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What To Do If You Have Not Filed Your 2006 Tax Return
The New
Year always turns thoughts to the new tax season and when it comes to taxes,
there is no place like home to find shelter. Your home offers a score of tax
deductions and credits designed to help offset the cost of housing and to
keep the housing market fueled with new buyers. Some federal-level
politicians would like to separate you from some of those benefits and they
may or may not be successful, so take advantage of them while you can.
Here is a look at the
Top 10 Tax Breaks, On The House.
Visit the Internal Revenue Service's website for more details on each item.
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Mortgage Loan
Interest:
The Mother Of All Tax Breaks, because interest payments comprises a large
portion of your mortgage payment in the early years of the loan's term,
mortgage interest on a maximum of $1 million in mortgage debt secured by a
first and second home is deductible. Deductions reduce your taxable income
against which your taxes due are calculated. The $1 million level applies
to married tax filers who file jointly and single taxpayers. Married
taxpayers who file separately split the maximum equally.
Likewise, home equity
loan interest is deductible, but limited to the smaller of $100,000 (half as
much for each member of a married couple if they file separately), or the
total of your home's fair market value as determined by a complicated
formula you may need a tax professional's help to decipher.
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Home Improvement
Loan Interest:
The interest on a home improvement loan is also deductible, but calculated
differently. You can deduct all the interest on a home improvement loan
provided the work is a "capital improvement" rather than repairs,
maintenance or cosmetic upgrades. Capital improvements typically increase
your home's value (say, because you added a room), prolong its life (a new
roof) or adapt it to new uses (universal design improvements to assist
older people or people with disabilities). You get tax benefits from
repair work (painting, repairing, etc.) only when you sell your home but
you can use a home equity loan to make repairs and deduct the interest --
up to the limits.
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Points:
lenders charge Points, each equal to 1 percent of the loan principal, as
part of the cost of the loan. You can fully deduct points associated with
a home purchase mortgage, but not a mortgage broker's commission.
Refinanced mortgage points are deductible too, but only when they are
amortized over the life of the loan. Once you refinance a second time, the
balance of the old points from a refinanced loan offer an immediate write
off, as you begin to amortize the new points.
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Property Taxes:
Property taxes or real estate taxes are fully deductible. Any local city
or state property tax refunds reduces your federal property tax deduction
by the same amount.
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Capital Gains Exclusion:
Home buying investors' best tax shelter comes from provisions in the
Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, which allows married taxpayers who file
jointly to keep, tax free, up to $500,000 in profit on the sale of a home
used as a principal residence for two of the prior five years. The amount
is halved for those filing single or separately. You can use the benefit
as often as you qualify.
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Home-Based Business
Deduction:
Home offices that use a portion of your home exclusively for business
could qualify you to deduct a percentage of costs related to that portion.
Included are a percentage of your insurance and repair costs, utility
bills and depreciation. Under clarified provisions of the Taxpayer Relief
Act of 1997, if your home office qualifies, you do not have to allocate a
home sale's capital gains between the home and the business.
Previously if you
used, say, 10 percent of your home for a home-based business, 10 percent of
the gain from a sale would be subject to capital gain taxes and you could
not use the capital gains tax exclusion on that portion. The clarified
provision does not excuse you from a recapture tax if you have taken a
depreciation deduction because of the home-based business.
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Selling Costs and
Capital Improvements:
When you sell your home, you can reduce your taxable capital gain by the
amount of your selling costs, which include real estate commissions, title
insurance, legal fees, advertising, and inspection fees. Cost typically
stemming from decorating or repairs -- painting, wallpapering, planting
flowers, maintenance, and the like -- are also selling costs if you
complete them within 90 days of your sale and with the intention of making
the home more saleable.
Selling costs are
deducted from your gain. Gain is your home's selling price, minus deductible
closing costs, minus selling costs, minus your tax basis in the property.
Your basis is the original purchase price, plus the cost of capital
improvements, minus any depreciation.
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Moving Costs:
A move triggered by a new job comes with some deductible moving costs. To
qualify, you must meet certain requirements including, moving within one
year of starting your new job, moving 50 miles farther from your old home
than your old job was and working full-time at the new job for 39 of 52
weeks following the move. Deductions include travel or transportation
costs and expenses for lodging and storing your household goods.
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Mortgage Tax Credit:
Mortgage Credit Certificates (MCCs) allow qualifying low-income,
first-time home buyers to take a mortgage interest tax credit of up to 20
percent (the amount varies by jurisdiction) of the mortgage interest
payments made on a home. This credit is available every year you keep the
loan and live in the house purchased with the certificate. Unlike a
deduction that reduces your income, the credit is subtracted, dollar for
dollar, from the income tax owed. For example, with a 20 percent tax
credit, if you paid $10,000 in interest, your tax credit would be $2,000.
If you owe $2,000 in income taxes without the credit, you would end up
owing nothing to the IRS after the credit was applied. The remaining 80
percent of your mortgage interest -- $8,000 -- is taken as a normal
mortgage interest deduction.
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Energy Tax Credits:
The newest home-based tax credits were made possible last year by the
Energy Policy Act of 2005. Tax credits of up to $500 in 2006 and 2007 are
available for upgrading heating and air conditioning systems, insulations,
windows, doors and thermostats, caulking leaks, installing pigmented metal
roofs and for otherwise putting the bite on energy waste in your home.
Qualified solar energy and fuel cell systems can net tax credits of up to
$2,000. Some states also offer tax credits or rebate deals that could
reduce the federal credit. Related tax credits are available for consumers
who buy alternative- and clean-fuel burning cars and for entrepreneurial
consumers who install clean-fuel vehicle refueling property at the
principal residence of the taxpayer.
By Broderick Perkins
Realty Times.
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