HOME
SALES FOR JOB MOVES
Tax Consequences
of
Home Purchase Programs
hen employees are asked to relocate to a
new job site, employers often offer various
benefitsincluding home purchase
programsto ease the transition. Using three
examples, revenue ruling 2005-74 explains the tax
consequences to employees and employers; CPAs
should become familiar with them.
FACTS
In the ruling an employer either arranges to
purchase an employees home at a certain
price or contracts with a third-party relocation
company to act as its agent and administer a
buyout.
In the first
scenario the employee effectively sells the
residence to the employer via the relocation
company; the buyout price is generally the
average of two or three appraisals. The property
is transferred to the agent. The employer later
sells the property to a third-party buyer at a
loss.
The second
scenario is the same, except the buyout price may
be determined by an amended value
option under which the employee can hire a
broker to locate a prospective buyer who will
offer more than the appraised value. If such an
offer is made, the employerthrough its
agentpurchases the home at the higher bid
price. The employer may or may not sell the
property to that prospective buyer. If it does,
the employee is not entitled to any part of the
sales price the employer receives that exceeds
the amount the employee received for the home.
The third scenario
is the same as the second, but the
employees sale of the home to the employer
at the higher amended price hinges on the
employers entering into a contract (acting
through the agent) with the actual
prospective buyer the employee located. The
employee also retains the right to negotiate the
sale of the residence to that buyer. Further, the
employee receives proceeds representing the
higher amended value, provided the sale of the
home to the third-party buyer closes.
ANALYSIS AND HOLDINGS
Applying a benefits-and-burdens analysis to the
above scenarios, the ruling concludes that, in
the first two, the overall transaction actually
resulted in two separate sales: the
employees sale of the residence to the
employer and the employers sale to the
third-party buyer. The employee recognizes
taxable gain on the disposition of the residence,
unless it is excluded from gross income by the
IRC section 121 principal residence exclusion.
However, the employee does not have taxable
compensation income for the employers
costs, if any (that is, property taxes and
mortgage payments).
On the other hand,
if the transactions are treated as one sale (as
in the third scenario), the employees gain
on a disposition is taxed the same way, but the
employers expenses are compensation income
to the employee under sections 61(a)(1) and 82.
UNANSWERED QUESTIONS
The ruling does not address the employers
payroll tax obligations, its income tax
consequences on the propertys acquisition
and subsequent sale, or whether the residence is
a capital or ordinary income asset in its hands.
RECOMMENDATION
An employer that offers a home purchase program
should be aware of the tax outcomes for itself
and its employees.
For more
information, see Tax Clinic, Tax
Consequences of Home Purchase Programs for
Relocating Employees by Carlisle F. Toppin,
in the March 2006 issue of The Tax Adviser.

Lesli
S. Laffie, editor
The Tax Adviser
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