Rumors about the 3.8% Medicare tax continue to circulate. Here's the
definitive word on what's true and what's not on how the tax impacts real
estate.
Ever since health care reform was enacted into law more than two years ago,
rumors have been circulating on the Internet and in e-mails that the law
contains a 3.8 percent tax on real estate. NAR quickly
released material to show that the tax doesn’t target real estate and will
in fact affect very few home sales, because it’s a tax that will only affect
high-income households that realize a substantial gain on an asset sale,
including on a home sale, once other factors are taken into account. Maybe 2-3
percent of home sellers will be affected.
Nevertheless, the rumors persist and the latest version that’s circulating
falsely say NAR is advocating for the tax’s repeal. But while NAR doesn’t
support the tax (it was added into the health care law at the last minute and
never considered in hearings), it’s not advocating for its repeal at this
time.
The characterization of the 3.8 percent tax as a tax on real estate is an
example of an Internet rumor, says Heather Elias, NAR’s director of social
business media. Elias and Linda Goold, NAR’s director of tax policy, sat down
for a discussion of how the tax works and how Internet rumors work and you can
find their remarks in the 6-minute video below.
Goold says the tax will affect few home sellers because so many different
pieces must fall into place a certain way for the tax to apply. First, any home
sale gain must be more than the $250,000-$500,000 capital gains exclusion that’s
in effect today. That’s gain, not sales amount, so you really have to reap a
substantial amount for the tax to even come into play. Very few people are
walking away with a gain of more than half a million dollars today, even in the
high-end home market, so right off the bat only a few home sellers would be a
candidate for the tax.
For the few households that do see a gain of more than the $250,000-$500,000
exclusion (that’s $250,000 for single filers and $500,000 for joint filers),
only the amount above the exclusion would be factored into the tax calculation,
and that would still only apply to high-income households, which the law defines
as single people earning $200,000 a year and joint filers earning $250,000 a
year.
So, if you are a households with annual income of $250,000 or more and you
earn a gain of more than $500,000 on your house (again, that’s after the
$500,000 exclusion), any amount of gain above the exclusion would be plugged
into a formula to see if it’s taxable. If it turns out that it’s taxable, then
the amount could be subject to the 3.8 percent tax. If the household had a gain
of more than $500,000 but only earned $249,000 a year in income, the tax
wouldn’t apply.
(Note that these are just hypothetical examples. To know if a case would
really be subject to the tax, a professional tax preparer or tax attorney has to
look at all the particulars of the tax filer’s case. Only a tax professional is
in a position to say the tax is applicable, but the examples cited here could
help you get a sense of how the tax works.)
The other thing about the tax worth noting is that, although it takes effect
in 2013, any impact on taxes wouldn’t happen until 2014. That’s because the tax
filer would do the calculation in 2014 for the 2013 tax year. Because it’s not a
tax on a real estate sale but rather on a capital gain, it’s not calculated at
the time of an asset sale, whether that asset is a house or something else. It’s
calculated at the time the filer figures his or her tax.
This is all explained clearly in the video, so if you have questions about
how the tax works, or if you’re still hearing rumors about the tax and you’re
not certain of the accuracy of what you’re hearing, the video should prove
helpful.
Source: http://realtormag.realtor.org/news-and-commentary/feature/article/2012/10/38-tax-whats-true-whats-not
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