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Updated almost 2 years ago on . Most recent reply

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11
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Nat Serrano
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11
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Capital gains tax if unemployed

Nat Serrano
Posted

hi all, I've read a lot of capital gains but still I don't get answer.

I bought a house in 2016 for 200k, lived for a a few months, then moved and used it as rental property.

In 2022 I refinanced because of the low rates, got 150k cash out, owe 350k to the bank

In 2023 I received an offer to buy it for 450k, I was laid off so I only had 40k income in 2023 (so far) and we file married jointly, my wife doesn't have any income.

How much will I pay in capital gains taxes?

is the equity/cashout I got from the bank considered as capital gain and taxed? (150k)

is the capital gain considered income? so if I get 100k this year from the sell (450k-350k debt = 100k), will my total income in 2023 would be 140k? (40k income 2023 and 100k cash from the sell, minus commissions etc) or will the IRS consider only 40k (w2 income)

I know the 0% tax rate cap if married is 80k, so if capital gain is considered income then I won't sell because my income will surpass 80k, but if I don't have to pay capital gains because of being unemployed then I'll sell.

PS: I have another property that produces revenue but to my knowledge that is not considered taxable income for the capital gains (pardon for my non accountant lingo)

if needed I can pay for a quick consultation to clarify my question

thanks

Nat

Most Popular Reply

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3,126
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Matt Devincenzo
  • Investor
  • Clairemont, CA
2,640
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3,126
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Matt Devincenzo
  • Investor
  • Clairemont, CA
Replied

There's more to this than my overly simplified answer, but this at least gets you in the ballpark. Your gain is sale price, minus sale costs, minus original purchase price. E.g. $450K - $35k (just a guess) -$200k leaves a gain of $215k. 

The $150k you received before was part of the $215k gain but you never paid taxes on it. Until you sell there isn't a taxable event and so no taxes are due.

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