how to avoid rental property sale tax?

I have a rental property which was converted from my primary residence. I plan to rent it out for a long time. So by the time that I want to sell it (probably many years later), can I move back to the house to converted it back to primary residence to avoid the tax? can I just leave it empty (noy move in it) for 2 years to avoid the tax?

3 Responses to “how to avoid rental property sale tax?”

  • PepsiLime:

    Nope, you can’t avoid tax even by converting it back into your primary residence. You’ll have to pay tax on the depreciation that you would have taken while the property was a rental. That you can’t avoid. As far as the primary residence rule goes, you can avoid tax on gain up to $250,000 if single, and $500,000 if married, if you have owned and lived in the home for 2 out of the previous 5 years. But even that rule doesn’t exclude the gain on depreciation recapture.

  • Jack N:

    It’l only carry capital gains tax for the time it was a rental property, not the time as a personal residence.

  • travelguruette:

    If you depreciate the property as a rental then when you convert back to a primary residence you have to add back all the depreciation. You must live in it for 2 of the last 5 years. You definitely need to see a tax planner for that.