How To Save Thousands
of Dollars
1) LOAN FEE "POINTS" PAID TO OBTAIN A HOME ACQUISITION
MORTGAGE. Homeowners rarely forget to deduct their mortgage
interest and property taxes. However, if you bought your principal
residence in 2005, and if you paid the mortgage lender a loan fee
(usually called "points"), that loan fee is deductible
as itemized interest on Schedule A. Each point equals 1 percent
of the amount borrowed.
To illustrate: if you obtained a $200,000 mortgage to buy your
home, and if you paid a two-point loan fee to the lender, that $4,000
fee qualifies as itemized interest. However, if you paid a loan
fee to obtain a mortgage secured by other real estate, such as an
investment property, that loan fee is never fully deductible up-front
and can only be deducted over the life of the mortgage.
But the IRS Form 1098 your lender sent you reporting your 2005
annual interest paid might not include the loan fee. Be sure to
double-check. Your best proof of the loan fee payment is often the
closing statement received when the acquisition mortgage was recorded.
2) DEDUCT MORTGAGE REFINANCE FEES PAID TO THE LENDER OVER
THE LIFE OF THE MORTGAGE.
If you refinanced your home loan, as millions of borrowers did
in 2005, and if you paid a loan fee to obtain that refinanced mortgage,
it can only be deducted over the life of the mortgage, such as 15,
20, or 30 years.
For example, if you paid your lender a $3,000 loan fee to refinance
your 30-year home mortgage, you can deduct $100 each year for the
next 30 years.
The general rule is for each one-point loan fee paid, the lender's
interest rate should decline by at least 1/8 percent. For example,
if you paid a two-point loan fee, the lender should have reduced
the interest rate on your new loan at least 0.25 percent.
Because this annual loan fee deduction for refinanced mortgages
is so small, it is easy to forget. Instead, many borrowers prefer
to obtain so-called "no cost" refinanced home loans even
if the fully deductible interest rate is slightly higher. Another
reason to avoid paying a loan fee on a refinanced mortgage is most
home loans are paid off or refinanced in less than 10 years, either
due to sale of the property or another refinancing.
3) DEDUCT UNDEDUCTED LOAN FEES FROM A PRIOR HOME LOAN REFINANCE.
In 2005, if you refinanced a prior refinanced home loan, remember
to deduct any remaining undeducted loan fee in the tax year of the
refinance.
For example, suppose you had $2,000 of undeducted loan fees remaining
from a prior home mortgage refinance. That $2,000 became fully deductible
interest as a lump sum in the year of the second refinance.
4) DEDUCT THE MORTGAGE PREPAYMENT PENALTY YOU PAID.
If you sold your home in 2005, or refinanced your mortgage, and
had to pay a mortgage prepayment penalty to the old lender, that
prepayment penalty qualifies as itemized tax-deductible interest.
Prepayment penalties most frequently apply to home loans during
the first three to five years, depending on the terms of the mortgage.
5) IF YOU CHANGED RESIDENCES AND JOB LOCATION IN 2005,
YOUR MOVING COSTS MAY BE TAX DEDUCTIBLE.
It doesn't matter if you are a renter or a homeowner, but you may
qualify to deduct your unreimbursed moving costs if you changed
both your residence and job location in 2005.
Moving costs can be a huge tax deduction, especially if you made
a long-distance move that was not paid by your employer. The residence
move must come within 12 months before or after the job site change.
Use IRS Form 3903 to calculate and claim this big tax break. To
qualify, the distance from your old home to your new job location
must be at least 50 miles further than was the distance from that
home to your old job site. The distance from your new home to the
new job is irrelevant.
For example, suppose your old residence was five miles from your
work site. That means if your new job location is at least 55 miles
from your old home (five plus 50), you can qualify to deduct your
direct moving costs. However, if you meet the distance test, you
must also meet the work time test in the vicinity of your new location.
This second test requires either employment for at least 39 weeks
during the subsequent 52 weeks or, if you are self-employed, working
at least 78 weeks during the next 104 weeks in the vicinity of your
new job location. Either spouse can qualify, but part-time work
doesn't count.
6) DON'T FORGET TO DEDUCT ANY UNINSURED CASUALTY LOSS.
If you suffered an uninsured "sudden, unusual, or unexpected"
loss, such as those due to a fire, flood, hurricane, tornado, earthquake,
mudslide, theft, accident, water damage, riot, embezzlement, vandalism,
snow, rain, or ice storm, you may qualify for the casualty loss
tax deduction.
But slow losses are not deductible. Non-deductible examples include
termite damage, dry rot, rust, moth damage, Dutch elm disease, erosion,
mold, corrosion, and dry well.
To qualify, the casualty loss deduction must exceed 10 percent
of your 2005 adjusted gross income, plus a $100 "floor"
per casualty event.
However, these limitations are waived if your casualty loss was
due to Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, or Wilma. Brand-new IRS Publication
4492 details the special tax relief granted by the IRS and Congress
to these hurricane victims. There are also special business tax
breaks for depreciation, expenses, and other losses. To obtain a
copy, call the IRS at 800-829-3676 or go to www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p4492.pdf.
7) REMEMBER TO DEDUCT PRO-RATED PROPERTY TAX IN THE YEAR
OF HOME SALE OR PURCHASE.
Another often-overlooked homeowner tax deduction occurs in the
year of sale or purchase. As part of the sale closing settlement,
the property taxes must be pro-rated between the buyer and seller
based on the number of days each party owned the home during the
property tax year.
Your best proof of payment of your pro-rated property tax share
is usually the closing settlement statement.
8) DEDUCT PRO-RATED MORTGAGE INTEREST IN YEAR OF HOME SALE
OR PURCHASE.
Another pro-rated itemized tax deduction, if you bought or sold
your home in 2005, is the pro-rated mortgage interest for the month
of sale. This pro-rated interest deduction occurs if the home buyer
assumed or purchased "subject to" an existing mortgage.
The best proof of this pro-rated mortgage interest deduction is
the closing settlement statement. Of course, when a home buyer obtains
a new mortgage, there is no pro-rated interest deduction on the
old mortgage.
9) REMEMBER TO DEDUCT PREPAID PROPERTY TAXES AND MORTGAGE
INTEREST.
If you are like millions of U.S. homeowners looking for every dollar
of tax deductions, you may have prepaid your part of your 2006 property
taxes and mortgage interest in December 2005.
These payments are tax deductible in the year of actual payment.
Not all property tax collectors allow prepayment, but many do. Or,
if you are like me, you may have prepaid your January 2006 mortgage
payment in December to gain a few hundred extra dollars of itemized
interest deductions.
10) DEDUCT GROUND RENT IF YOUR HOME IS ON LEASED LAND.
A little known tax deduction for the millions of homeowners whose
residences are on leased land is the ground rent payments.
To qualify, Internal Revenue Code 163(c) permits homeowners living
on leased land to deduct their ground rent payments if a) the ground
lease is for at least 15 years, including renewal periods, b) the
land lease is freely assignable to the buyer of your home, c) the
land owner's interest is primarily a security interest (similar
to a mortgage), and d) you have a current or future option to buy
the land beneath your home.
If your situation does not meet all four of these tests, your ground
rent payments are not tax deductible as interest.
To illustrate: if you rent a "lot" or "pad"
in a mobile home park, your monthly rent paid to the park owner
is not deductible unless you have at least a 15-year lease with
a land purchase option for your lot or pad.
NON-DEDUCTIBLE HOMEOWNER PAYMENTS
Monthly payments into a mortgage escrow impound account held by
your mortgage lender are not immediately tax deductible until the
loan servicer remits the full property tax payment to the local
tax collector when it becomes due.
However, the monthly insurance premium paid into your escrow account
for homeowner's insurance is a personal non-deductible expense.
Most lenders itemize the deductible portion of escrow payments
on the borrower's annual IRS Form 1098. Of course, if you pay your
property taxes direct to the local tax collector without an escrow
account, your lender won't itemize your property tax payment.
In 2005, almost 13 million new and resale homes changed ownership.
If you bought or sold a home, you probably paid closing costs such
as transfer tax, recording fees, escrow, title, or attorney fees,
sales commission, and other non-deductible expenses.
Home buyers should add these non-deductible expenses paid to their
purchase price cost basis. Home sellers can subtract many of their
selling expenses from the gross sales price. Full details on these
and other homeowner and real estate investor tax benefits are available
from your personal tax adviser.
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