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Sunday, March 24, 2013

TAX TIME!

The Top 10 Real Estate Tax Deductions for Homeowners


As the time to file income taxes approaches, we need to take a new look at the changing tax landscape for homeowners. The dynamic atmosphere in Washington, D.C. has a different effect each year on which tax breaks are proposed, rescinded, changed, and extended for taxpayers who own a home.
Thanks to the efforts of many real estate industry groups including the National Association of Realtors, many of the  tax benefits that homeowners enjoy–which were on the chopping block over the past few months–have been protected and extended through the 2013 tax season.
Disclaimer – This is only an informational summary of current tax issues in the news. If you need tax advice, please contact a tax attorney or CPA
1.  Mortgage Interest Deduction
The mortgage interest deduction has always been the most-beloved tax benefit of home buyers in the U.S.  New homeowners’ monthly mortgage payments are made up almost entirely by interest for the first few years. Their ability to deduct that interest can result in a healthy reduction in tax liability. Affordability for first-time home buyers is directly linked to their ability to deduct the interest on their mortgage.
Homeowners who itemize their deductions can deduct the interest paid on a mortgage with a balance of up to $1 million. While there is some movement to limit the total itemized deductions for taxpayers with higher incomes (over $400,000), the current deductions holds for all tax brackets. Americans save around $100 million every year by deducting mortgage interest on their tax returns.
2.  Home Improvement Loan Interest Deduction
The interest on home equity loans used for “capital improvements” to a home can also be a tax deduction. On loans with balances of up to $100,000, the interest is tax-deductible for a homeowner who uses the loan to make improvements to the home such as adding square footage, upgrading the components of the home, or repairing damage from a natural disaster. Maintenance items like changing the carpet and painting a home are usually not included as capital improvement projects.
3.  Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) Deduction
Homeowners who make a down payment of less than 20% are usually paying some sort of Private Mortgage Insurance. PMI (sometimes abbreviated MIP or just MI), can be a few dollars to hundreds of dollars per month, and it is a large portion of many homeowners’ mortgage payments.
If your mortgage was originated after Jan 1, 2007, and you have PMI, it can be a tax deduction. The deduction is phased out, 10% per $1,000, for taxpayers who have an adjusted gross income between $100,000-$109,000 and those above that level do not qualify. The extension of this tax deduction in 2013 was one of many last-second saves by real estate industry advocates.
4. Mortgage Points/Origination Deduction
Homeowners who paid points on their home purchase or refinance can often deduct those points on their tax returns. Points, often called origination fees, are usually percentage-based fees which a lender charges to originate a loan. A one percent fee on a $100,000 loan would be one point, or $1,000.
On a home purchase loan, taxpayers can deduct the entirety of the points that they paid in the same year. On a refinance loan, the points must be deducted as an amortization over the life of the loan. Many taxpayers forget about this amortized benefit over time, so it’s important to keep good records on the deduction of points on a refinance.
5. Energy Efficiency Upgrades/Repairs Deduction
Homeowners can deduct the cost of the building materials used for energy efficiency upgrades to their home. This is actually a tax credit, one which is applied as a direct reduction of how much tax you owe, not just a reduction in your taxable income.
10 percent of the total bill for energy-efficient materials can be used as a tax credit, up to a maximum $500 credit. Insulation, doors, new roofs, and many other items qualify for the energy efficiency credit. There are also individual limits for certain items, such as $150 for furnaces, $200 for windows, and $300 for air conditioners and heat pumps.
6. Profit on Sale of Real Estate Deduction
If you’ve sold a home in the past year, you’re likely aware that individuals can claim up to $250,000 of profit from the sale tax-free, and married couples can claim up to $500,000 tax-free. Of course, there are some requirements to escaping the capital gains tax on this profit.
The home must be a primary residence. This means that you must have lived in the home, as your primary residence, for two of the past five years. You could rent it out for years one, three, and five, while living in it for years two and four. In this way, a homeowner could potentially claim this tax break on multiple homes within a fairly short time frame, but each tax-free sale must occur at least two years apart from the previous tax-free transaction.
7. Real Estate Selling Cost Deduction
For those lucky folks whose profits on the sale of their home might exceed the $250k/$500k limits, there are still some ways to reduce the tax burden.  The costs of selling the home can be significant, and those in themselves can be claimed as tax deductions.
By adding up all of the fees paid at closing, capital improvements made to the home while you owned it, money spent to make repairs to damaged property, and marketing costs necessary to sell the home, you can add a significant figure to the cost basis of your home.  This basically raises the original price you paid for the home.  Your cost basis begins with the original price of the home, and then adds in the improvement and selling costs.  When the new cost basis price is compared to your selling price, it reduces your potentially-taxable profit on the home significantly.
8. Home Office Deduction
The home office tax deduction is often cited as a deduction that increases your likelihood of being audited.  While the raw numbers might add some credibility to that perception, it’s really the way a home office is deducted that gets some taxpayers into audit purgatory.
This deduction, when used correctly, is just as safe as any other.  Homeowners deduct a percentage of their mortgage, utilities, and repair bills in direct proportion to the amount of their home that is dedicated office space.
There are a few hard and fast rules to live by when deducting the costs of your home office. The home office must be your principal place of business (the primary office location where you get the majority of your work done).  It needs to be exclusively used for business (it can’t be your kitchen by day and office by night).  You need to be realistic with its size and use (unless you enjoy audits).
9. Property Tax Deduction
New homeowners often don’t know that their property taxes are deductible.  While it may sound strange to have a tax-deductible tax, the overall effect is that you don’t pay income tax on money that was spent on property taxes.
Homeowners should be careful to only deduct the amount of property tax actually paid to their local municipality for the year. This is not necessarily the amount you paid to your escrow account, and should not include any other city/county fees that might potentially be on the same bill as your property taxes.
10. Loan Forgiveness Deduction
The Mortgage Debt Forgiveness Relief Act of 2007 was created when short sales were becoming a new and growing part of the real estate market. An underwater homeowner might convince their lender to agree to a short sale of their home at $100,000, even though they owe $150,000 on their mortgage. While the lender forgives the extra $50,000 owed after the short sale, the government views it as $50,000 in taxable income (a gift from the lender to the borrower).
The Debt Forgiveness Act temporarily relieved the taxpayer of that burden, but was set to expire this year. Through much effort, it was extended along with many other homeowner tax relief measures this year and homeowners can continue to claim this tax relief in 2013.
IRS-suggested disclaimer: To the extent that this message or any attachment concerns tax matters, it is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, by a taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be imposed by law.  This message was written to support the promotion or marketing of the transactions or matters addressed herein, and the taxpayer should seek advice based on the taxpayer’s particular circumstances from an independent tax advisor.
Sam DeBord is a Realtor® and Managing Broker at Coldwell Banker Danforth & Associates. Find him on SeattleHome.com.

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Monday, March 18, 2013

NATIONAL home price news...like NATIONAL weather...

 home_price_increase_object [1]The latest FNC Residential Price Index® (RPI) indicates that U.S. property values continued to recover through January—the 11th consecutive month of rising prices. Despite the uneven pace of price gains across different geographical markets, there are clear signs that the housing recovery is increasingly widespread.
A limited housing supply and declining foreclosure sales are contributing to the recovery of underlying property values.

Saturday, March 16, 2013

WHAT THE 1% IS BUYING...

Hot Property: Jason Bateman Gives Ernest Borgnine’s Estate a New Identity

—Actor Jason Bateman and his wife, actress Amanda Anka, are dropping anchor in the Beverly Crest area with the purchase of the estate of Ernest Borgnine for $3 million.

Monday, March 11, 2013

RATES...THEY ARE A-RISING!

Mortgage Rates Highest In Nearly 10 Months After Employment Data
Posted to: Mortgage Rate Watch
Friday, March 08, 2013 2:59 PM
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Mortgage rates vaulted higher today at their fastest pace since late January, after the Employment Situation showed an unexpectedly high number of jobs created in February.  The Employment Situation is the most important piece of domestic economic data each month and always has the potential to greatly impact markets.  This was indeed the case today, and it brings 30yr Fixed Best-Execution up to 3.75% for the first time since May 2012.  Lenders are still offering lower rates, but at greatly increased costs.  For every $100k in loan amount, you'd pay an extra $700 of closing costs to keep yesterday's rates at an average lender.  On average, the costs associated with 3.625% yesterday are the same costs associated with 3.75% today.
(What is A Best-Execution Mortgage Rate?
Unfortunately for mortgage rate watchers hoping for lower rates, today's moves go a long way toward further confirming the longer-term upward trend in rates that we've been discussing for several months (Everything in the the "ongoing lock/float considerations" below has been dead on and continues to summarize our stance).  It's by no means the final nail in the coffin, but it's increasingly the case that the global economic environment would need to be faced with threats of a similar nature to the past few years of European stability concerns or benefits of a similar potency to ongoing quantitative easing (absent the current discussions of tapering Fed purchases of long-term debt).  The latter looks unlikely and the former is at least not on the table for now.  So rates continue to rise.  Risk-takers would be better justified in a decision to float this weekend than any other time in the past 2 weeks, but there's no guarantee that rates won't continue to move higher next week.
Loan Originator Perspectives
"Rates up again today, which is no surprise in this corner. Every economic report released is seemingly stock bullish and bond bearish these days. While we're not losing massive ground in single bunches, we're like a leaky boat; every day there's more water in the hull. Hate to sound like a broken record, but every loan I have is locked, and intend to stay that way until the trend breaks." -Ted Rood, Senior Originator, Wintrsut Mortgage.
"Since all of my clients are locked only the new ones have to deal with the higher rates out today. Hard to say if we see a breather on Monday with an improvement or not. I would normally say lock no matter what day it is, but since it's Friday and the damage is done we might as well wait to see what happens on Monday. This could be a short lived run up (I hope) since the jobs reports looked this good last year only to disappoint as the year progressed. The difference now is the Europe is no longer on the radar at least until it is again. " -Mike Owens, Partner, Horizon Financial Inc.
"Rates are up .25% this week and up .5% for 2013. For consumers still holding for rates to drop, today is a good day to re-read my MortgageNewsDaily piece from January 21: Wake Up Call: Free Refi Boom Almost Over" -Julian Hebron, Branch Manager, RPM Mortgage.
Today's Best-Execution Rates
  • 30YR FIXED - 3.75%
  • FHA/VA - 3.375-3.5% (varies more between lenders than conventional 30yr Fixed)
  • 15 YEAR FIXED -  3.00%
  • 5 YEAR ARMS -  2.625-3.25% depending on the lender
Ongoing Lock/Float Considerations
  • Rates have risen moderately but consistently since hitting their all-time lows in September and October 2012.
  • Regardless of global or domestic economic weakness, the subsiding fear of a disorderly EU breakup will continue to prevent rates from getting back to those lows.
  • This is very likely to be the case unless a similarly panic-inducing event were to come into focus, or if a disorderly break-up regained the spotlight.
  • Sequestration, negative growth, and generally choppy political and economic environments around the world DO NOT constitute that sort of panic.
  • This is a "rising rate environment" until further notice, though pockets of recovery and consolidation can provide smaller-scale opportunities against the larger-scale backdrop.
  • (As always, please keep in mind that our talk of Best-Execution always pertains to a completely ideal scenario.  There can be all sorts of reasons that your quoted rate would not be the same as our average rates, and in those cases, assuming you're following along on a day to day basis, simply use the Best-Ex levels we quote as a baseline to track potential movement in your quoted rate).

Monday, March 4, 2013

NOTE TO SELLER...

What Do Home Buyers Really Want?
 homebuyers_young_couple_inside [1]Many in the housing industry are wondering not only what today’s home buyers really want, but also what they are ready to leave behind in light of current economic realities. A new study recently released by NAHB, What Home Buyers Really Want [2], was designed to answer these questions, and more specifically, to provide the most current and accurate information on buyer preferences so that NAHB members can deliver the home (and community) that today’s buyers want and are willing to pay for.