Couple who found gold coins to face high taxes

By Staff | February 28, 2014 | Last updated on February 28, 2014
1 min read

In the U.S., there’s one major drawback to discovering gold in your backyard.

As it turns out, a U.S. District Court in Ohio decided that finding a treasure trove was a taxable event in a 1969 ruling, reports sfgate.com. Since then, the IRS has stated that any American who finds and keeps valuable property must pay tax on its market value within the year.

So, the couple that recently found about $10 million-worth of old gold coins on their property may have to cough up almost half of their findings to the taxman. If they sell any of the gold, however, they can take advantage of lower capital gains taxes.

Click here to find out what experts are suggesting.

In Canada, there are no specific treasure trove tax rules. But the CRA does focus on sales of personal-use property, which is defined as items that people own for personal use or enjoyment. Check out the rules.

Read:

Equities to outshine gold in 2014

3 myths about gold

What do Olympic winners owe the CRA?

How much is a pot of gold worth?

Advisor.ca staff

Staff

The staff of Advisor.ca have been covering news for financial advisors since 1998.