World Wide Property Sales
Canadian Tax Write Offs From Real Estate - Part 1
By Julie A Broad
If you are paying taxes, it means you are making money. If you are paying a lot
of taxes, then it stands to reason that you are making a lot of money. However
much you make, it doesn't make it any less painful to pass it along to the
government though. Unfortunately I haven't been faced with the problem of paying
a big bundle of tax to the government (but I am hoping I have that problem
really soon!!), but I have been through enough in the last seven years to give
you a few pointers on some ways to minimize taxes surrounding the sale of your
real estate investments.
As a real estate investor, you will pay tax on the rental income you earn on the
property as well as on any capital gains when you sell. The amount of tax you
pay on rental income can be reduced dramatically by expenses such as
maintenance, property management, capital cost allowance (depreciation),
interest on your mortgage (but not the principal pay down), and other money
spent to run your property. In Part 2 of this article series, we'll address some
of these write offs. For this edition, let's focus in on the second major area
you will pay tax on, and that is on Capital Gains when you sell your investment.
A Capital Gain occurs when you sell your property for more than you paid for it.
You do not realize your capital gains until you sell.
To calculate your capital gain take the:
Money from the sale of your property
SUBTRACT
Costs of disposition (real estate agent fees, lawyers etc.)
SUBTRACT
What you paid for the property.
You will owe tax on 50% of the amount from the above calculation if the
resulting number is positive (a capital gain). This amount gets added (or
subtracted if it's a net loss) to your personal income and you are taxed
accordingly.
If the property you are selling is your principal residence, then it is exempt
from tax. According to Canada Revenue Agency, a property qualifies as your
principal residence if in that year of filing:
* you acquire only to get the right to inhabit
* you own the property alone or jointly with another person
* you, your current or former spouse or common-law partner, or any of your
children lived in it at some time during the year
* and, you designate the property as your principal residence.
Now, what if you live in the home for a few years, and then move out and rent it
out for a few years as I did with the condo that I owned in Toronto? In that
situation, the answer for me was that the condo could still be considered my
principal residence for four years after I changed it's use. The catch is that I
could not claim capital cost allowance on the condo, nor could I claim any other
property as my principal residence at the same time. For me, this choice was
easy because I moved into a property Dave and I already owned and had been
treating as a rental property from the accounting sense of things. It was easier
to keep the condo as my primary residence and continue to treat my new "home" as
a rental property for accounting purposes. It's important to note that you and
your significant other (including common law or same sex partner) cannot own two
principal residences at the same time for tax purposes. You must choose one
during the over-lapping period.
It's complicated and that is why both my husband Dave and I have accountants
that we consult with on a regular basis to get the best advice.
THE DISCLAIMER: Neither of us have any legal training, nor do either of us
have extensive accounting training. We are not experts and we always consult
with our accountants and legal counsel before we make decisions. We pay money to
get quality advice when we need it and always advise our friends, family and
readers to do the same.
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