Downsizing your home in retirement can free up cash and reduce expenses, but understanding the tax implications helps you maximize the financial benefit and avoid surprises.
Tax Benefits of Downsizing
The Financial Benefits
Downsizing Can:
- Free up cash (sell larger home, buy smaller)
- Reduce expenses (lower property tax, maintenance, utilities)
- Simplify life
- Why: Financial and lifestyle benefits
Tax Benefit: Capital gains exclusion can make sale tax-free
The Tax Benefit
Capital Gains Exclusion:
- Up to $250,000 (single) / $500,000 (married) tax-free
- If meet requirements
- Why: Major tax benefit
Example: Sell home for $400,000 profit
- Married: $0 tax (under $500,000 exclusion)
- Vs. without exclusion: $60,000+ tax
Capital Gains Exclusion
The Exclusion Amounts
2026 Exclusion (unchanged):
- Single: $250,000
- Married Filing Jointly: $500,000
- Why: Significant tax benefit
Key Point: Can exclude up to these amounts from capital gains tax.
Requirements
Must Meet All:
- Ownership test: Owned home for 2 of last 5 years
- Use test: Lived in home as primary residence for 2 of last 5 years
- Frequency limit: Can't have used exclusion in last 2 years
- Why: Prevents abuse
Both Spouses Must Meet (for married):
- For full $500,000 exclusion
- Why: Both must qualify
How the Exclusion Works
The Calculation
Step 1: Calculate Gain:
- Sale price minus basis (purchase price + improvements)
- Why: Determine gain
Step 2: Apply Exclusion:
- Subtract exclusion amount
- Why: Reduce taxable gain
Step 3: Calculate Tax:
- Tax remaining gain at capital gains rates
- Why: Only excess is taxable
Example
Situation: Married, sell home for $600,000 profit
Exclusion: $500,000
Taxable Gain: $100,000 ($600,000 - $500,000)
Tax: $15,000 (15% of $100,000)
Vs. Without Exclusion: $90,000 tax (15% of $600,000)
Savings: $75,000
If Under Exclusion
If Gain Less Than Exclusion:
- No tax on home sale
- Why: Fully excluded
Example: Married, $300,000 gain
- Tax: $0 (under $500,000 exclusion)
Tax Implications of Home Sale
Capital Gains Tax
If Gain Exceeds Exclusion:
- Excess taxed at capital gains rates
- 0%, 15%, or 20% (depending on income)
- Why: Preferential rates
Example: Married, $600,000 gain
- Exclusion: $500,000
- Taxable: $100,000
- Tax: $15,000 (15% of $100,000)
Basis Adjustments
Improvements Increase Basis:
- Home improvements add to basis
- Reduces gain
- Why: Lower gain = lower tax
Example:
- Purchase: $200,000
- Improvements: $50,000
- Basis: $250,000
- Sale: $600,000
- Gain: $350,000 (not $400,000)
Depreciation Recapture
If You Rented Home:
- Depreciation may be recaptured
- Taxed at 25% (not capital gains rate)
- Why: Different treatment
Example:
- Depreciation: $30,000
- Recapture tax: $7,500 (25% of $30,000)
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Moving Expenses
Generally Not Deductible
Moving Expenses (2026):
- Generally not deductible
- Why: TCJA eliminated deduction for most
Exception: Military moves (if active duty)
What You Can't Deduct
Not Deductible:
- Moving truck rental
- Moving company fees
- Travel expenses
- Why: No longer deductible
But: May reduce your gain (if part of sale)
Downsizing Strategies
Strategy 1: Time the Sale
Meet 2-Year Requirement:
- Own and live in home 2 of last 5 years
- Why: Qualify for exclusion
Example:
- Bought home 3 years ago
- Qualify: Meet 2-year requirement
Strategy 2: Maximize Basis
Track Improvements:
- Keep records of improvements
- Add to basis
- Why: Reduces gain
Example:
- Improvements: $50,000
- Reduces gain by $50,000: Lower tax
Strategy 3: Coordinate with Other Income
Sell in Low-Income Year:
- Lower total income
- Capital gains in lower bracket
- Why: Lower tax rate
Example:
- Year 1: Low income, sell home (0% capital gains)
- Year 2: Higher income, would be 15%
- Savings: $7,500+ from timing
Strategy 4: Use Exclusion Strategically
If Large Gain:
- May need to pay tax on excess
- Plan for tax
- Why: Avoid surprises
Example:
- Gain: $600,000
- Exclusion: $500,000
- Taxable: $100,000: Plan for $15,000 tax
Real Examples
Example 1: Under Exclusion
Situation: Married, sell home for $400,000 gain
Exclusion: $500,000
Taxable Gain: $0 (under exclusion)
Tax: $0
Keep: $400,000 (all tax-free)
Example 2: Over Exclusion
Situation: Married, sell home for $600,000 gain
Exclusion: $500,000
Taxable Gain: $100,000
Tax: $15,000 (15% of $100,000)
Keep: $585,000 (after tax)
Example 3: Single Filer
Situation: Single, sell home for $300,000 gain
Exclusion: $250,000
Taxable Gain: $50,000
Tax: $7,500 (15% of $50,000)
Keep: $292,500 (after tax)
Example 4: With Improvements
Situation: Married, $600,000 sale, $200,000 purchase, $50,000 improvements
Basis: $250,000 ($200,000 + $50,000)
Gain: $350,000 ($600,000 - $250,000)
Exclusion: $500,000
Taxable Gain: $0 (under exclusion)
Tax: $0
Vs. Without Improvements: $400,000 gain, still $0 tax (under exclusion)
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Not Meeting 2-Year Requirement
Problem: Don't own/live in home 2 years
Cost: Lose exclusion, pay full tax on gain
Solution: Wait until meet requirement
Mistake 2: Not Tracking Improvements
Problem: Don't keep records of improvements
Cost: Pay tax on improvements (should reduce gain)
Solution: Keep detailed records
Mistake 3: Not Planning for Tax
Problem: Large gain, don't plan for tax on excess
Cost: Surprise tax bill
Solution: Calculate tax, plan for payment
Mistake 4: Using Exclusion Too Frequently
Problem: Used exclusion within 2 years
Cost: Can't use exclusion again
Solution: Wait 2 years between sales
Bottom Line
Downsizing and taxes:
- Capital gains exclusion: Up to $250,000 (single) / $500,000 (married) tax-free
- Must meet requirements: Own and live in home 2 of last 5 years
- Improvements reduce gain: Add to basis
- Excess is taxable: Capital gains rates (0%, 15%, 20%)
- Timing matters: Sell in low-income years for lower tax
Key Takeaways:
- Capital gains exclusion: Up to $250,000 (single) / $500,000 (married)
- Must meet requirements: 2-year ownership and use test
- Improvements reduce gain: Track and add to basis
- Excess is taxable: Capital gains rates if over exclusion
- Timing matters: Sell in low-income years
- Track improvements: Keep detailed records
- Plan for tax: If gain exceeds exclusion
Action Steps:
- Understand capital gains exclusion ($250,000 single / $500,000 married)
- Ensure you meet 2-year requirement (own and live in home)
- Track all home improvements (add to basis)
- Calculate potential gain (sale price minus basis)
- Plan for tax if gain exceeds exclusion
- Time sale strategically (low-income years)
- Keep detailed records (purchase, improvements, sale)
- Work with professional if large gain
Remember: Downsizing can be tax-free if your gain is under the exclusion amount ($250,000 single / $500,000 married). Track your improvements to maximize basis, ensure you meet the 2-year requirement, and plan for tax if your gain exceeds the exclusion. The key is understanding the exclusion rules and planning your sale strategically.