Summary#
This bill raises the amount of profit ("gain") people can exclude from federal income tax when they sell their main home. It doubles the current exclusion limits and makes those dollar limits rise with inflation each year after 2024. The broad goal, as implied by the title, is to encourage more home sales by reducing tax on gains from selling a principal residence.
- Main change: the exclusion rises from $250,000 to $500,000 for single filers and from $500,000 to $1,000,000 for married couples filing jointly.
- Indexing: those new dollar amounts will be adjusted each year for inflation, starting for taxable years after 2024.
- Other rules stay the same: the bill does not change the other conditions of the current exclusion (for example, the ownership/use and timing tests).
- Effective date: applies to sales and exchanges after the date the law is enacted.
What it means for you#
- Homeowners who sell a primary residence: You could exclude up to $500,000 (single) or $1,000,000 (married filing jointly) of gain from federal income tax when you sell, if you meet the existing tests for the exclusion.
- Married couples: Married taxpayers filing jointly gain the same proportional increase (from $500,000 to $1,000,000).
- Buyers and sellers in the housing market: This could make sellers less likely to face a tax bill on sales and might influence decisions to sell, refinance, or move. This is a likely effect, not a guaranteed result.
- Tax preparers and financial advisers: They will need to apply the higher limits and the new annual inflation-adjusted amounts when preparing returns after the law takes effect.
- Renters and prospective buyers: No direct tax change for renting or buying; any effect would come indirectly through housing market responses.
- Government administration: The IRS will apply the new limits and the annual inflation increases; the bill does not add new procedural tests.
Expenses#
No publicly available information.
- The bill itself contains no fiscal estimate in the text provided here.
- The change would likely reduce federal income tax revenue because more gain would be excluded from taxation, but the bill does not provide a revenue estimate.
- Any administrative cost to the IRS for implementing the new dollar limits and inflation adjustment is not stated.
Proponents' View#
- The bill appears intended to help sellers keep more after-tax proceeds from home sales by increasing the excluded amount of gain.
- Supporters may argue this could encourage homeowners to sell homes they would otherwise hold, potentially increasing housing supply.
- Making the amounts inflation-adjusted could maintain the real value of the exclusion over time, avoiding gradual erosion of the benefit.
Opponents' View#
- One concern is that the benefit will flow more to owners of higher-value homes, so wealthier sellers may gain more than middle-income homeowners.
- The bill does not include an estimate of lost tax revenue; a likely trade-off is reduced federal revenue, which could affect other spending or deficit levels.
- It is unclear whether the change will meaningfully increase the number of homes put on the market; the bill does not require or measure any housing supply outcomes.
- The bill keeps the existing conditions for the exclusion in place, so some homeowners may still be ineligible even with higher limits.