Ask Margaret: Can I avoid CGT when I sell my home?

I won’t rent out my former home, so will I avoid CGT?

Ask Margaret: Can I avoid CGT when I sell my home?

By Margaret Lomas
Friday, 08 February 2013

Hi Margaret

I am going to sell my family home and move into a new home, but it's taking time to sell, and so I wanted to take my first home off the market for a while and move into the new one, then sell at a later date.  I won’t rent out my former home, so will I avoid CGT? 

Andrea

 

 

Andrea, capital gains tax (CGT) is one of the most misunderstood concepts in property investing, but in reality it’s quite simple.

CGT is not about whether you rent out a property or not, and many assets attract CGT even though they don’t produce income for you. When it comes to CGT on your family home, it is all about which property you intend to claim as your principal place of residence (PPOR), and you can only claim one. Any other property you own, regardless of if it is rented out or not, will accrue CGT. The value that becomes the cost base upon which the gain is calculated will depend on a host of things, from when it was purchased through to when it ceased being your principal place of residence exemption.

You can move out of your  PPOR for up to six years and still maintain an exemption on it, as long as you don’t have another property for which you claim that exemption. This allows home owners to be relocated for work, or move out and rent for a time, without CGT accruing. Remember that if you buy another property in that time, you must nominate one as your PPOR, and your intention for the nominated property is that it must be genuinely a home you have intention to reside in.

You are allowed a six-month overlap, however, so that you have time to move and set up a new principal place of residence.  Be very careful on this one, though – if you go over the six months  by even one day you may end up paying some CGT on the family home, calculated in most cases on the change in value form the day you moved out until the day it sells. This might be OK if the value has not increased since you moved out, but if there has been any type of value increase since you left it, you could be up for some tax.

Try not to be too alarmed – remember  CGT is incurred on only half the gain (as long as it has been held as an asset over 12 months) and although it is tacked on to the top of your other income and calculated at your highest marginal rate of tax, this may be a fairly small amount after all.

Margaret Lomas is a best-selling author and writes and hosts the popular Property Success With Margaret Lomas and heads up the panel onYour Money, Your Call, both on Sky News. She is the founder of Destiny.

Have a property question? Ask Margaret!



      Did you like this article? 

      Sign up to the Property Observer Newsletter to receive a daily news wrap-up straight to your inbox AND a free eBook!

      Please enter a valid email address. For example fred@domain.com .


      The Mark at Sydney's Central Park

      Central Park is the $2 billion transformation of a heritage brewery site on Sydney's Broadway into a vibrant mixed-use urban village.

      Designed by architects Johnson Pilton Walker, 'The Mark' is a soaring glass tower of sustainability, advanced building technology and applied imagination - and your opportunity to capitalise on Central Park's success.
      Register your interest now at centralparksydney.com or call 1300 857 057. >>
        Previous
        Next
        Investors should steer clear as Port Hedland's star fades: Terry Ryder Terry Ryder
        Now, all signs point south for this market. A year ago vacancies were near zero but today they’re approaching 5%. Price growth has stopped and, according to Australian Property Monitors’ price graph, has started to dip below the red line.
        SEARCH SITE

        Suburb Data

        Free suburb snapshots for investors

        Powered by

        Property data for Western Australia Property data for Tasmania Property data for Queensland Property data for Northern Territory Property data for South Australia Property data for Victoria Property data for New South Wales Property data for Canberra

        Click on your state for local insight

        Follow us Property Observer on Twitter Property Observer on Facebook Property Observer on LinkedIn Subscribe to Property Observer RSS feeds
        RP Data-Rismark June 20 daily index
         

        Private Media Publications

        Crikey

        loading...

        Smart Company

        loading...

        StartupSmart

        loading...

        Leading Company

        loading...

        Womens Agenda

        loading...