monthly mortgage payment, upkeep, utilities, and unexpected repair. It may be that neither spouse is in a financial position to singularly carry the full financial burden, and neither may be in a position to buy out the other. Preventing default on the mortgage is the most common reason divorcing couples choose to sell the family home. Monies budgeted for the upkeep of the home, property taxes, home insurance, home security, and house payments may or may not still be available when couples split. Couples who sell their homes before divorce have the advantage of the capital gains tax exclusion of $500,000. A divorced person selling a home receives 50% of the tax break. Whether and how the capital gains tax affects you during your divorce depends on what you are doing with the house. In general, transfers of property between divorcing spouses are nontaxable. But there are circumstances where the capital gains tax—a tax on profits from sales of property where the gains exceed a certain amount—does apply to transfers that are made as part of your divorce. If you sell your house, you and your spouse can each exclude the first $250,000 of gain from your taxable income. The capital gains exclusion applies only to your “principal residence,” which is defined as a home in which you've lived for at least two of the five years prior to the sale. A vacation house doesn't count. What's “gain”? In the simplest terms, taxable gain is the selling price of your home, minus the selling expenses, minus your adjusted “basis.” Basis is the amount you paid for your house or the amount it cost you to build it, with some pluses and minuses for improvements and tax benefits. Of course, being tax related, your basis is not always simple to figure out. If you and your spouse sell your house at the time you're getting divorced, the capital gains tax applies. But you're entitled to exclude a total of $500,000 of gain from tax if you lived there for two of the five years before the sale. (If either spouse is in the military that five-year period can be extended for up to ten years under some circumstances.) And if you bought the house less than two years ago the exclusion may be reduced.
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