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Replies: 16 / Views: 1,973 |
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
5953 Posts |
OK Hypothetically here. Lets say I want to sell 40 Gold Eagles I take them down to my local Bullion Exchange and get $5 over melt each for them. Do I have to declare the sale on my return and pay tax ? Do I pay Tax on the whole sale or just the Profit? How does the IRS know what I paid in the first place? Edited by nohope587 05/28/2008 6:09 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2602 Posts |
I read somewhere about this, because I was interested in this question too. The answer is yes. However, if you sell collectibles and take a loss, you can't claim the loss, unlike the situation with stocks.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
632 Posts |
I just wouldn't claim it. How would they ever find out?
Some people say thats dishonest but really, if you work for a living and pay your federal income tax and your state income tax and your property tax and your sales tax and your humina humina humina then I would be able to sleep at night not reporting a little bonus money made off of my hobby.
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Valued Member
United States
372 Posts |
I would never claim it either. Perhaps it's just the little bit of anti-government in me (despite currently being in the military) but I say if you can keep the "man" from getting some of your hard earned money then that's a plus for you!
Heck, I would love to have one gold eagle right now. Wanna donate one to the "poor soldier who can't afford a decent collection" fund? LOL
Mike
Edited by mmerc20 05/28/2008 7:10 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1208 Posts |
Yes. You must pay taxes on it. Will they find out if you don't? NO.
I was at a flea market the other day and there were Florida state revenue officers going around and asking vendors for ID and taking notes on what they were selling and how busy they were at times. The vendors got a written notice that Florida expects to get their 'cut' from sales tax within 14 days! Didn't even give them a stamped envelope either!
My guess is that it cost more in salary for those officers to mull around a flea market on Saturday, than the amount of tax that will be reported over those next 14 days! What a joke.
Next they'll send revenuers to stand around at everyone's yard sales. :rolleyes:
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Pillar of the Community
  United States
5953 Posts |
I'm not talking State tax here. Texas has no state tax and sales tax is exempt on bullion over $1000 I'm talking about federal capitol gains tax. If it make a difference if the hypothetical turned to reality the funds received would be going towards payment of a property.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2335 Posts |
More than likely the Bullion Exchange has a system to keep track of what they buy, & who they buy it from. They certainly aren't going to pay any more tax than they have to, so it's possible you will get caught. Theoretically, you are supposed to pay tax on the profit, less any expenses. The IRS doesn't know what you paid, but if you get audited the burden of proof is on the individual. Bullion is not generally considered a collectible so you can declare a loss. I'm pretty sure if you have held the gold for more than a year it falls under long term capital gains, with a max tax rate of around 20%. If you bought several years ago at $300/oz & sell now for $900, you are looking at a $24K profit & a $4800 tax burden. I'm not a CPA or Tax Attorney, & I don't play one on TV. I'm not advocating anything illegal, but I have heard of people in a similar situation selling to a private individual for cash. Of course then you have the problem of what to do with the cash. You can't deposit amounts larger than $10,000 without being reported. A series of deposits just under the limit can also trigger reporting.
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New Member
United States
38 Posts |
When I lived in Fl in the 1980's it was steering towards full on police state- sounds like I haven't missed much.
I like gold because it's private, I would never buy paper gold, I would never put coins in an "IRA" and have some banker store them for me.
In my area there are large transfers of black market cash because of the ganja industry, people pay cash for homes all the time. An accountant I trust told me that cash transactions happen all the time and so long as they don't come from "paper assets" not to worry- if you deal in gold or cash only YOU know where it's been. People can "gift" people up to $10k a year off the books...
It would go along way to restore the Union by abolishing the 16th amendment and repealing the federal reserve act, it is unconstitutional because when you file a return you violate your fifth amendment right.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
619 Posts |
Page 48 of pub.550 includes coins and precious metal investments as reportable capital gains. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p550.pdfIf the dealer issues you a 1099B which documents the transaction, I would report it. If the dealer doesn't issue you a 1099B, check out that bill of sale that the dealer writes up. Does it have your name, address, SS# on it? Whether it does or not really doesn't matter to the IRS because they say you must report the gain. If he pays you by check, that in itself is a paper trail if either one of you is audited. Question 3: They don't. But if you were audited they could estimate a cost basis for you. What if the 40 eagles were a gift? Surely, you wouldn't be accountable for the entire hoard's value, would you? That brings up an interesting question. You dump your coin collection on a dealer and he records the $75,000 sale on a 1099B. How do you figure out the cost basis? Over the decades, which slabs of metal came from coin-roll hunting, grandma, metal detecting, etc? Did you keep records for every purchase on the internet, coin-shop, coin-show, auction, yard sale, etc.? Though the sale of a coin collection is such a common transaction, I've searched the internet for an answer and couldn't come up with one.
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Valued Member
United States
259 Posts |
How does the IRS know how much I paid for them? Well, they don't. But here's the problem. You have to state your cost basis for those coins on your tax return, since the sale will result in capital gain or loss. You have to come up with some basis,and if you're audited the burden is on you, not them, to prove how much you paid.
Of course you don't want to use a cost basis of zero for a sale that large. Consult your tax advisor. There are probably ways to estimate about how much the coins cost you that would pass muster with the IRS.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2049 Posts |
If you stored them in a safety deposit box and nothing else in there, you should be able to deduct the SDB costs from the profit should you decide to pay the taxes on the gains. Also, any expenses from mileage for going to the coin shop/bullion place, going to the bank to put them in the SDB, etc should count. With a little legwork and proper documentation, you should be able to wipe out a good portion of the profit you made on these, thus reducing your tax burden.
Personally, I keep track of what each coin in my collection cost (well I should say the ones I put in 2x2 holders anyway but not the stuff in boxes like common wheats). I also just started keeping track of mileage as well.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3233 Posts |
The cost basis on a gift, I believe, is figured based on its valuation on the day you received the gift.
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Member
United States
3242 Posts |
I second that it was a gift Mr IRS person 
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Pillar of the Community
  United States
5953 Posts |
Thanks for the info guys. What it boils down to is its better to sell the ones you paid the most for first if you are selling to a dealer and the ones you paid the least for to a private individual. thanks for the tips in the mileage and SDB. I will pass on this thread and see what she wants to do. For some reason she rejected the idea of selling to me for face.....
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Valued Member
United States
109 Posts |
Quote: It would go along way to restore the Union by abolishing the 16th amendment and repealing the federal reserve act, it is unconstitutional because when you file a return you violate your fifth amendment right. Huh, restoring the Union? People have tried to claim the 5th amendment defense concerning tax returns but the Supreme Court has always rejected that idea. As much as I hate paying taxes, they are absolutely necessary.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
6326 Posts |
Interesting thread here !.......good post !...  ....I know many of us have wondered about this very thing......hypothetically of course !.. 
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Replies: 16 / Views: 1,973 |