
Since the taxpayer in this case sold the home by reason of a change in place of employment should qualify for the safe harbor under §§1.121-3(c)(2), when read in conjunction with subparagraphs (1) and (3), the sale would be deemed to be by reason of a change in place of employment and the taxpayer should qualify for the reduced exclusion, taking into account the following periods (give or take a month since it is not clear whether the cutoff was end of Aug or sometime in Sep)-
In addition, we will need to consider §121(b)(5) for potential exclusion of gain for nonqualified use. By means of §121(b)(5)(c)(i) and (ii)(II), nevertheless, it would appear that there should not be any period of nonqualified use.
Note, however, any gain realized would still be subject to unrecaptured §1250.
Yes, they qualify for the exclusion. I disagree with TaxMonkey and itonewbie.
1) Assuming the taxpayer was in the military the entire time, the period is extended by 10 years, not to 10 years. So it would be a 15 year period.
2) Assuming it meets the 50 mile criteria, it was a "change in place of employment". That is a "safe harbor" so §1.121-3(b)(1) does not apply, so the long period between moving out and selling it does not matter.
The way I read it: The period from August 2005 through July 2015 is removed, ASSUMING that he was in the military for all 10 years, so he had 36 months from July 2015 to have a 60 month look back that included 24 months of residence. If he sold it before August 2018 (we don't know the actual day, and it doesn't matter).
He sold it September 2018. Too late to claim anything. In the 60 month test period he lived in it 22 or 23 months. No exclusion.
The military suspension is for the 60 month test period. Since he lived in it for many months through July 2005 (more than 24), 24 of those count in the 60 months. Then he left, but the test period is suspended while he is on qualified official extended duty. IF that lasted until July 2015, then the test counting begins again. 60 - 24 = 36.
The sale happened in 2018, and you want to suggest that he sold it because he had to move back in 2005? He decided to rent the property in 2005, not sell it. I would not consider a partial exclusion in this case. See 1.121-3(b)(1) in particular.
Please disregard this and see the latest response.
You have clicked a link to a site outside of the Intuit Accountants Community. By clicking "Continue", you will leave the community and be taken to that site instead.