CarolynFH
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2000
- Messages
- 19,530
My understanding is that although we'd have to report a capital-gains profit on a timeshare sale, we can't deduct a capital loss. And the IRS doesn't recognize inflation-adjusted costs, so even though our $62.50 pp for BWV in 1997 is roughly $121 today, we'd still have to pay capital gains taxes if we sold for that!All of this. I don’t think you should buy DVC expecting capital gains, but having a higher base can be valuable for tax reasons (I guess even in my pessimistic scenario it would also be great for tax loss harvesting to pay more, lol).
Ok, you’ve inspired a tax hypothetical:
If I buy BWV today at $120 loaded and sell it in 2040 for $10 with only 2041 points, can I take that $110 as a long term capital loss?![]()