Amid booming California home prices, capital gains tax is crimping inventory, lawmakers say

A million dollars couldn’t entice a Fountain Valley woman to sell her house of 40 years even though she’d rather down-size and move closer to her children and grandchildren.

It’s not because of the sentimental value of the family homestead. And it’s not because she still needs four bedrooms, 2 ½ bathrooms and a big backyard.

“Why don’t I sell?” said Sue, who lives alone and doesn’t feel safe using her last name in print. “(A sale) leaves many homeowners, like me, with a huge capital gains tax.”

Capital gains — a term most commonly associated with investment property — has seeped into the vocabulary of residents living in long-held suburban tract homes.

In the past, most homeowners were sheltered from the tax on their primary residences. The first $250,000 in value gains are excluded from the tax for single taxpayers while $500,000 in gains are excluded for married couples filing joint returns.

But skyrocketing home values exposed more people to the tax because the exemptions haven’t changed in the past 26 years.

When the exclusion was adopted in 1997, the median house price was just $129,000 nationwide and $186,490 in California, Realtor figures show. As of August, the U.S. median had tripled to $407,100, and the California median jumped five-fold to $859,500.

In Sue’s case, the house she and her ex-husband bought for $125,000 in 1983 is now worth about $1.1 million. If she were to sell today, her accountant estimates, the capital gains tax would be at least $104,000.

“(If) I’m going to move … (it would be) with a lot less money to buy the next house,” she said. “This is really a big problem and, if addressed, could solve a huge shortage of good family homes that are being underutilized by seniors.”

Some argue that the tax is more than offset by soaring profits owners made on their homes.

But a handful of lawmakers and at least one housing economist believe the capital gains tax is discouraging people from selling. That, in turn, is contributing to a major shortfall in the number of homes on the market. In Southern California, for example, for-sale listings are running about a third below normal.

A bill pending in Congress seeks to remedy that problem by doubling the amount of profit that’s exempt from the tax.

The California Association of Realtors hailed the bill as a possible solution to the lack of housing. In a separate analysis, CAR determined the bill could shield two-thirds of homeowners now exposed to such a tax.

‘A simple fix’

Called the “More Homes on the Market Act,” the measure would increase the capital gains exclusion from $250,000 to $500,000 for single filers. For married couples filing a joint return, the exclusion would go from $500,000 to $1 million.

The bill, co-authored by Rep. Jimmy Panetta, D-Carmel Valley, and Rep. Mike Kelly, R-Pa., would also index the exclusion so it keeps pace with inflation.

“The existing exemption was created in 1997 and fails to take into account inflation and the sharp increase in home prices,” Panetta said in a statement. “A simple fix would allow homeowners to downsize, sell their homes, and keep their nest-eggs intact while providing one solution that can help the affordable housing issue.”

Designed to protect homeowners rather than investors or flippers, the exemption can only be used for a primary residence that owners have lived in for at least two of the last five years.

The bill has drawn support from 27 co-sponsors from both parties, including Democratic Reps. Katie Porter and Ted Lieu and GOP Reps. Mike Garcia and Michelle Steel.

Because the bill has yet to be reported out of committee, the Congressional Budget Office hasn’t done an analysis to determine how much a doubling the exemption will cost the U.S. Treasury.

A good problem

Most economists attribute low for-sale inventory to high mortgage rates, not the capital gains tax.

With rates up 4 percentage points in the last two years, most homeowners prefer to stay put in their current home than buy a new one that doubles their monthly house payment.

“I think the interest rates are the much bigger issue,” said Fred Mihaylo, a Coldwell Banker agent in Laguna Niguel. “I don’t believe people are not selling only because of capital gain.”

At the same time, homeowners benefit from a wide array of government protections, ranging from the federal mortgage-interest tax deduction to California’s Prop. 13 property tax limits.

Mission Viejo accountant Mark LeWinter believes the cost of the tax is more than offset by the profits homeowners reap.

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