Adjusted Basis

  

See Cost Basis.

Adjusted basis refers to the cost basis of the seller of a thing when the seller sells the thing for cash. That is, the home might have cost the seller $300,000.

They sold it for $500,000. In theory, the basis of $300,000 would then deliver a taxable gain of $200,000. But there was commission, closing costs, and other fees, such that another $20,000 in costs had to be tacked on before profits were actually calculated for tax purposes. In this case, the adjusted basis was $320,000 and not $300,000, so the taxable $180,000 hurts slightly less.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a cost-benefit analysis...0 Views

Up Next

Finance: What is Cost Basis?
10 Views

What is Cost Basis? For accounting purposes, the cost basis is the amount invested at the time of asset purchase. That is subtracted from the sale...

Finance: What is Average Down?
8 Views

What is Average Down, or Dollar Cost Averaging? Average down just means that an investor has bought more shares of a stock at a lower price than wh...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)