





A fixer-upper house is defined as a residence below neighborhood standards. Some of these properties need major rehab work. But most "fixers" with profit potential are not so deteriorated that the best solution is to tear down the house and start over.
The most profitable fix-up homes only need a thorough cleaning, minor repairs, and fresh coat of interior and exterior paint. New carpets, fresh landscaping, and new light fixtures are additional examples of profitable fix-up work that will bring the residence up to neighborhood standards.
These minor home defects are known as "the right things wrong." However, unprofitable fix-up houses include those needing expensive structural work, which adds little or no market value.
To illustrate, a fix-up house needing expensive foundation repairs, a new roof, updated wiring, or new plumbing is usually an unprofitable fix-up house unless it can be bought at a huge discount price from comparable nearby homes. The reason is the necessary work doesn't show so it doesn't add market value.
Slum fix-up property in a high-crime neighborhood is another example of property without "profit potential" (unless there are solid signs of neighborhood improvement). The local police department office can provide crime statistics if you are unfamiliar with the area.
Occasionally, buyers of fixer-upper houses purchase for the charm or location. I've also met some individual developers who purchase to help improve a neighborhood. But most fix-up home buyers purchase for the prospective profit.
Also thanks to Internal Revenue Code 121, it is possible to earn home fix-up profits tax-free when the principal residence is eventually sold. To earn up to $250,000 tax-free profits upon sale, the owner must have owned and lived in the property as their primary residence an "aggregate" 24 of the 60 months before its sale.
A married couple can qualify for up to $500,000 tax-free capital gains if both spouses meet the occupancy test, even if only one spouse's name is on the title. But they must file a joint income tax return in the year of the home sale.
However, if extensive home renovation is contemplated, it is often advisable to move out while the major remodeling takes place. Especially if there are children involved, renting an apartment or another house for a few months can save the marriage.
To illustrate, three years ago my neighbors took a two-month "grand tour" of Europe with their two children while their fix-up home was completely renovated. When they returned, their "new home" was almost completed and they didn't have to endure the unpleasant aspects of having workers in their personal residence almost every day.
I have met several couples who actually enjoy buying fix-up houses, renovating and occupying them, and then making profitable tax-free sales after at least 24 months of ownership and occupancy.
But the big, obvious drawback is living in their principal residence while it undergoes fix-up.
Because the big tax savings of Internal Revenue Code 121 can be used over and over again, but only every 24 months, these repeat, tax-free home sellers are known as "serial fix-up home sellers." It's all perfectly legal and very profitable for up to $500,000 tax-free, principal-residence sale profits every 24 months.
One "serial home seller" husband I met is a carpenter foreman by day with a major home builder and a home handyman by night and on weekends. He told me he often recruits his co-worker plumber, electrician, and other construction friends to help him and he assists them on their home fix-up projects, thus keeping costs low.
Finding fixer-upper houses doesn't take much work in most communities. Just ask a savvy realty agent if she or he knows of any fix-up bargain houses for sale.
Most home buyers don't want fixer-uppers so you probably won't have much competition from other buyers. Here are the four primary reasons houses become fixer-uppers:
Fixer-upper houses with "the right things wrong," purchased at substantially below-market value, can be superb profit opportunities, especially if you own and occupy them at least 24 of the 60 months before sale. Then you can qualify for up to $250,000 tax-free principal residence sale profits (up to $500,000 for a qualified married couple filing jointly). This tax-break can be used again every 24 months.
