CGT Main Residence Exemption
Any capital gain or loss made on the
disposal of a taxpayer's main residence is exempt from capital
gains. To qualify, a person must own or acquire a "dwelling"
which is defined to include a unit of accommodation constituted
or contained within a building. the unit of accommodation must
substantially be residential accommodation. The dwelling itself
can be a caravan, houseboat or mobile home as well as the land
below the dwelling.
Multiple Dwellings on the One Property
As a general rule, the main residence exemption only applies to
one unit of accommodation that is used as a person's main
residence. However, in circumstances where there are multiple
units of accommodation, they may in qualify as part of the main
residence. This is generally when the two units of accommodation
are so integrated, that they are not considered to be separate
from the main residence.
For example, if you have a caravan parked behind your farmhouse,
and a family member lives in there, but regularly uses the
facilities in the farmhouse, it might be considered part of the
main residence. But if two dwellings are independent of each
other, but affixed to the owners land, then that would generally
constitute a separate dwelling.
In all, the question of whether or not multiple units of
accommodation constitute the same dwelling is a matter to be
determined on individual circumstances. The courts have taken
the view that the facts considered in deciding whether multiple
units can constitute the same dwelling are:
(a) whether the occupants sleep, eat and live in them;
(b) the distance between and the proximity of the units of
accommodation;
(c) whether the units are connected;
(d) whether the units are capable of being sold separately;
(e) the extent to which the daily activities of the occupants in
the units are integrated;
(f) how the units are shared by the occupants; and
(g) how costs of the units are shared by the occupants.
For a detailed explanation, and some examples, view the
Australian Tax Office ruling on the matter, TD 1999/69.
Ownership
A person is considered to own or have acquired the dwelling if
they have a legal or equitable estate or interest in the land on
which the dwelling resides, or a license to occupy the dwelling.
Where ownership is shared, the main residence exemption will
apply separately to each owner, if they are both using the
dwelling as their main residence.
The main residence exemption will not be available when the
property is held by an individual trustee of a trust (ID
2003/467), nor will it be available when held by a company, or
corporate trustee (ID 2003/163).
Adjacent Land & Subdivided Land
The main residence exemption includes land that is adjacent to
the dwelling, if it is used for private or domestic purposes and
the dwelling and surrounding land does not exceed 2 hectares. To
be considered adjacent, the land need not be connected, but has
to be close or near (TD 1999/68). If part of the land is used
for income producing purposes, then the main residence exemption
is denied for whatever portion of the land was not used for
private or domestic purposes (TD 2000/15).
If the land exceeds 2 hectares, the taxpayer may select which 2
hectares will qualify for the main residence exemption. If those
two hectares can be separately valued, then the proportion of
capital gain they generate when disposed of will be disregarded.
If the 2 hectares cannot be separately valued, the proportion
entitled to a main residence exemption will be calculated on an
area basis (TD 1999/67).
A Separate garage or store room is also considered part of the
main residence exemption, provided that it is attached to the
building or is part of the building in which the unit of
accommodation is contained, and it is used for private or or
domestic purposes.
If adjacent land is disposed of separately from the rest of the
dwelling; or the garage, storeroom or other structure forming
part of the dwelling is disposed of separately, the main
residence exemption will not apply to that disposal.
See also,
Main Residence
Exemption Timing Issues and
Main Residence
Usage.
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