IRS Pub. 17, Your Federal Income Tax
The basis of property you buy is usually its cost. The cost is the
amount you pay in cash, debt obligations, or other property. Your cost
also includes, for example, amounts you pay for the following items.
- Sales tax charged on the purchase.
- Freight charges to obtain the property.
- Installation and testing charges.
- Excise taxes.
- Legal and accounting fees (when they must be
capitalized).
- Revenue stamps.
- Recording fees.
- Real estate taxes (if assumed for the seller).
- Commissions.
In addition, the cost basis of real estate and business assets
may include other items.
Loans with low or no interest.
If you buy property on any time-payment plan that charges little or
no interest, the basis of your property is your stated purchase price
minus any amount considered to be unstated interest. You generally
have unstated interest if your interest rate is less than the federal
rate that applies.
For more information, see Unstated Interest in
Publication 537.
Real Property
If you buy real property, certain fees and other expenses you pay
are part of your basis in the property. Real property is land and
generally anything built on, growing on, or attached to land. For
example, a building is considered real property.
Assumption of a mortgage.
If you buy property subject to (or assume) an existing mortgage,
your basis includes the amount you pay for the property plus the
unpaid mortgage.
Settlement costs.
You can include in the basis of property you buy the settlement
fees and closing costs you pay for buying the property. You cannot
include fees and costs for getting a loan on the property. (A fee for
buying the property is any fee you would have had to pay if you bought
the property for cash.)
The following costs are some of the settlement fees or closing
costs that you can include in the basis of your property.
- Abstract fees (abstract of title fees).
- Charges for installing utility services.
- Legal fees (including title search and preparation of the
sales contract and deed).
- Recording fees.
- Surveys.
- Transfer taxes.
- Owner's title insurance.
- Any amounts the seller owes that you agree to pay, such as
back taxes or interest, recording or mortgage fees, charges for
improvements or repairs, and sales commissions.
You must properly allocate these fees or costs between land and
improvements, such as buildings, to figure the basis for depreciation
of the improvements. Allocate the fees according to the fair market
values of the land and improvements at the time of purchase. Fair
market value (FMV)
is the price at which the
property would change hands between a buyer and a seller, neither
having to buy or sell, and both having a reasonable knowledge of all
necessary facts. Sales of similar property on or about the same date
may be helpful in figuring the FMV of the property.
Settlement costs do not include amounts placed in escrow
for the future payment of items such as taxes and insurance.
The following costs are some of the settlement fees and closing
costs that you cannot include in the basis of property.
- Fire insurance premiums.
- Rent for occupancy of the property before closing.
- Charges for utilities or other services related to occupancy
of the property before closing.
- Fees for refinancing a mortgage.
- Charges connected with getting a loan. The following items
are examples of these charges.
- Points (discount points, loan origination fees).
- Mortgage insurance premiums.
- Loan assumption fees.
- Cost of a credit report.
- Fees for an appraisal required by a lender.
Real estate taxes.
If you buy real property (real estate) and agree to pay taxes the
seller owed on it, treat the taxes you pay as part of your basis. You
cannot deduct them as taxes paid.
If you reimburse the seller for taxes the seller paid for you, you
can usually deduct that amount. Do not include that amount in the
basis of the property.
Points.
If you pay points to get a loan (including a mortgage, second
mortgage, line of credit, or a home equity loan), do not add the cost
to the basis of the related property. Generally, you deduct the points
over the term of the loan. For more information on how to deduct
points, see Points in chapter 8 of Publication 535.
Points on home mortgage.
Special rules may apply to points you and the seller pay when you
get a mortgage to buy your main home. If they meet certain
requirements, you can fully deduct them in the year paid. If you
deduct seller-paid points, reduce your basis by that amount. For more
information, see Points in chapter 25.
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