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Tax Strategies for Residential Property Gains: Optimizing Client Outcomes
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Larry PonGuest Expert: Larry Pon, CPA/PFS, CFP, EA, USTCP, AEP,

Tax Planning When Clients Have Large Gains on the Sale of a Home

Summary Overview

The sale of a primary residence is often one of the largest taxable transactions a client will ever enc...

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Discussions & Comments

missy@financialexpertsnetwork.com 4 days 9 hours ago
A few comments from listeners when they were asked what the learned from the webinar:

A few things that can be added to cost basis that I wasn't aware of.
- George G.

Add refinance costs to the basis. Clients rarely provide that information, so Mr. Pon's suggestion of asking for those costs and home improvement costs each year is a good one.
- TeriAnn K.

I had never heard of the American Council on Gift Annuities. Good to know you can check current rates (though it looks as though you have to be a member to get them).
- Maria R.

I love the list of improvement that qualify for increase in basis. So much good info about 1031 exchanges
- Sherri G.

If converting a residence to rental, and renting for a limited time, it's possible to get the 121 gain exclusion and do a 1031 exchange, making part of the realized gain non-taxable.
- Robert S.

Larry helped explain many nuances of tax issues to consider with this subject. Larry is phenomenal!
- Russel F.

missy@financia…

Wed, 06/03/2026 - 14:33

A few comments from listeners when they were asked what the learned from the webinar:

A few things that can be added to cost basis that I wasn't aware of.
- George G.

Add refinance costs to the basis. Clients rarely provide that information, so Mr. Pon's suggestion of asking for those costs and home improvement costs each year is a good one.
- TeriAnn K.

I had never heard of the American Council on Gift Annuities. Good to know you can check current rates (though it looks as though you have to be a member to get them).
- Maria R.

I love the list of improvement that qualify for increase in basis. So much good info about 1031 exchanges
- Sherri G.

If converting a residence to rental, and renting for a limited time, it's possible to get the 121 gain exclusion and do a 1031 exchange, making part of the realized gain non-taxable.
- Robert S.

Larry helped explain many nuances of tax issues to consider with this subject. Larry is phenomenal!
- Russel F.

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Tax Planning When Clients Have Large Gains on the Sale of a Home

Summary Overview

The sale of a primary residence is often one of the largest taxable transactions a client will ever encounter. While Internal Revenue Code Section 121 provides substantial gain exclusions—up to $250,000 for single taxpayers and $500,000 for married couples filing jointly—many homeowners, particularly those in high-appreciation markets, can still face significant capital gains tax exposure.

In this session, Larry Pon, CPA, EA, CFP®, PFS, AEP, explored the tax rules governing home sales, strategies for reducing taxable gains, and planning opportunities involving basis management, partial exclusions, 1031 exchanges, charitable giving techniques, opportunity zone investments, and Medicare premium planning.

A recurring theme throughout the presentation was that effective tax planning must occur before the sale closes. Proper documentation, basis tracking, and advance planning can substantially reduce tax liability and prevent missed opportunities.


Key Topics and Expanded Insights

Understanding the Home Sale Gain Calculation

The starting point for every home sale analysis is determining the taxable gain.

Core Formula

Taxable Gain = Sales Price – Adjusted Cost Basis – Section 121 Exclusion

The Section 121 exclusion remains:

  • $250,000 for single taxpayers
  • $500,000 for married filing jointly taxpayers

Importantly, these exclusion amounts have not been increased since the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997.

Key Advisor Takeaways

  • Many clients significantly underestimate their adjusted basis.
  • Large remodeling projects, additions, and capital improvements can materially reduce taxable gain.
  • Basis reconstruction should begin well before the property is listed for sale.
  • Clients should not wait until tax season to gather records.

Capital Gains Tax Rates and Planning Opportunities

The webinar reviewed how home-sale gains interact with federal capital gains tax rates.

Planning Considerations

Long-term capital gains generally qualify for:

  • 0% rate
  • 15% rate
  • 20% rate

depending on taxable income.

Strategic Gain Harvesting

Pon emphasized that advisors often focus on harvesting losses but should also consider harvesting gains when clients are in lower capital gain brackets.

Examples include:

  • Retirees before Required Minimum Distributions begin
  • Clients temporarily in lower-income years
  • Clients holding concentrated stock positions with significant appreciation

Net Investment Income Tax

Clients may also face the:

  • 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT)

once modified adjusted gross income exceeds applicable thresholds.

Planning opportunities may include:

  • Charitable contributions
  • Loss harvesting
  • Timing transactions across tax years

Section 121 Home Sale Exclusion Rules

Ownership and Use Tests

To qualify for the full exclusion:

  • Taxpayer must own the home for at least two years during the five-year period before sale.
  • Taxpayer must use the home as a principal residence for at least two years during the same five-year period.

The ownership and use periods do not have to occur simultaneously.

Advisor Implications

Clients frequently misunderstand these rules.

A home does not lose exclusion eligibility simply because:

  • The owner moved out before selling.
  • The property was rented temporarily.

The key is whether the two-out-of-five-year requirement remains satisfied.


Partial Exclusions for Early Sales

Taxpayers who fail the full two-year requirement may still qualify for a prorated exclusion.

Qualifying Events Include

Work-Related Moves

Generally requiring a new workplace at least 50 miles farther from the residence.

Health-Related Moves

Examples include:

  • Medical necessity
  • Accessibility concerns
  • Physician-recommended relocation

Unforeseeable Circumstances

Potential examples:

  • Natural disasters
  • Casualty losses
  • Multiple births
  • Unemployment
  • Divorce
  • Certain severe personal hardships

Planning Insight

The webinar emphasized documenting facts and circumstances carefully.

Partial exclusions are often overlooked but can eliminate substantial taxable gains.


Basis: The Most Overlooked Tax Planning Opportunity

One of the most practical themes of the session involved basis management.

Items That Generally Increase Basis

  • Original purchase price
  • Settlement and closing costs
  • Refinancing costs tied to acquisition
  • Room additions
  • Kitchen remodels
  • Roof replacements
  • HVAC systems
  • Driveways
  • Landscaping
  • Retaining walls
  • Pools
  • Built-in appliances
  • Fencing
  • Utility improvements

Items That Generally Do Not Increase Basis

  • Routine maintenance
  • Ordinary repairs
  • Painting
  • Utility expenses
  • HOA dues

Advisor Best Practice

Clients should maintain:

  • Digital copies of receipts
  • Contractor invoices
  • Building permits
  • Improvement summaries

throughout homeownership rather than attempting reconstruction years later.


Special Rules for Former Rentals and Mixed-Use Properties

The Housing Assistance Tax Act of 2008 introduced "nonqualified use" rules effective beginning in 2009.

Why This Matters

Prior to the law change, taxpayers could:

  1. Rent a property for years.
  2. Move into it for two years.
  3. Exclude most gains.

The current rules limit this strategy.

Nonqualified Use Allocation

Periods during which a property was not used as a principal residence may reduce the amount eligible for exclusion.

Advisor Planning Opportunity

Former rental properties require:

  • Detailed occupancy records
  • Depreciation tracking
  • Allocation calculations

before sale.


Depreciation Recapture Considerations

Even when Section 121 applies, depreciation claimed after May 6, 1997 generally remains subject to recapture.

Key Takeaways

  • Exclusion does not eliminate depreciation recapture.
  • Former home offices and rental portions may create additional taxable income.
  • Recapture is generally taxed at a maximum 25% federal rate.

1031 Exchanges Involving Former Residences

The webinar discussed advanced planning opportunities combining:

  • Section 121 exclusion
  • Section 1031 exchanges

Potential Strategy

  1. Convert residence to rental property.
  2. Establish bona fide rental use.
  3. Complete a 1031 exchange.
  4. Utilize Section 121 where applicable.

Important Limitations

  • Proper rental documentation is critical.
  • Personal use immediately before exchange can create issues.
  • Timing requirements remain strict.

Advisor Consideration

These strategies can generate significant tax deferral but require multi-year planning and careful execution.


Opportunity Zone Investments

Qualified Opportunity Zone investments were discussed as another potential deferral tool.

Potential Benefits

  • Deferral of capital gains
  • Potential long-term tax advantages
  • Real estate development opportunities

Important Risks

  • Limited operating history
  • Liquidity concerns
  • High fees in some offerings
  • Delayed cash flow

Pon emphasized that Opportunity Zones are not appropriate for every client and require extensive due diligence.


Charitable Planning Strategies for Highly Appreciated Homes

For charitably inclined clients, several advanced planning opportunities exist.

Partial Donation of Residence Before Sale

A taxpayer may:

  • Transfer a portion of ownership to charity
  • Sell the property
  • Shift a portion of gain directly to the charity

Potential benefits include:

  • Charitable deduction
  • Reduction of taxable gain

Charitable Remainder Trusts (CRTs)

A CRT may:

  • Sell appreciated property without immediate capital gains recognition
  • Provide lifetime income
  • Leave remainder assets to charity

Charitable Gift Annuities

For some clients, charitable gift annuities provide:

  • Simpler administration
  • Fixed lifetime payments
  • Immediate charitable deductions

These arrangements can be particularly effective when a client wants income and charitable impact simultaneously.


Medicare IRMAA Planning

A significant home-sale gain can increase Modified Adjusted Gross Income and trigger higher Medicare Part B and Part D premiums under IRMAA rules.

Planning Considerations

Advisors should:

  • Project MAGI before sale
  • Evaluate loss harvesting opportunities
  • Consider charitable deductions
  • Warn clients in advance about potential premium increases

Practical Follow-Up

Clients experiencing one-time income spikes may seek relief through Social Security using Form SSA-44 when appropriate life-changing events apply.


Trust-Owned Residences

Tax treatment depends heavily on trust structure.

Revocable Living Trusts

Generally treated as grantor trusts.

Result:

  • Home-sale exclusion remains available.

Irrevocable Trusts

More complicated.

Result:

  • Section 121 benefits may be limited or unavailable depending on trust structure and beneficiary arrangements.

Trust analysis should occur before listing the property.


Special Situations Discussed During Q&A

Additional planning topics included:

Duplexes

  • Rental portion treated separately from personal residence portion.
  • Partial exclusion and depreciation recapture calculations may apply.

Inherited Homes

  • Step-up in basis generally reduces future gain.
  • Buyouts between siblings can trigger taxable consequences depending on timing and appreciation.

Home Improvements

Examples discussed:

  • Swing sets may qualify if permanently attached and conveyed with the property.
  • Roof replacements generally qualify as improvements.
  • Fence replacements may qualify, while routine repairs generally do not.

Assisted Living Situations

Temporary absences due to medical care may not necessarily disqualify a residence from Section 121 treatment, depending on facts and circumstances.


Practical Advisor Takeaways

  1. Begin planning before a home is listed for sale.
  2. Reconstruct basis carefully and document every capital improvement.
  3. Evaluate Section 121 eligibility early.
  4. Review opportunities for partial exclusions.
  5. Analyze depreciation recapture exposure.
  6. Consider charitable planning for highly appreciated properties.
  7. Evaluate whether a 1031 exchange may fit the client's objectives.
  8. Monitor IRMAA exposure and Medicare premium impacts.
  9. Review trust ownership structures before sale.
  10. Coordinate legal, tax, and financial planning professionals for complex transactions.

External Reference Sources

Internal Revenue Service – Selling Your Home (Publication 523)
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p523

Internal Revenue Code Section 121
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/121

Internal Revenue Service – Like-Kind Exchanges (Publication 544)
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p544

Internal Revenue Service – Form 8949
https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-8949

Internal Revenue Service – Schedule D
https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-schedule-d-form-1040

Internal Revenue Service – Net Investment Income Tax
https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/questions-and-answers-on-the-net-investment-income-tax

Internal Revenue Service – Opportunity Zones
https://www.irs.gov/credits-deductions/opportunity-zones-frequently-asked-questions

Social Security Administration – Form SSA-44
https://www.ssa.gov/forms/ssa-44.html

IRS Publication 590-B
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p590b

American Council on Gift Annuities
https://www.acga-web.org

IRS Charitable Contributions Guidance
https://www.irs.gov/charities-and-nonprofits/charitable-organizations

IRS Publication 561 – Determining the Value of Donated Property
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p561