If you’re already considering your home’s cost basis, you understand why it matters. However, awareness alone doesn’t yield tax savings; documentation does. Whether you’re prepping for sale or tax time, here’s exactly what to track for any improvement project and why it matters.
Quick Refresher: What Is Cost Basis?
Your cost basis is what you paid for your home, plus the value of major improvements. When you sell, it helps determine how much profit you made and how much tax you might owe. The more improvements you can prove, the lower your potential tax bill. Learn more about cost basis.
Not All Improvements Are Equal
You know the rule: value-adding, life-extending, or repurposing improvements count toward your cost basis, but only if you can prove they happened.
Here’s why it matters: homeowners nationwide are spending big. Total U.S. remodeling spendings are expected to reach $608 billion in 2025, a 27 % inflation-adjusted bump since 2019, according to (Investopedia). That includes professional projects averaging $7,800 each and DIY work, around $4,700. Without documentation, every one of those dollars risks being left off your cost basis, meaning you miss the opportunity to reduce your tax bill when it’s time to sell.
What to Document for Each Project
Receipts and Invoices
IRS rules require “proof of payment and description of the work” to adjust your basis. Always keep labor and materials records, even Venmo payments count.
Project Scope or Contracts
Agreements, estimates, or signed scopes help prove scale and intent, especially crucial for substantial or phased renovations.
Before and After Photos
While not IRS-required, visual evidence supports your documentation and jogs your memory when tallying costs years later.
Permits and Approvals
Permitted work doesn’t just keep you compliant, it adds long-term value and trust to your home. Projects done to code and with proper documentation are more likely to recoup their costs at resale. Permits also help validate your improvements for tax purposes, strengthening your case if you’re ever audited. In short, holding onto permits and approvals isn’t just good practice, it’s a strategic move for your home’s value and your financial peace of mind.
DIY Documentation
If you handle projects yourself, logging all materials and tools and keeping dated notes makes a big difference. While DIY projects can be cost-effective, they still contribute to your home’s value if they meet the criteria for capital improvements. Keeping even a simple spreadsheet with itemized expenses, receipts from hardware stores, and notes on the scope of work helps establish legitimacy, especially if the project is substantial (like building a deck or replacing flooring). The more detailed your records, the easier it is to prove the value of your improvements if questions come up later.
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What Doesn’t Count Toward Basis
Not every home-related expense qualifies for a cost basis adjustment. The IRS only allows capital improvements—those that add value, extend the home’s life, or adapt it to a new use. Here’s what typically doesn’t qualify:
Routine Maintenance
Tasks that keep your home in working condition don’t count toward your cost basis. These are considered standard upkeep—not value-adding improvements. Examples include:
- Interior/exterior painting
- Touch-ups, repainting the same color, or refreshing surfaces for aesthetics
- Does not qualify unless it's part of a full remodel (e.g., kitchen upgrade)
- Appliance replacement (unless part of a larger remodel)
- Swapping out a broken dishwasher, stove, or fridge
- If the replacement is standalone (not part of a kitchen renovation), it’s considered maintenance
- Regular HVAC service
- Annual tune-ups, filter changes, or minor part replacements
- Full system upgrades can be included if they replace the old unit entirely
- Pest control or deep cleaning
- Seasonal treatments, termite checks, or move-out cleaning
- These don’t alter or improve the structure, they preserve it
- Basic yard work or seasonal upkeep
- Mowing, raking, mulching, or replacing flowers
- Does not include hardscaping or installing permanent features like retaining walls or irrigation systems (which do qualify)
Repairs vs. Improvements
Fixing or restoring existing features (like patching a roof) is considered a repair, not a basis-eligible improvement, unless you're fully replacing or upgrading the system.
DIY Labor
Your own time and labor don’t count, even for large projects. Only paid labor costs for capital improvements qualify for inclusion in your cost basis. “Don’t include the value of your own labor, or any other personal expenses.”(IRS Publication 523)
Why Tracking Early Pays Dividends
Late documentation is a lost opportunity:
- IRS audits? Documented improvements make your case clearer.
- Own a second home or investment property? You won’t get the same capital gains tax breaks as a primary residence, so tracking your cost basis is key to reducing what you owe.
- Tax season can be overwhelming, especially when you’re trying to track down years of project costs. Professional work averages $7,800 annually, and major upgrades can easily exceed $50,000, making proper documentation critical (Bankrate).
- Homeowners often misjudge actual costs: one survey found the average homeowner spends $18,000 +/year on non-mortgage costs, and surprise maintenance bills (New York Post).
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Tools to Make Tracking Simple
Let go of messy folders and spreadsheet frustration. A digital system like HouseFacts helps you consolidate and manage:
- Receipts and invoices
- Contracts and permits
- Photos and service history
- Warranties and insurance policies
Everything you need to maintain your cost basis, securely stored and ready when it matters most: tax prep, refinancing, insurance claims, or sale.
Final Tip
Start tracking before a project begins. Early documentation saves hours of scavenging, and potentially thousands in lost deductible basis. Your future self (and your CPA!) will thank you.
Want to dive deeper into how cost basis works? Check out our guide: Understanding Cost Basis Adjustments for Your Home for a deeper breakdown of how to stay ahead.