sao18
FNG
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2023
- Messages
- 7
When your brother passed and you inherited the property you both should have been on the deed. You could likely sell it and report it the correct way and the IRS would be none the wiser.why would it apply to her and not me?? We are 50/50 owners of the property. We both paid equal amounts to buy out our brother. I understand beings we inherited the property it would be outside a tax burden because its value was below the amount allowed before it would be taxed. But would we have to pay on the increased value of the property? Say the property was worth $100k when we inherited it, that would be tax free. Now the property is worth $250k. Profit off sale $150k, we would each get $75. Is that taxable???? My guess is, yes.
You're correct on valuation, you get the a step up in basis(cost) at inheritance. In your example, your basis in the property would be the fair market value at death/inheritance AKA 100K. Any money you put into the property would add to your basis. Say you did 50K of renovations that would increase your basis to 150(100+50). If no renovations, then basis 100K and gain would be 150k split two ways.
Few ways to avoid the tax hit:
1) 1031 exchange for a similar property. I'd recommend using an CPA to achieve this. Simply taking cash from the sale and reinvesting it will not avoid the tax.
2) rent to own.
3) installment or deferred sale.