|
Home >
Articles by Peter G. Miller >
Homeowners Rejoice: Tax Breaks Are Here....
Let's be honest: April 15th is a day of reckoning, the moment when we find out what we really owe for taxes. In households nationwide wallets are drained and many who were rich on the 14th are greatly impoverished by the 16th.
But for those with real estate the load is made lighter by tax rules which encourage the ownership of homes and investment property. Such rules are not only good for homeowners, they're also good for the country: About 20 percent of all economic activity nationwide is related to real estate, so policies which encourage real estate activity help everyone.
It seems that almost every year changes to the tax code require the production of new forms and a re-education process. That said, the real estate basics remain in place and they're good news for buyers, sellers, borrowers and owners.
New for 2007 -- mortgage insurance premiums may be deductible.
At the last possible moment, the 109th Congress agreed that mortgage insurance premiums should be deductible. The catch? Not all premiums are deductible by all borrowers. In general, the rules look like this:
- The deduction applies to loans made after January 1st, 2007.
- The deduction applies to both private mortgage insurance (MI) as well as mortgage insurance through the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), the Veterans Department (VA) and the Rural Housing Administration.
- The deduction applies to acquisition indebtedness, meaning debt used to acquire a home.
- If you refinance remaining "acquisition indebtedness" then you can write off mortgage insurance on the new debt.
- You can take the deduction if you're married, file jointly and have a gross adjusted income of $100,000 or less. If you're single or married and filing separately the income limit is $50,000.
- The deduction phases out once income limits are passed. For married couples, the deduction is reduced by 10 percent for each $1,000 in income over $100,000. This means there is no deduction for incomes above $110,000. For singles and those married and filing separately, the deduction is reduced by 10 percent for each $500 in additional income -- this means there is no deduction above $55,000.
- The mortgage premium write-off begins January 1, 2007 and is scheduled to end on December 31st, 2007. However, the program is likely to be extended.
- Speak with a tax professional for specifics.
Mortgage interest is generally deductible.
The IRS says there are three categories of deductible home mortgage interest:
- Mortgages you took out on or before October 13, 1987 (called grandfathered debt).
- Mortgages you took out after October 13, 1987, to buy, build, or improve your home (called home acquisition debt), but only if throughout 2005 these mortgages plus any grandfathered debt totaled $1 million or less ($500,000 or less if married filing separately).
- Mortgages you took out after October 13, 1987, other than to buy, build, or improve your home (called home equity debt), but only if throughout 2005 these mortgages totaled $100,000 or less ($50,000 or less if married filing separately) and totaled no more than the fair market value of your home reduced by (1) and (2).
Substantial profits can be sheltered when a prime residence is sold.
When a prime residence is sold, up to $500,000 in profits can be sheltered from federal taxes if married, $250,000 if single, providing the home has been used as a prime residence for two of the past five years. Generally this deduction cannot be used more than once every two years, according to the IRS.
There are also provisions which may be helpful to individuals who must sell a prime residence in less than two years. Under the 2004 safe harbor rules, individuals may be able to get some capital gains relief under certain circumstances, such as being forced to move because a job has been relocated at least 50 miles or a home that must be sold because of multiple births resulting from the same pregnancy.
Also, individuals in the Armed Forces and the Foreign Service may be entitled to special consideration under the Military Family Tax Relief Act of 2003 (MFTRA). For instance, you may have longer to take a capital gains deduction or to amend a tax return. There are other provisions under MFTRA that also may be helpful, so check with a tax professional for specifics.
Points may be deducible by both buyers and sellers.
Picture a situation where a home is sold for $500,000 and the owner -- to help close the sale -- offers to pay 1 point for the buyer. If the property was financed with a $350,000 mortgage, a point would be worth $3,500. According to the IRS, "the seller cannot deduct these fees as interest. But they are a selling expense that reduces the amount realized by the seller."
Interestingly, in this situation the buyer can also deduct the points when the home is sold.
"The buyer," says the IRS, "reduces the basis of the home by the amount of the seller-paid points and treats the points as if he or she had paid them."
In effect, the seller gets to write-off the $3,500 cost by reducing any profit from the sale. The buyer essentially lowers the purchase price of the property when the home is sold at some point in the future -- thus increasing the size of any profit. However, since up to $500,000 in sale profits may be untaxed, most buyers will effectively never pay a tax on the seller's contribution for points.
If a prime residence is refinanced then the deal with points is different: The expense of a point must deducted over the life of the loan. If the home is sold before the loan term ends, then any undeducted cost for points can be used to reduce owner's profit from the sale.
Home offices may be deductible.
If a portion of your home is used regularly and exclusively as your principal place of business or for the convenience of your employer it may be possible to write off a portion of such costs as mortgage interest, property taxes and utilities. There are a number of tests which must be met to take this deduction, see IRS Publication 587, Business Use of Your Home for details.
In some cases there may be tax advantages associated with not deducting your home office in the year or two before you move. Speak with a tax professional for specifics.
Natural Disasters
The Katrina Emergency Tax Relief Act of 2005 provides extensive tax benefits and assistance to those who were victims of hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma. For details, go to the IRS Katrina relief page or call 1-866-562-5227.
If you have been in a natural disaster -- a flood, hurricane, tornado, etc., contact your local congressional office to see if special tax help is available. Links to congressional offices can be found by pressing here.
Investment real estate can generate substantial write-offs.
If you own rental property you must seek a fair market rental for your property. You may generally deduct mortgage interest, property taxes, repair costs, management by an outside party, depreciation, advertising, insurance, utilities, legal services and other expenses.
It's possible with rental properties to have both a positive cashflow and a loss for tax purposes. However, the ability to use real estate losses to reduce overall taxes may be phased out as income rises above $100,000.
If a rental involves relatives special rules and restrictions may apply. Check with a tax pro for details.
A 1031 exchange may allow investors to defer all capital gains taxes.
With a 1031 transaction, investment property is exchanged for "like" real estate. The basic requirements are that within 45 days after the "relinquished" property has been sold, a "replacement" property must be identified. The identified replacement property must then be acquired within 180 days after the sale of the relinquished property.
What's important about a 1031 exchange is that the capital gains tax on the relinquished property is deferred -- but it does not disappear. What really happens is that the basis for the new property (the "replacement property") is reduced by the adjusted value of the "relinquished property" (the old property).
A 1031 exchange is complex and requires the services of a "qualified intermediary." Among other tasks, a qualified intermediary holds the money from the sale of the relinquished property and applies it to the purchase of the replacement real estate. This must be done because under the rules for 1031 exchanges, the seller of a relinquished property cannot touch money from the sale -- it must be held by the qualified intermediary.
Accounting for a 1031 exchange is also complex. Essentially there is a need to figure out the sale value of the relinquished property, add back depreciation and account for financing. Ed Horan, a well-known exchange authority and the author of How To Do a Like Kind Exchange of Real Estate, has posted a free 13-page exchanging guide with an accounting worksheet that's well worth reviewing before meeting with a tax pro.
Sources and Publications
As always with taxes, nothing is ever simple or easy. Speak with a qualified tax professional for specific advice -- an enrolled agent, a CPA or an attorney who specializes in tax issues.
Also, the IRS itself has excellent information at its website, www.irs.gov, by phone at 1-800-829-1040 and with specialized publications such as those below:
Peter G. Miller is a syndicated real estate and personal finance
columnist who appears in more than 90 newspapers. He writes a
bi-monthly column exclusively for Mortgage Lenders Plus.com, an
advertiser supported mortgage directory featuring
home mortgage lenders nationwide for
refinancing, second mortgages, and home loans.
Latest Articles:
Is Now The Time To Buy A House?
At first this may seem like an odd question, especially given the front-page headlines of the past few weeks. But the reality is that selected properties in slow markets can be terrific buys.
|
How To Play The New Mortgage Game -- And Win
Just when everyone thought they had the mortgage market figured out, whoops -- along comes the meltdown of 2007 and with it an end to many old borrowing strategies and ideas. Despite recent changes it's important to know that not only is real estate financing available, it's easily and readily available for most borrowers.
|
Can FHASecure Save Your Home?
The big news from Washington is that the federal government is going to bail out many borrowers who now face foreclosure. Estimates vary regarding how many homeowners will be impacted, but the important point is that hundreds of thousands of loans are likely to be refinanced in the next two years under the new program.
|
What's the Deal With Mortgage Insurance?
According to the National Association of Realtors the typical existing home sold for $230,100 in June. Imagine if the only way to buy such a property was to purchase with 20 percent down plus closing costs.
|
Is Now The Time For A Line of Credit?
With all the tossing and turmoil in the mortgage marketplace during the past few months you might wonder if there is a financial safe haven, a type of loan that can help you through tough times. If you've owned your home for several years the odds are overwhelming that in most markets you have substantial equity.
|
How Foreclosures Really Work
Because of recent headlines, it's not surprising that there are a lot of questions about foreclosure and how to avoid losing a home. Misconceptions about foreclosure abound, so let's look at what's actually going on and what borrowers can do if they face mortgage problems.
|
How To Boost Your Credit Standing
Everyone will tell you that the key to getting the best possible mortgage is to have good credit. And folks will also tell you that the key to getting good credit is to pay bills in full and on time.
|
Why Borrowers Want To Bring Home All C's
Back in the good old days, solid performance in school meant getting a string of A's and maybe a few B's. But when it comes to lending you can score best by doing well with four C's.
|
Changing Standards Mean Refinance Now
If you want a lower mortgage rate or a smaller monthly payment then it's usually time to think about refinancing but at this moment there's another reason to immediately consider replacement mortgages: The standards for real estate loans are changing so if you have a need to refinance it may be best to update loans as soon as possible. Here's what's happening: The business news during the past few weeks has been filled with stories of failing mortgage lenders, especially subprime.
|
An Insider's Guide To Home Prices, Profits And Inflation
About 75 years ago my grandparents bought a home in what was then a distant and exotic part of New York. Family legend has it that they paid $8,000 for a brick row house in Brooklyn, a property I knew as a child and a home which today has a market value of roughly $800,000.
|
10 Ways To Avoid Predatory Lenders
They're out there. It doesn't matter where you live, how much you make or whether you're a saint or a sinner, predatory lenders want your business in the worst way.
|
10 Reasons To Find Your Mortgage Online
It used to be that there was one piece of sure-fire advice for anyone who needed a mortgage: Speak with at least three mortgage lenders before financing or refinancing a home. Today such advice is as useful as typewriter ribbons.
|
Which ARM Index Is Best For You?
A vast number of adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) are available today. There are interest-only loans with adjustable rates, plain-old vanilla adjustables and "option ARMs" -- mortgages with adjustable rates and a series of monthly payment choices during the first few years of the loan.
|
What Do The 2007 Mortgage Loan Limits Mean For You?
The new loan limits for 2007 are out and -- ta da -- they're the same as 2006. But don't let such financial sameness fool you, loan limits are important and what you know about them could save you big dollars.
|
Stated Income Loans: Five Things You Need To Know
If you're a borrower in good standing then the odds are overwhelming that you can get a mortgage without a lengthy look at how much you make. In fact, most lenders will simply take your word for whatever income you say you have.
|
Where's The Real Estate Market Headed in '07?
Trying to figure out where the real estate market will head is always a dubious process. Economists of every view and persuasion can provide entirely opposite explanations to "prove" that the market will move up, down or sideways.
|
Bad Credit Mortgages: The Inside Story
There's a lot of information concerning mortgages and most of it is directed toward borrowers with great credit. Alas, not everyone has the strong credit needed for super-fast loan applications or the lowest possible rates.
|
Are You Ready For New Loan Standards?
The world of lending is about to change. For most borrowers new loan standards will mean nothing other than a little more paperwork -- but for many the new standards will mean something else, a reduced ability to borrow.
|
Mortgage Relics: Are Seller Take-Backs For You?
With markets slowing in many areas it comes as little surprise that a growing number of owners are offering "seller contributions" to pay closing costs, bigger fees for brokers who bring in buyers and such things as riding mowers and even cars.
But perhaps the most interesting owner strategy is this: Why bother with lenders when a helpful owner will take back some or all of the financing you need to become a homeowner?
For those with "impaired credit" such offers may sound enticing.
|
How To Profit In A Slowing Market
Across the country local real estate markets have become sluggish and weak. In many areas, unit sales are down and prices are holding steady or not rising at all.
|
How To Get An FHA Refund
For many years the huge FHA mortgage program paid insurance refunds to borrowers. While the refund program stopped in late 2004, there are still millions of older FHA loans out there where borrowers may be able to get back some of their insurance money.
|
How To Finance A $1 Million Home
Million-dollar homes seem to be increasingly common, a reality which raises a question: How do buyers finance such homes -- and how can you?
For many buyers the answer does not involve upper-income tax brackets or a few choice words in the wills of the rich and famous. Instead, buyers in the $1 million range are often long-time property owners who have seen their equity grow over time.
|
20 Questions: What Are The Secrets of Today's Loans?
Not too long ago the world of real estate finance was a fairly simple place. Most loans were so clear that borrowers without advanced degrees in finance could reasonably compare marketplace choices
Those days are gone.
|
Should You Refinance If Rates Are Rising?
When interest rates are falling the case for refinancing is clear and obvious. If you can save money each month without big cash costs to refinance then getting new a mortgage is a winner.
|
Is The 50-Year Mortgage For You?
During the past few weeks several mortgage lenders have announced that they will now offer 50-year mortgages. This is a curious idea, but not as curious as it could be: At the height of the real estate boom in Japan some homes were financed with 100-year mortgages.
|
The Truth About 10 Credit Score Myths
Credit scores are enormously important to both borrowers and mortgage lenders. In the same way that doing better in work, sports or at school produces real benefits, the same is true with credit scores.
|
How Much Should You Borrow?
There's little doubt that we're borrowing more and there's also little doubt that credit is one of the great conveniences of modern life. That said, like Goldilocks you want to borrow the amount that's just right -- and no more.
|
Homeowners Rejoice: Tax Breaks Are Here....
Let's be honest: April 15th is a day of reckoning, the moment when we find out what we really owe for taxes. In households nationwide wallets are drained and many who were rich on the 14th are greatly impoverished by the 16th.
|
When Is The Right Time To Refinance?
One of the great mysteries of our time concerns the matter of when to refinance. It used to be that borrowers would refinance only when rates fell by 2 full percentage points, a standard which makes no sense in today's marketplace.
|
Is It Time To Grab Your Home Equity?
If you bought a home in the past few years the odds are overwhelming that your equity increased. According to the National Association of Realtors, the value of a typical home grew by 12.
|
A Mortgage Secret for First-Time Buyers: It Can Pay To Buy More
It's not easy to buy a first home, so here's a suggestion that may be surprising: Instead of buying one residence, buy several. What I'm suggesting has nothing to do with late night infomercials or books that promise fast and easy wealth from real estate.
|
FHA Loans Look Strong
We take long-term mortgages for granted today, but it wasn't always that way. Long ago it was likely that if you financed a home you borrowed money with a five-year "term" mortgage -- and even then you needed 50 percent down.
|
The Perils of Plastic
Millions of credit card borrowers are about to face larger monthly payments, a change that represents both good news and bad for consumers.
Under new guidelines suggested by the federal government, starting in January minimum monthly payments for credit card debt will generally increase.
|
Has the "Bubble" Burst?
After watching home values soar during the past few years it looks as if real estate reality is finally about to set in. The home-pricing forecast for 2006 is mild and modest with higher prices projected for the year but not the double-digit increases seen in 2005.
|
How to Get Your First Mortgage
When it comes to lifetime markers getting a first mortgage is a major event. With a mortgage you're magically transformed from occupant to owner and from tenant to titleholder.
|
|