How to Calculate Profit From Sale of House
Use this premium calculator to estimate your gross gain, taxable gain, estimated taxes, and net cash after sale.
Complete Expert Guide: How to Calculate Profit From Sale of House
Calculating profit from selling a house sounds simple at first glance: sale price minus what you paid. In real life, the math is more nuanced. If you want a realistic number, you must account for selling expenses, tax basis adjustments, mortgage payoff, and possible capital gains taxes. This guide walks you through the full process, step by step, so you can estimate your true financial outcome before you list your home.
Whether you are a homeowner planning to move, an investor selling a rental, or a homeowner weighing if now is the right time to sell, understanding your profit calculation helps you negotiate better and avoid costly surprises at closing.
1) Core Formula for House Sale Profit
At a high level, you can think in two layers:
- Economic gain (before taxes): Amount realized from sale minus adjusted cost basis.
- Cash outcome: Net proceeds after selling costs and loan payoff, then minus estimated taxes.
The calculator above uses both viewpoints. It shows your gain for tax logic and your practical cash after mortgage payoff, which is often what sellers care about most.
2) Define Amount Realized
Amount realized is not simply your contract sale price. It is your sale price minus selling expenses. Common selling expenses include:
- Real estate commission
- Title and escrow fees
- Transfer taxes and recording fees
- Attorney fees (in states where customary)
- Seller credits to buyer, if structured as selling expense
If your house sells for $520,000 and total selling expenses are $35,000, your amount realized is $485,000.
3) Calculate Adjusted Cost Basis
Your adjusted basis starts with original purchase price, then adds qualifying acquisition costs and capital improvements. A common mistake is including repairs that are not capital improvements. New roof, room addition, and full kitchen remodel usually qualify; minor maintenance generally does not.
- Start with original purchase price.
- Add buying costs that increase basis.
- Add capital improvements over ownership period.
- Subtract depreciation claimed (if property had business or rental use).
Example: Purchase at $320,000, buying costs $8,500, and improvements $42,000 gives basis of $370,500 before any depreciation adjustments.
4) Compute Capital Gain Before Exclusions
Capital gain before exclusions equals amount realized minus adjusted basis. If amount realized is $485,000 and adjusted basis is $370,500, your preliminary gain is $114,500.
This is the key tax figure before applying Section 121 home sale exclusion for a primary residence.
5) Apply Primary Residence Exclusion Rules
For many homeowners, this is the biggest tax advantage. Under IRS Section 121, eligible taxpayers may exclude up to $250,000 of gain if single, or up to $500,000 if married filing jointly, assuming ownership and use tests are met.
- You generally must have owned and used the home as your main residence for at least 2 out of the 5 years before sale.
- You generally cannot have claimed this exclusion on another home sale within the prior 2 years.
- Some partial exclusions may apply for qualifying life events.
Official guidance is in IRS Publication 523 and Topic 701: irs.gov/publications/p523, irs.gov/taxtopics/tc701.
6) Estimate Federal Tax Rates on Any Taxable Gain
If your gain exceeds exclusion limits, or if the property is investment use, taxable gain may be subject to long term capital gains rates. In certain cases, Net Investment Income Tax and depreciation recapture tax can apply as well.
| 2024 Long Term Capital Gains Brackets | Single | Married Filing Jointly | Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lower bracket threshold | Up to $47,025 | Up to $94,050 | 0% |
| Middle bracket range | $47,026 to $518,900 | $94,051 to $583,750 | 15% |
| Upper bracket threshold | Over $518,900 | Over $583,750 | 20% |
Brackets shown are commonly used 2024 federal LTCG thresholds. Confirm current year values with IRS releases before filing.
| Other Federal Figures That May Affect Home Sale Taxes | Current Figure | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Primary home exclusion (single) | Up to $250,000 gain excluded | Can reduce taxable gain to zero for many owner occupants |
| Primary home exclusion (married filing jointly) | Up to $500,000 gain excluded | Larger exclusion for eligible couples |
| Depreciation recapture rate | Up to 25% | Applies to depreciation previously claimed on rental or business use |
| Net Investment Income Tax | 3.8% | May apply above modified AGI thresholds |
7) Understand Mortgage Payoff vs Tax Gain
Sellers often confuse these. Mortgage payoff affects cash you receive at closing. It does not directly reduce your taxable gain. Taxable gain is based on sale economics and basis, not remaining debt.
You can have:
- High taxable gain but modest cash if a large mortgage remains.
- Little taxable gain but strong cash if loan balance is low.
That is why the calculator shows both gain and cash metrics.
8) Step by Step Example
Suppose your numbers are:
- Sale price: $520,000
- Commission: 5% ($26,000)
- Other selling costs: $9,000
- Purchase price: $320,000
- Buying costs: $8,500
- Improvements: $42,000
- Mortgage payoff: $185,000
- Primary residence with 2+ years occupancy
- Amount realized = $520,000 – $35,000 = $485,000.
- Adjusted basis = $320,000 + $8,500 + $42,000 = $370,500.
- Pre exclusion gain = $485,000 – $370,500 = $114,500.
- Section 121 exclusion can cover up to $250,000 single, so taxable gain may be $0.
- Net cash after mortgage = $485,000 – $185,000 = $300,000.
In this scenario, you may owe little or no federal capital gains tax, but always verify details with a tax professional.
9) Common Mistakes That Distort Profit Estimates
- Ignoring improvements that increase basis, causing overestimated taxes.
- Treating regular repairs as basis improvements, causing underestimated taxes.
- Forgetting transfer taxes, title fees, and seller credits in selling costs.
- Assuming mortgage payoff reduces taxable gain.
- Missing depreciation recapture on prior rental use.
- Using outdated tax brackets and exclusion assumptions.
10) Documents to Gather Before You Calculate
- HUD 1 or closing disclosure from purchase and sale
- Improvement invoices and permits
- Mortgage payoff statement
- Depreciation schedules if rental or mixed use
- Prior tax returns showing any home office or rental treatment
11) Planning Strategies Before You Sell
If your estimated gain is large, planning matters. Selling a few months later might complete your 2 year use test. Keeping good basis records can materially reduce taxes. Timing other income events may help manage your capital gains bracket and NIIT exposure.
If you are buying your next home, HUD housing resources can help with financing and counseling: hud.gov/topics/buying_a_home.
12) Market Context and Why Profit Is Not the Same as Return
A sale can produce a nominal dollar profit, but your investment return may be lower after considering years of ownership costs, property taxes, insurance, interest, and maintenance. If you want a true investment performance view, calculate annualized return with all cash flows included.
For national housing market reference data and construction statistics, you can review Census resources: census.gov/construction/nrs.
13) Quick Checklist for Accurate House Sale Profit Calculation
- Enter realistic sale price and full selling costs.
- Build adjusted basis correctly with qualifying improvements.
- Apply primary residence exclusion only if eligibility is met.
- Estimate federal tax layer: LTCG rate, NIIT, and recapture where applicable.
- Calculate net cash after mortgage payoff separately.
- Validate numbers with your closing agent and CPA before final decisions.
Final Takeaway
The best way to calculate profit from sale of house is to separate three outcomes: economic gain, taxable gain, and closing cash. Sellers who only look at sale price minus mortgage usually miss critical tax and cost details. Use the calculator above to build a precise estimate, then confirm with your tax advisor using your actual documents. A little preparation can protect thousands of dollars in your final result.