Taxation Determination

TD 2000/13

Income tax: capital gains: if:

you acquire land and a dwelling (dwelling A) on or after 20 September 1985 which you use as your main residence and do not use for income producing purposes; and
you subdivide the land into 2 blocks and build another dwelling (dwelling B) on the subdivided vacant land and this dwelling becomes your main residence; and
you choose not to apply section 118-150 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (about building, repairing or renovating a dwelling) for dwelling B; and
you sell dwellings A and B;

are you entitled to the full main residence exemption in Subdivision 118-B for both dwellings?

  • Please note that the PDF version is the authorised version of this ruling.

FOI status:

may be releasedFOI number: I 102577

Preamble
This Taxation Determination is a 'public ruling' for the purposes of Part IVAAA of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 and is legally binding on the Commissioner. Taxation Rulings TR 92/1 and TR 97/16 together explain when a Determination is a public ruling and how it is legally binding on the Commissioner.
Date of effect
This Determination applies after its date of issue. However, this Determination does not apply to taxpayers to the extent that it conflicts with the terms of settlement of a dispute agreed to before the date of the Determination (see paragraphs 21 and 22 of Taxation Ruling TR 92/20).

1. No. The answer is the same whether dwellings A and B are sold under a single contract of sale or under separate contracts of sale. As far as adjacent land is concered in both situations two dwellings are sold and the adjacent land cannot be used, in terms of the main residence exemption, in association with both dwellings throughout their ownership periods.

Dwelling A

2. If you sell dwelling A, a CGT event A1 (about a disposal of a CGT asset) in section 104-10 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) happens. On CGT event A1 happening to dwelling A, if you choose to not apply section 118-150 of the ITAA 1997 (about building, repairing or renovating a dwelling) for dwelling B, you are entitled to a main residence exemption for dwelling A under section 118-110 throughout the entire period of ownership that it was your main residence. The exemption also applies during that period, to adjacent land sold with dwelling A because it had been used primarily for private or domestic purposes in association with that dwelling throughout the ownership period.

3. Section 118-140 allows you to treat both dwelling A and dwelling B as your main residence after dwelling B actually becomes your main residence if you have acquired an ownership interest in it and if you still have your ownership interest in dwelling A. The maximum period you may treat both dwellings as your main residence is six months, ending when your ownership interest in dwelling A ends.

4. If dwelling B has actually been your main residence for more than six months when your ownership interest in dwelling A ends, there is a part of your ownership period for dwelling A for which you are not entitled to the main residence exemption.

Dwelling B

5. On the sale of dwelling B you are only entitled to a partial main residence exemption under section 118-110, when read with section 118-185. Because section 118-110 only allows you to disregard a capital gain or capital loss for a dwelling which is your main residence, you are not entitled to a full exemption for both dwelling A and dwelling B throughout their entire ownership period. In accordance with paragraph 118-125(a) your ownership period of dwelling B commences from when you have an ownership interest in the land on which the dwelling is later built. Apart from the operation of section 118-140, dwelling B is only your main residence from when it actually becomes your main residence. It is not your main residence for the whole of its ownership period. Therefore, you are only entitled to a partial exemption for any capital gain or capital loss you make on the sale of dwelling B.

6. Section 118-140 operates if you have acquired an ownership interest in dwelling B which is to become your main residence and you still have an ownership interest in dwelling A. Dwelling B can be treated as your main residence for a maximum period of six months, ending when your ownership interest in dwelling A ends.

7. The partial exemption (under section 118-110 read with section 118-185) applies to dwelling B which includes the land immediately under dwelling B: paragraph 118-115(1)(c). Dwelling B does not include land adjacent to dwelling B unless it satisfies section 118-120.

8. Subsection 118-120(1) provides that the main residence exemption in Subdivision 118-B applies to land that is adjacent to a dwelling (if the same CGT event happens to the land or your ownership interest in it) to the extent that you used the land primarily for private or domestic purposes in association with the dwelling.

9. The land adjacent to dwelling B is only used for part of your period of ownership of dwelling B primarily for private or domestic purposes in association with dwelling B. Before constructing dwelling B and it becoming your main residence, that land is used in association with dwelling A. Only a portion of the capital gain or capital loss you make on the adjacent land associated with dwelling B may be disregarded under subsection 118-120(1).

Note

10. Nothing said in this Taxation Determination for capital gains purposes affects the operation of the general provisions of the income tax law, if applicable, to the sales of the dwellings.

Example

11. John purchases one hectare of land on 1 May 1996 for $200,000. There is an established home on the land. He immediately moves into the home and uses it as his main residence (dwelling A). On 1 December 1997, John subdivides the land and commences to build a new home on the back block of land. This house is completed on 1 May 1998 at a cost of $150,000. John moves into the new house and it actually becomes his main residence (dwelling B). On 1 July 1998, John sells the original house and land for $250,000. On 1 May 1999, John moves interstate and sells the new home for $300,000.

Dwelling A

12. John has obtained advice that when he purchased the home in 1996, the land was worth $140,000 and the home $60,000. The land has been subdivided and the cost of the land attributable to dwelling A is $70,000.

13. Ignoring other costs and indexation, when CGT event A1 happens John makes a capital gain of:

$250,000 less $130,000 = $120,000.

14. Section 118-110 together with section 118-140 allow John to disregard the capital gain on dwelling A in full.

Note: John only gets a full exemption in this example as he satisfies the conditions in section 118-140. If he sold dwelling A in January 1999 he would not get an exemption for the period from 1 May 1998 to 1 July 1998.

Dwelling B

15. The cost of dwelling B is $70,000 (land) and $150,000 (building).

16. John makes a capital gain of:

$300,000 less $220,000 = $80,000.

17. John's ownership period for dwelling B commences on 1 May 1996 when the land was acquired. Dwelling B was John's main residence from 1 May 1998 to 1 May 1999. In addition, he may treat it as his main residence for the period from 1 January 1998 to 1 July 1998 in accordance with section 118-140. Therefore, John disregards the following portion of the capital gain on dwelling B and the adjacent land:

(485 days/1095 days) x (capital gain made on dwelling B (including the land under the dwelling and the adjacent land.))

Note: the extent to which the adjacent land has been used primarily for private or domestic purposes in association with dwelling B is also 485/1095.

Note

18. If John sells dwelling A on 1 January 1999, section 118-140 does not extend the period for which John can claim the main residence exemption in regard to dwelling B as during that period it is actually his main residence.

Commissioner of Taxation
12 April 2000

Previously issued as Draft TD 1999/D97

References

ISSN: 1038-8982

Related Rulings/Determinations:

TD 1999/D98

Subject References:
adjacent land
capital gain
capital loss
CGT event A1
dwelling
exemption
land
main residence
partial exemption
subdivision

Legislative References:
104-10
118-B
118-110
118-115(1)(c)
118-120
118-120(1)
118-125
118-125(a)
118-135
118-140
118-150
118-185


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