this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2025
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A Boring Dystopia

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Joel and Kathryn Friedman, both 71, are counting the days until they can sell their home and move into a 55-plus community.

The retired empty-nesters have been ready to downsize for years, but are reluctant to sell their five-bedroom, 5,000-square-foot Southern California house [mansion] in large part because of at least $700,000 in capital gains taxes they estimate they'd have to pay.

Since 1997, home sale profits over $500,000 (for married couples) and $250,000 (for single filers) have been subject to a capital gains tax of up to 20%. That threshold hasn't changed since 1997, meaning that — between inflation and soaring home prices pushing an ever higher number of houses above that limit — many more home sellers have to pay the tax now than when it was first implemented.

The Friedmans are among a growing number of older homeowners discouraged by the tax from selling their valuable properties. Housing economists say that dynamic has exacerbated a shortage of family-sized homes on the market, especially in expensive places like California.

The Friedmans' house is too big for them, and maintenance costs are only rising, Joel said. "There are a million reasons why we'd like to move, but we're not because the tax is just burdensome," he said.

But that could change — there's bipartisan support in Congress for raising the federal tax threshold to boost home sales in a stagnant market.

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[–] jj4211@lemmy.world 5 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Even if you use the proceeds to immediately buy another house, you still have to pay the tax, unless you are a landlord then you get a tax break, because we must protect those landlords but not private homeowners...

So you may be at a 15% or so disadvantage looking for a new place to live if you wanted to sell your property and move.

[–] CallMeAnAI@lemmy.world -2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

No you don't get taxed at sale and even if you did booo fucking hoo. If you're sitting on 500k+ in gains after downsizing then eat it and pay the tax. I'll play a sad violin story for the top 2% in the richest nation in the world.

I can't move because of these taxes 🙄 fuck off with that circle jerk

[–] jj4211@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago

As a private homeowner you want to trade your $500k house to move near an adult child after your spouse dies. With the housing markets being equal, you end up owing a ton of capital gains tax but having to spend more just to try to keep even.

Or, as the tax code seems to want to encourage, the private homeowner becomes a landlord because that at least might let them keep pace with a new mortgage they have to take on.

It's crazy that we give tax advantage to landlords and deny them to people actually using their houses.