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Orlando Real Estate
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Services by: |
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CENTURY 21 Solutions Realty |
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(407) 297 - 6608 |
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First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit at a
Glance |
- The tax credit is
available for first-time home buyers only.
- The maximum credit amount is $7,500.
- The credit is available for homes purchased
on or after April 9, 2008 and before
July 1, 2009.
- Single taxpayers with incomes up to $75,000
and married couples with incomes up to $150,000 qualify for the full tax
credit.
- The tax credit works like an interest-free
loan and must be repaid over a 15-year period.
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Frequently Asked Questions
About the First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit |
| The Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008
authorizes a $7,500 tax credit for qualified first-time home buyers purchasing
homes on or after April 9, 2008 and before July 1, 2009. The following questions
and answers provide basic information about the tax credit. If you have more
specific questions, we strongly encourage you to consult a qualified tax advisor
or legal professional about your unique situation. |
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- Who is eligible to
claim the $7,500 tax credit?
First time home buyers
purchasing any kind of home—new or resale—are eligible for the tax credit.
To qualify for the tax credit, a home purchase must occur on or after April
9, 2008 and before July 1, 2009. For the purposes of the tax credit, the
purchase date is the date when closing occurs.
- What is the
definition of a first-time home buyer?
The law defines "first-time home buyer"
as a buyer who has not owned a principal residence during the three-year
period prior to the purchase. For married taxpayers, the law tests the
homeownership history of both the home buyer and his/her spouse. For
example, if you have not owned a home in the past three years but your
spouse has owned a principal residence, neither you nor your spouse
qualifies for the first-time home buyer tax credit. Ownership of a vacation
home or rental property not used as a principal residence does not
disqualify a buyer as a first-time home buyer.
- How do I claim the
tax credit? Do I need to complete a form or application?
Participating in the tax credit program
is easy. You claim the tax credit on your federal income tax return. No
other applications or forms are required. No pre-approval is necessary;
however, prospective home buyers will want to be sure they qualify for the
credit under the income limits and first-time home buyer tests.
- What types of
homes will qualify for the tax credit?
Any home purchased by an eligible
first-time home buyer will qualify for the credit, provided that the home
will be used as a principal residence and the buyer has not owned a home in
the previous three years. This includes single-family detached homes,
attached homes like townhouses and condominiums, manufactured homes (also
known as mobile homes) and houseboats.
- Instead of buying
a new home from a home builder, I have hired a contractor to construct a
home on a lot that I already own. Do I still qualify for the tax credit?
Yes. For the purposes of the home buyer
tax credit, a principal residence that is constructed by the home owner is
treated by the tax code as having been "purchased" on the date the owner
first occupies the house. In this situation, the date of first occupancy
must be on or after April 9, 2008 and before July 1, 2009.
In contrast, for newly-constructed homes bought from a home builder,
eligibility for the tax credit is determined by the settlement date.
- What is "modified
adjusted gross income"?
Modified adjusted gross income or MAGI
is defined by the IRS. To find it, a taxpayer must first determine "adjusted
gross income" or AGI. AGI is total income for a year minus certain
deductions (known as "adjustments" or "above-the-line deductions"), but
before itemized deductions from Schedule A or personal exemptions are
subtracted. On Forms 1040 and 1040A, AGI is the last number on page 1 and
first number on page 2 of the form. For Form 1040-EZ, AGI appears on line 4
(as of 2007). Note that AGI includes all forms of income including wages,
salaries, interest income, dividends and capital gains.
To determine modified adjusted gross income (MAGI), add to AGI certain
amounts such as foreign income, foreign-housing deductions, student-loan
deductions, IRA-contribution deductions and deductions for higher-education
costs.
- If my modified
adjusted gross income (MAGI) is above the limit, do I qualify for any tax
credit?
Possibly. It depends on your income.
Partial credits of less than $7,500 are available for some taxpayers whose
MAGI exceeds the phaseout limits. The credit becomes totally unavailable for
individual taxpayers with a modified adjusted gross income of more than
$95,000 and for married taxpayers filing joint returns with an AGI of more
than $170,000.
- Can you give me an
example of how the partial tax credit is determined?
Just as an example, assume that a
married couple has a modified adjusted gross income of $160,000. The
applicable phaseout to qualify for the tax credit is $150,000, and the
couple is $10,000 over this amount. Dividing $10,000 by $20,000 yields 0.5.
When you subtract 0.5 from 1.0, the result is 0.5. To determine the amount
of the partial first-time home buyer tax credit that is available to this
couple, multiply $7,500 by 0.5. The result is $3,750.
Here’s another example: assume that an individual home buyer has a modified
adjusted gross income of $88,000. The buyer’s income exceeds $75,000 by
$13,000. Dividing $13,000 by $20,000 yields 0.65. When you subtract 0.65
from 1.0, the result is 0.35. Multiplying $7,500 by 0.35 shows that the
buyer is eligible for a partial tax credit of $2,625.
Please remember that these examples are intended to provide a general idea
of how the tax credit might be applied in different circumstances. You
should always consult your tax advisor for information relating to your
specific circumstances.
- Does the credit
amount differ based on tax filing status?
No. The credit is in general equal to
$7,500 for a qualified home purchase, whether the home buyer files taxes as
a single or married taxpayer. However, if a household files their taxes as
"married filing separately" (in effect, filing two returns), then the credit
of $7,500 is claimed as a $3,750 credit on each of the two returns.
- Are there any
circumstances for which buyers whose incomes are at or below the $75,000
limit for singles or the $150,000 limit for married taxpayers might not be
able to claim the full $7,500 tax credit?
In general, the tax credit is equal to
10% of the qualified home purchase price, but the credit amount is capped or
limited at $7,500. For most first-time home buyers, this means the credit
will equal $7,500. For home buyers purchasing a home priced less than
$75,000, the credit will equal 10% of the purchase price.
- I heard that the
tax credit is refundable. What does that mean?
The fact that the credit is refundable
means that the home buyer credit can be claimed even if the taxpayer has
little or no federal income tax liability to offset. Typically this involves
the government sending the taxpayer a check for a portion or even all of the
amount of the refundable tax credit.
For example, if a qualified home buyer expected, notwithstanding the tax
credit, federal income tax liability of $5,000 and had tax withholding of
$4,000 for the year, then without the tax credit the taxpayer would owe the
IRS $1,000 on April 15th. Suppose now that taxpayer qualified for the $7,500
home buyer tax credit. As a result, the taxpayer would receive a check for
$6,500 ($7,500 minus the $1,000 owed).
- What is the
difference between a tax credit and a tax deduction?
A tax credit is a dollar-for-dollar
reduction in what the taxpayer owes. That means that a taxpayer who owes
$7,500 in income taxes and who receives a $7,500 tax credit would owe
nothing to the IRS.
A tax deduction is subtracted from the amount of income that is taxed. Using
the same example, assume the taxpayer is in the 15 percent tax bracket and
owes $7,500 in income taxes. If the taxpayer receives a $7,500 deduction,
the taxpayer’s tax liability would be reduced by $1,125 (15 percent of
$7,500), or lowered from $7,500 to $6,375.
- Can I claim the
tax credit if I finance the purchase of my home under a mortgage revenue
bond (MRB) program?
No. The tax credit cannot be combined
with the MRB home buyer program.
- I live in the
District of Columbia. Can I claim both the DC first-time home buyer credit
and this new credit?
No. You can claim only one.
- I am not a U.S.
citizen. Can I claim the tax credit?
Maybe. Anyone who is not a nonresident
alien (as defined by the IRS), who has not owned a principal residence in
the previous three years and who meets the income limits test may claim the
tax credit for a qualified home purchase. The IRS provides a definition of
"nonresident alien" in IRS
Publication 519.
- Does the credit
have to be paid back to the government? If so, what are the payback
provisions?
Yes, the tax credit must be repaid.
Home buyers will be required to repay the credit to the government, without
interest, over 15 years or when they sell the house, if there is sufficient
capital gain from the sale. For example, a home buyer claiming a $7,500
credit would repay the credit at $500 per year. The home owner does not have
to begin making repayments on the credit until two years after the credit is
claimed. So if the tax credit is claimed on the 2008 tax return, a $500
payment is not due until the 2010 tax return is filed. If the home owner
sold the home, then the remaining credit amount would be due from the profit
on the home sale. If there was insufficient profit, then the remaining
credit payback would be forgiven.
- Why must the
money be repaid?
Congress’s intent was to provide as
large a financial resource as possible for home buyers in the year that they
purchase a home. In addition to helping first-time home buyers, this will
maximize the stimulus for the housing market and the economy, will help
stabilize home prices, and will increase home sales. The repayment
requirement reduces the effect on the Federal Treasury and assumes that home
buyers will benefit from stabilized and, eventually, increasing future
housing prices.
- Because the
money must be repaid, isn’t the first-time home buyer program really a zero-interest
loan rather than a traditional tax credit?
Yes. Because the tax credit must be repaid,
it operates like a zero-interest loan. Assuming an interest rate of 7%, that
means the home owner saves up to $4,200 in interest payments over the
15-year repayment period. Compared to $7,500 financed through a 30-year
mortgage with a 7% interest rate, the home buyer tax credit saves home
buyers over $8,100 in interest payments. The program is called a tax credit
because it operates through the tax code and is administered by the IRS.
Also like a tax credit, it provides a reduction in tax liability in the year
it is claimed.
- If I’m qualified for the tax credit and
buy a home in 2009, can I apply the tax credit against my 2008 tax return?
Yes. The law allows taxpayers to choose
("elect") to treat qualified home purchases in 2009 as if the purchase
occurred on December 31, 2008. This means that the 2008 income limit (MAGI)
applies and the election accelerates when the credit can be claimed (tax
filing for 2008 returns instead of for 2009 returns). A benefit of this
election is that a home buyer in 2009 will know their 2008 MAGI with
certainty, thereby helping the buyer know whether the income limit will
reduce their credit amount.
- For a home
purchase in 2009, can I choose whether to treat the purchase as occurring in
2008 or 2009, depending on in which year my credit amount is the largest?
Yes. If the applicable income phaseout
would reduce your home buyer tax credit amount in 2009 and a larger credit
would be available using the 2008 MAGI amounts, then you can choose the year
that yields the largest credit amount.
- Is there any way
for a home buyer to access the money allocable to the credit sooner than
waiting to file their 2008 tax return?
Yes. Prospective home buyers who
believe they qualify for the tax credit are permitted to reduce their income
tax withholding. Reducing tax withholding (up to the amount of the credit)
will enable the future home buyer to accumulate cash by raising his/her take
home pay. This money can then be applied to the downpayment. Buyers should
adjust their withholding amount on their
W-4 via their employer
or through their quarterly estimated tax payment.
IRS Publication 919
contains rules and guidelines for income tax withholding. Prospective home
buyers should note that if income tax withholding is reduced and the tax
credit qualified purchase does not occur, then the individual would be
liable for repayment to the IRS of income tax and possible interest charges
and penalties.
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