Home Mortgage Loan Interest Tax Deduction Information for 2011, 2012
67Home Mortgage Loan Interest Tax Deduction Information
The mortgage interest tax deduction has been one of the best tax breaks available to all homeowners who pay taxes in the United States. You may be able to claim a tax deduction for mortgage interest.
The tax deduction is available for interest expense for:
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A mortgage to buy your home,
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A second mortgage,
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A line of credit secured by your home, and
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Home-equity loans
The mortgage interest tax deduction is available on any structure with sleeping, cooking and toilet facilities that is used as a first or second home. This is true whether this is on a house, condominium, cooperative, mobile home or even an RV or boat. The loan must be secured by the main home or second home to qualify for the deduction.
The home mortgage interest tax deduction is limited to the lesser of the fair market value of your home or $1,000,000 ($500,000 if you’re single or married filing separately). Home equity lines are limited to $100,000 (or $50,000 if married filing separately). When you refinance your home, the mortgage interest you pay is generally treated just as your original mortgage. Of course, once the original mortgage is paid off, you will not be able to deduct the interest on that mortgage any longer.
The documentary support for your mortgage interest deduction consists of tax Form 1098, Mortgage Interest Statement showing the interest and deductible points on each mortgage you have with a reporting financial institution, the closing statement for a mortgage established in the current year, and the name, social security number and address of the person who sold you your home if it is a seller financed mortgage.
In rare situations, you might actually pay more interest than is reflected in your Form 1098. When that happens, you are required to attach a statement to your return explaining why your deducting more than your lender reported.
The mortgage interest tax deduction has been a staple deduction for American taxpayers for many, many years. It is unlikely to disappear no matter what other tax changes are imposed. Yet, given the current mortgage crisis, the Wall Street bailout and credit scare, it is very likely that changes, significant changes in how the deduction is taken will occur in the next year or two. What these changes will be is hard to know at this point, but the tax deduction for home mortgage loan interest is likely to become one of the major political footballs of the next Congress.
For up-to-date tax information and a free mortgage interest calculator visit TurboTax Online. Their support section is loaded with informative and accurate articles you can use to help lower your taxes. You can use their award winning tax library by clicking through the support tab, and entering, home mortgage loan interest tax deduction information into the search box. Visit the web site today and take a look at what you've been missing!
Home Mortgage Loan Interest Tax Deduction Video
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information of mortage loan account no 3023622345
The deadline for the first-time homebuyer credit was extended to include purchases where a binding contract is signed by April 30, 2010, and closed by June 30, 2010.
A few rules:
• “First-time homebuyers” are those who have not owned a home during the previous three years.
• The credit is worth 10 percent of the purchase price, up to a credit limit of $8,000 on homes costing $800,000 or less; homes priced above that are ineligible.
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Barry Gelb 6 months ago
If I own a parcel of land and am building a house to be used as a second residence (no debt) and I purchase the adjacent plot for a purchase money mortgage, is the interest paid on the mortgage deductible? The additional land is the security for the loan and the additional land was purchased a few months after the first plot.
Thanks