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Is your home exempt from CGT? - featured image
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Is your home exempt from CGT?

Trying to get your head around Capital Gains Tax (CGT) can sometimes be like attempting to learn a new language.

Cgt2You think you’re doing alright with it and then someone from that country starts talking to you thinking you’re a local and you end up quite confused and no doubt a little embarrassed.

Of course, it doesn’t have to be that way, because there are experts out there who can assist you.

Just think of them as your very own tax interpreter!

In the meantime, though, and keeping to the foreign language theme, here are some of the basics of the CGT language for homeowners to understand.

1. You don’t pay CGT on your main residence

Your main residence (or your home) is generally exempt from CGT, however, you must move in immediately on settlement and live in it as such.

If your new home is being constructed on a vacant lot, you can treat the land as your main residence for up to four years before the dwelling is finished.

You must still move into the property as soon as possible after it is completed and use it as your main residence for at least three months.

Generally, a dwelling is considered to be your main residence if:

  • You and your family live in it.
  • Your personal belongings are in it.
  • It is the address your mail is delivered to.
  • It is your address on the electoral roll, and
  • Services such as phone, gas and power are connected.

2. When a home becomes an investment property

Generally, a dwelling is no longer your main residence once you stop living in it, which impacts more people these days as they upgrade to a new home without selling their previous one.
In this scenario, their new home would be classed as their main residence and would therefore be exempt from CGT.

House DemandHowever, because the other property had originally been their home, too, they can treat it as their main residence for up to six years if it produces income, or indefinitely if it doesn’t, if they sell it.

The caveat is that you generally cannot treat any other dwelling as your main residence for tax purposes for the same financial year period.

Of course, this only has relevance if you sold your former property while you are still living in your current home.

With multiple investment properties, for example, what this means is that you can choose which one will be classified as your main residence when you prepare your tax return for the year in which one of them was sold – but only if you lived in that property within the previous six years, for example.

These days, more people are also choosing to rent out their homes and lease a property somewhere else, that is, they are opting to become rentvesters for a time, which is another piece of tax language that it’s best to get expert advice about.

3. You run your business from home

One of the biggest changes to society over recent years has been the drastic increase in the number of people not only working from home but running a business from there, too.

However, this can unfortunately impact your CGT exemption.

Again, if this is your situation, it’s vital you work with your “tax interpreter” before lodging your first tax return from your home business.

That’s because tax issues can arise when you are generating business income from home as opposed to the more benign action of coming home from a workplace and doing some additional work from home.

It’s important to understand that if your employer has an office in the city or town where you live, your home office will not be a place of business, even if your work requires you to work outside normal business hours.

Taxes

Also, if your income includes personal services income, you may not be able to claim a deduction for occupancy expenses.

So, that’s why it’s so important to consider any CGT impacts of claiming your home as a business premise, such as:

  • Proportion of the floor area of your home that is set aside to produce income.
  • Period you use it for this purpose.
  • Whether you are eligible for the “absence” or six-year rule.
  • Whether it was first used to produce income after 20 August 1996.

As you can see, there are many variables to consider when it comes to CGT and your home.

However, rather than trying to get your head around concepts that are probably quite foreign to you, it makes more sense to sit down with experts who not only understand the language of property tax, they like to talk about it all day long.

The article is general information only and is intended as educational material. Metropole Wealth Advisory nor its associated or related entitles, directors, officers or employees intend this material to be advice either actual or implied. You should not act on any of the above without first seeking specific advice taking into account your circumstances and objectives. 

About Ken is director of Metropole Wealth Advisory and gives strategic expert advice to property investors, professionals and business owners. He is in a unique position to blend his skills of accounting, wealth advisory, property investing, financial planning and small business. View his articles
2 comments

Hi Mike, This reads like I can move into one of my rental properties for a while and if I sell it, I do not have to pay GCT (can only sell one per fin year) My accountant once said if I moved into a rental and sold it, CGT would be worked out more on ...Read full version

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