SPONSORED RESULTS about Capital Gains taxes:
The tax basis of assets or investments
To determine whether or not the sale of your
investment or asset resulted in a capital gain or a capital
loss, you first need to figure its tax basis.
The tax
basis is dependent upon several factors - how you acquired the
investment or asset, its fair market value or cost, and the
amount it has depreciated or appreciated.
Most of the
time determining the tax basis is simple, especially if you
made the original purchase.
However, things get a
little more complicated if you're selling something you've
inherited or received as a gift. Or if you're selling a house
on which you've made improvements or a collectible that has
depreciated in value over time.
In these instances, the
tax basis is calculated differently.
Here is a
guide to help you determine the tax basis of an asset or
investment:
|
If you sell: |
You need to know the
asset's: |
Its basis is: |
|
Property you purchased |
cost |
its cost increased by improvements or
decreased by depreciation |
|
Property you received as a gift |
• fair market value on date gift was
made • original cost to the donor • any gift tax
paid by the donor |
whichever is less: the fair market value
or the cost to the donor increased by any gift tax
|
|
Property you inherited |
fair market value on date of death |
the fair market value on the date of
death |
|
Property received for services |
its value |
the amount you paid taxes on as part of
your income |
Methods of selling investments
Once you've figured out the tax basis of an
asset, the capital gain or loss is pretty straight-forward.
However, the process can become more complicated when you are
selling investments.
For example, if five years
ago you bought 100 shares of stock all at once, and you sold
them this past year for a capital gain, simply enter the price
you purchased the shares for originally as the tax basis, and
the amount you sold them for in the long term gains section of
your Schedule D.
Sidebar
Ahh, Schedule D. One
of those "fun forms". With multiple selling points and
different types of assets, filling our Schedule D (and
Schedule D-1) can get complicated. But if you are prepared,
and file electronically, the process
becomes much simpler.
But back to the theory.
If throughout
the years you periodically bought more of a certain company's
stock, and then sold a portion of the shares, figuring the tax
basis becomes trickier:
Probably, each time you
bought more shares, the price per share was not the same.
Selling a number of shares with varying costs adds to the
confusion.
In these instances, you must designate
which shares you're selling and indicate the amount you paid
for each share. The IRS recognizes four different methods of
selling shares of varying prices.
How shares are sold. (Or how they should be)
The easiest is the First-in First-out
method. This is also the default method, used if you fail
to indicate an alternative one. As the title suggests, under
this method, the shares you buy first are sold
first.
Note: you need to tell your broker which
method you want to use while you are selling the shares.
Otherwise, it is likely the first method was used, which means
you can not figure your capital gains and losses using a
different method.
The remaining three methods are
less common, but can make more financial sense in some
situations.
For instance, the Specific ID
Method, which allows you to pick and choose the shares you
want to sell, is quite helpful if the most recently bought
shares are the ones you want to sell.
The
Single-Category Average Basis Method figures the
average pre-sale basis for all the shares and uses this
average to figure your capital gain or loss on the amount of
shares you are selling.
Finally, the
Double-Category Average Basis Method figures two
average pre-sale bases, one for short term shares and one for
long term shares. You then choose how many shares from either
category you would like to sell at the average
basis.
If you use any of the last three methods,
indicate this on your Schedule D.
Next: fun
times in April means filling out Schedule
D.
Related IRS publications
You can get more information about capital
gains tax rates directly from the IRS, in the form of IRS Publication 550.
If you file a
paper return, you will also have to fill out Schedule D and possibly Schedule D-1. If you file electronically, all this will be taken
care of for you electronically.
Note: you will need an Adobe Acrobat
Reader to view these publications, which you can get here. (But you probably already have
it.)