Installment Sale Income

An installment agreement is one where you receive at least 1 payment after the end of the tax year in which the sale occurs. If you realize a gain on an installment sale, you may be able to report part of the gain when you receive each payment. This method of reporting gain is called the installment method.  

Certain types of sales don’t qualify as installment sales, though, including:

As the seller, you aren’t required to report an installment sale using the installment method. However, you might want to do so because you can spread the tax over all the years in which installment payments are being made instead of paying the tax on your gain all in 1 year.

Generally, you'll use Form 6252 to report installment sale income from casual sales of real or personal property during the tax year. However, special rules may allow for exclusion of income or require reporting on other forms such as Schedule D (Form 1040) or Form 4797.

Each payment that the buyer pays you consists of three parts:

For each year that you receive a payment (or payments) or are treated as receiving a payment, you must include in income both the interest and a portion of the gain.

Interest Income

You need to consider a part of each payment that you receive as interest, whether or not the agreement you reached with the buyer included interest. The interest portion is taxed as ordinary income and isn’t subject to any special tax rates.

Return of Your Basis and Gain on the Sale

After you’ve calculated the interest portion of your payment, you treat the rest of the payment as being made up of 2 parts:

You’ll need the following information to complete the form:

For more information on depreciation recapture, see Publication 537, Installment Sales.