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Selling price. The selling price is the total cost of the property to the buyer. It includes:
Do not include stated interest, unstated interest, any amount recomputed or recharacterized as interest, or original issue discount. Adjusted basis for installment sale purposes. Your adjusted basis is the total of the following three items.
Adjusted basis. Basis is the amount of your investment in the property for installment sale purposes. The way you figure basis depends on how you acquire the property. The basis of property you buy is generally its cost. The basis of property you inherit, receive as a gift, build yourself, or receive in a tax-free exchange is figured differently. While you own property, various events may change your original basis. Some events, such as adding rooms or making permanent improvements, increase basis. Others, such as deductible casualty losses or depreciation previously allowed or allowable, decrease basis. The result is adjusted basis. For more information on how to figure basis and adjusted basis, see Publication 551. Selling expenses. Selling expenses are any expenses that relate to the sale of the property. They include commissions, attorney fees, and any other expenses paid on the sale. Selling expenses are added to the basis of the sold property. Depreciation recapture. If the property you sold was depreciable property, you may need to recapture part of the gain on the sale as ordinary income. See Depreciation Recapture Income, under Other Rules, later. Gross profit. Gross profit is the total gain you report on the installment method. To figure your gross profit, subtract your adjusted basis for installment sale purposes from the selling price. If the property you sold was your home, subtract from the gross profit any gain you can exclude. See Sale of Your Home, later, under Reporting Installment Sale Income. Contract price. Contract price equals:
Gross profit percentage. A certain percentage of each payment (after subtracting interest) is reported as installment sale income. This percentage is called the gross profit percentage and is figured by dividing your gross profit from the sale by the contract price. The gross profit percentage generally remains the same for each payment you receive. However, see the Example under Selling Price Reduced, later, for a situation where the gross profit percentage changes. Amount to report as installment sale income. Multiply the payments you receive each year (less interest) by the gross profit percentage. The result is your installment sale income for the tax year. In certain circumstances, you may be treated as having received a payment, even though you received nothing directly. A receipt of property or the assumption of a mortgage on the property sold may be treated as a payment. For a detailed discussion, see Payments Received or Considered Received, under Other Rules, later. Example. You sell property at a contract price of $6,000 and your gross profit is $1,500. Your gross profit percentage is 25% ($1,500 ÷ $6,000). After subtracting interest, you report 25% of each payment, including the down payment, as installment sale income from the sale for the tax year you receive the payment. The remainder (balance) of each payment is the tax-free return of your adjusted basis. Selling Price ReducedIf the selling price is reduced at a later date, the gross profit on the sale also will change. You then must refigure the gross profit percentage for the remaining payments. Refigure your gross profit using Worksheet B, New Gross Profit Percentage — Selling Price Reduced. You will spread any remaining gain over future installments. Worksheet B. New Gross Profit Percentage — Selling Price Reduced
Example. In 2005, you sold land with a basis of $40,000 for $100,000. Your gross profit was $60,000. You received a $20,000 down payment and the buyers note for $80,000. The note provides for four annual payments of $20,000 each, plus 12% interest, beginning in 2006. Your gross profit percentage is 60%. You reported a gain of $12,000 on each payment received in 2005 and 2006. In 2007, you and the buyer agreed to reduce the purchase price to $85,000 and payments during 2007, 2008, and 2009 are reduced to $15,000 for each year. The new gross profit percentage, 46.67%, is figured in Worksheet B. You will report a gain of $7,000 (46.67% of $15,000) on each of the $15,000 installments due in 2007, 2008, and 2009. Example — Worksheet B. New Gross Profit Percentage — Selling Price Reduced
Reporting Installment Sale IncomeGenerally, you will use Form 6252 to report installment sale income from casual sales of real or personal property during the tax year. You also will have to report the installment sale income on Schedule D (Form 1040) or Form 4797, or both. See Schedule D (Form 1040) and Form 4797, later. If the property was your main home, you may be able to exclude part or all of the gain. See Sale of Your Home, later. Form 6252Use Form 6252 to report an installment sale in the year it takes place and to report payments received, or considered received because of related party resales, in later years. Attach it to your tax return for each year. Form 6252 will help you determine the gross profit, contract price, gross profit percentage, and installment sale income. Which parts to complete. Which part to complete depends on whether you are filing the form for the year of sale or a later year. Year of sale. Complete lines 1 through 4, Part I, and Part II. If you sold property to a related party during the year, complete Part III. Later years. Complete lines 1 through 4 and Part II for any year in which you receive a payment from an installment sale. If you sold a marketable security to a related party after May 14, 1980, and before January 1, 1987, complete Form 6252 for each year of the installment agreement, even if you did not receive a payment. (After December 31, 1986, the installment method is not available for the sale of marketable securities.) Complete lines 1 through 4. Complete Part II for any year in which you receive a payment from the sale. Complete Part III unless you received the final payment during the tax year. If you sold property other than a marketable security to a related party after May 14, 1980, complete Form 6252 for the year of sale and for 2 years after the year of sale, even if you did not receive a payment. Complete lines 1 through 4. Complete Part II for any year during this 2-year period in which you receive a payment from the sale. Complete Part III for the 2 years after the year of sale unless you received the final payment during the tax year. Schedule D (Form 1040)Enter the gain figured on Form 6252 (line 26) for personal-use property (capital assets) on Schedule D (Form 1040), Capital Gains and Losses, as a short-term gain (line 4) or long-term gain (line 11). If your gain from the installment sale qualifies for long-term capital gain treatment in the year of sale, it will continue to qualify in later tax years. Your gain is long-term if you owned the property for more than 1 year when you sold it. Form 4797An installment sale of property used in your business or that earns rent or royalty income may result in a capital gain, an ordinary gain, or both. All or part of any gain from the disposition of the property may be ordinary gain from depreciation recapture. For trade or business property held for more than 1 year, enter the amount from line 26 of Form 6252 on Form 4797, line 4. If the property was held 1 year or less or you have an ordinary gain from the sale of a noncapital asset (even if the holding period is more than 1 year), enter this amount on Form 4797, line 10, and write “From Form 6252.” Sale of Your HomeIf you sell your home, you may be able to exclude all or part of the gain on the sale. See Publication 523, for information about excluding the gain. If the sale is an installment sale, any gain you exclude is not included in gross profit when figuring your gross profit percentage. Seller-financed mortgage. If you finance the sale of your home to an individual, both you and the buyer may have to follow special reporting procedures. When you report interest income received from a buyer who uses the property as a personal residence, write the buyers name, address, and social security number (SSN) on line 1 of Schedule B (Form 1040) or Schedule 1 (Form 1040A). When deducting the mortgage interest, the buyer must write your name, address, and SSN on line 11 of Schedule A (Form 1040). If either person fails to include the other persons SSN, a $50 penalty will be assessed. Other RulesThe rules discussed in this part of the publication apply only in certain circumstances or to certain types of property. The following topics are discussed.
Electing Out of the Installment MethodIf you elect not to use the installment method, you generally report the entire gain in the year of sale, even though you do not receive all the sale proceeds in that year. To figure the amount of gain to report, use the fair market value (FMV) of the buyers installment obligation that represents the buyers debt to you. Notes, mortgages, and land contracts are examples of obligations that are included at FMV. You must figure the FMV of the buyers installment obligation, whether or not you would actually be able to sell it. If you use the cash method of accounting, the FMV of the obligation will never be considered to be less than the FMV of the property sold (minus any other consideration received). Example. You sold a parcel of land for $50,000. You received a $10,000 down payment and will receive the balance over the next 10 years at $4,000 a year, plus 8% interest. The buyer gave you a note for $40,000. The note had an FMV of $40,000. You paid a commission of 6%, or $3,000, to a broker for negotiating the sale. The land cost $25,000 and you owned it for more than one year. You decide to elect out of the installment method and report the entire gain in the year of sale.
The recognized gain of $22,000 is long-term capital gain. You include the entire gain in income in the year of sale, so you do not include in income any principal payments you receive in later tax years. The interest on the note is ordinary income and is reported as interest income each year. How to elect out. To make this election, do not report your sale on Form 6252. Instead, report it on Schedule D (Form 1040) or Form 4797, whichever applies. When to elect out. Make this election by the due date, including extensions, for filing your tax return for the year the sale takes place. Automatic six-month extension. If you timely file your tax return without making the election, you still can make the election by filing an amended return within 6 months of the due date of your return (excluding extensions). Write “Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2” at the top of the amended return and file it where the original return was filed. Revoking the election. Once made, the election can be revoked only with IRS approval. A revocation is retroactive. You will not be allowed to revoke the election if either of the following applies.
Payments Received or Considered ReceivedYou must figure your gain each year on the payments you receive, or are treated as receiving, from an installment sale. In certain situations, you are considered to have received a payment, even though the buyer does not pay you directly. These situations occur when the buyer assumes or pays any of your debts, such as a loan, or pays any of your expenses, such as a sales commission. However, as discussed later, the buyers assumption of your debt is treated as a recovery of your basis rather than as a payment in many cases. Buyer Pays Sellers ExpensesIf the buyer pays any of your expenses related to the sale of your property, it is considered a payment to you in the year of sale. Include these expenses in the selling and contract prices when figuring the gross profit percentage. Buyer Assumes MortgageIf the buyer assumes or pays off your mortgage, or otherwise takes the property subject to the mortgage, the following rules apply. Mortgage less than basis. If the buyer assumes a mortgage that is not more than your installment sale basis in the property, it is not considered a payment to you. It is considered a recovery of your basis. The contract price is the selling price minus the mortgage. Example. You sell property with an adjusted basis of $19,000. You have selling expenses of $1,000. The buyer assumes your existing mortgage of $15,000 and agrees to pay you $10,000 (a cash down payment of $2,000 and $2,000 (plus 12% interest) in each of the next 4 years). The selling price is $25,000 ($15,000 + $10,000). Your gross profit is $5,000 ($25,000 - $20,000 installment sale basis). The contract price is $10,000 ($25,000 - $15,000 mortgage). Your gross profit percentage is 50% ($5,000 ÷ $10,000). You report half of each $2,000 payment received as gain from the sale. You also report all interest you receive as ordinary income. Mortgage more than basis. If the buyer assumes a mortgage that is more than your installment sale basis in the property, you recover your entire basis. The part of the mortgage greater than your basis is treated as a payment received in the year of sale. To figure the contract price, subtract the mortgage from the selling price. This is the total amount you will receive directly from the buyer. Add to this amount the payment you are considered to have received (the difference between the mortgage and your installment sale basis). The contract price is then the same as your gross profit from the sale. Installmentsale
Example. The selling price for your property is $9,000. The buyer will pay you $1,000 annually (plus 8% interest) over the next 3 years
and assume an
existing mortgage of $6,000. Your adjusted basis in the property is $4,400. You have selling expenses of $600, for a total
installment sale basis of
$5,000. The part of the mortgage that is more than your installment sale basis is $1,000 ($6,000 - $5,000). This amount is
included in the
contract price and treated as a payment received in the year of sale. The contract price is $4,000:
Your gross profit on the sale is also $4,000:
Your gross profit percentage is 100%. Report 100% of each payment (less interest) as gain from the sale. Treat the $1,000
difference between the
mortgage and your installment sale basis as a payment and report 100% of it as gain in the year of sale.
If the buyer of your property is the person who holds the mortgage on it, your debt is canceled, not assumed. You are considered
to receive a
payment equal to the outstanding canceled debt.
Example. Mary Jones loaned you $45,000 in 2003 in exchange for a note mortgaging a tract of land you owned. On April 4, 2007, she bought
the land for
$70,000. At that time, $30,000 of her loan to you was outstanding. She agreed to forgive this $30,000 debt and to pay you
$20,000 (plus interest) on
August 1, 2007, and $20,000 on August 1, 2008. She did not assume an existing mortgage. She canceled the $30,000 debt you
owed her. You are considered
to have received a $30,000 payment at the time of the sale.
If the buyer assumes any other debts, such as a loan or back taxes, it may be considered a payment to you in the year of sale.
If the buyer assumes the debt instead of paying it off, only part of it may have to be treated as a payment. Compare the debt
to your installment
sale basis in the property being sold. If the debt is less than your installment sale basis, none of it is treated as a payment.
If it is more, only
the difference is treated as a payment. If the buyer assumes more than one debt, any part of the total that is more than your
installment sale basis
is considered a payment. These rules are the same as the rules discussed earlier under Buyer Assumes Mortgage. However, they apply only to
the following types of debt the buyer assumes.
If the buyer assumes any other type of debt, such as a personal loan or your legal fees relating to the sale, it is treated
as if the buyer had
paid off the debt at the time of the sale. The value of the assumed debt is then considered a payment to you in the year of
sale.
If you receive property rather than money from the buyer, it is still considered a payment in the year received. However,
see Like-Kind
Exchange, later.
Generally, the amount of the payment is the propertys FMV on the date you receive it.
Exception.
If the property the buyer gives you is payable on demand or readily tradable, the amount you should consider as payment
in the year received is: Debt not payable on demand.
Any evidence of debt you receive from the buyer that is not payable on demand is not considered a payment. This is
true even if the debt is
guaranteed by a third party, including a government agency.
Fair market value (FMV).
This is the price at which property would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller, neither being
under any compulsion to buy or
sell and both having a reasonable knowledge of all the necessary facts.
Third-party note.
If the property the buyer gives you is a third-party note (or other obligation of a third party), you are considered
to have received a payment
equal to the notes FMV. Because the FMV of the note is itself a payment on your installment sale, any payments you later
receive from the third party
are not considered payments on the sale. The excess of the notes face value over its FMV is interest. Exclude this interest
in determining the
selling price of the property. However, see Exception under Property Used As a Payment, earlier.
Example. You sold real estate in an installment sale. As part of the down payment, the buyer assigned to you a $50,000, 8% interest
third-party note. The
FMV of the third-party note at the time of the sale was $30,000. This amount, not $50,000, is a payment to you in the year
of sale. The third-party
note had an FMV equal to 60% of its face value ($30,000 ÷ $50,000), so 60% of each principal payment you receive on this note
is a nontaxable
return of capital. The remaining 40% is interest taxed as ordinary income.
Bond.
A bond or other evidence of debt you receive from the buyer that is payable on demand or readily tradable in an established
securities market is
treated as a payment in the year you receive it. For more information on the amount you should treat as a payment, see Exception under
Property Used As a Payment, earlier.
If you receive a government or corporate bond for a sale before October 22, 2004, and the bond has interest coupons
attached or can be readily
traded in an established securities market, you are considered to have received payment equal to the bonds FMV. However,
see Exception,
earlier.
Buyers note.
The buyers note (unless payable on demand) is not considered payment on the sale. However, its full face value is
included when figuring the
selling price and the contract price. Payments you receive on the note are used to figure your gain in the year received.
If you use an installment obligation to secure any debt, the net proceeds from the debt may be treated as a payment on the
installment obligation.
This is known as the pledge rule and it applies if the selling price of the property is over $150,000. It does not apply to
the following
dispositions.
The net debt proceeds are the gross debt minus the direct expenses of getting the debt. The amount treated as a payment is
considered received on
the later of the following dates.
A debt is secured by an installment obligation to the extent that payment of principal or interest on the debt is directly
secured (under the terms
of the loan or any underlying arrangement) by any interest in the installment obligation. For sales after December 16, 1999,
payment on a debt is
treated as directly secured by an interest in an installment obligation to the extent an arrangement allows you to satisfy
all or part of the debt
with the installment obligation.
Limit.
The net debt proceeds treated as a payment on the pledged installment obligation cannot be more than the excess of
item (1) over item (2), below. Installment payments.
The pledge rule accelerates the reporting of the installment obligation payments. Do not report payments received
on the obligation after it has
been pledged until the payments received exceed the amount reported under the pledge rule.
Exception.
The pledge rule does not apply to pledges made after December 17, 1987, to refinance a debt under the following circumstances. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||