Top 10 Tax Tips

Your Home as a Tax Shelter: Top Ten Tax Deductions for Owning Your Home

Your home shelters you from the elements, but it is also a valuable tax shelter.

Your home provides many tax benefits -- from the time you buy it right on through when you decide to sell. Here's a summary of the tax benefits of home ownership; you can get details by visiting the IRS website at http://www.irs.gov/.

1. Mortgage Interest

Joint tax filers can deduct all the interest on a maximum of $1 million in mortgage debt secured by a first and second home. The maximums are halved for married taxpayers filing separately.

You can't use the $1 million deduction if you pay cash for your home and later use it as collateral for an equity loan.

Learn more from IRS Publication 936, Home Mortgage Interest Deduction, available at http://www.irs.gov/.

2. Points

Your mortgage lender will charge you a variety of fees, notably what are called "points." A point equals 1% of the loan principal. One to three points are common on home loans, which can easily add up to thousands of dollars. You can fully deduct points associated with a home purchase mortgage. You cannot deduct a mortgage broker's commission.

Refinanced mortgage points are also deductible, provided they are amortized over the life of the loan. Homeowners who refinance can immediately write off the balance of the old points and begin to amortize the new.

3. Equity Loan Interest

You may be able to deduct some of the interest you pay on a home equity loan or line of credit. However, the IRS places a limit on the amount of debt you can treat as home equity debt for this deduction. Your total home equity debt is limited to the smaller of:

  • $100,000 (or $50,000 for each member of a married couple if they file separately), or
  • the total of your home's fair market value -- that is, what you would get for your house on the open market -- less certain other outstanding debts against it.

The IRS rules about the home equity loan interest deduction are complicated. IRS Publication 936, Home Mortgage Interest Deduction, available at http://www.irs.gov/, explains the details.

4. Home Improvement Loan Interest

If you take out a loan to make substantial home improvements, you can deduct the interest on this loan. There is no dollar limit on this deduction. However, the work must be a "capital improvement" rather than ordinary repairs.

Qualifying capital improvements are those that increase your home's value, prolong its life, or adapt it to new uses. For example, qualifying improvements might include adding a fence, driveway, new room, swimming pool, garage, porch or deck, new built-in appliances, insulation, new heating/cooling systems, a new roof, landscaping, and the like. (Do keep in mind that capital improvements that increase the square footage of your home could trigger a reassessment and higher property taxes.)

Work that doesn't qualify you for an interest deduction includes such repairs as repainting, plastering, wallpapering, replacing broken or cracked tiles, patching your roof, repairing broken windows, and fixing minor leaks. Wait until you are about to sell your home to gain tax benefits from repair work. (See Selling Costs and Capital Improvements, below.) However, you can use a home equity loan, up to the limits discussed above, to make repairs and deduct the interest.

5. Property Taxes

Often referred to as "real estate taxes," property taxes are fully deductible from your income. You can't deduct escrow money held for property taxes until the money is actually used to pay your property taxes.

A city or state property tax refund reduces your federal deduction by a like amount.

6. Home Office Deduction

If you use a portion of your home exclusively for business purposes, you may be able to deduct home costs related to that portion, such as a percentage of your insurance and repair costs, and depreciation. For details about this tax break, see The Home Office Tax Deduction in the Small Business area of Nolo's website.

Further details can be found in IRS Publication 587, Business Use of Your Home.

7. Selling Costs and Capital Improvements

If you decide to sell your home, you'll be able to reduce your taxable capital gain by the amount of your selling costs.

Real estate broker's commissions, title insurance, legal fees, advertising costs, administrative costs, and inspection fees are all considered selling costs. In addition, the IRS recognizes that costs ordinarily attributed to 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.

All selling costs are deducted from your gain. Your 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.

8. Capital Gains Exclusion

This is a true tax shelter for those who are treating home buying as an investment. Thanks to the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, many home sellers no longer suffer a taxable gain. Married taxpayers who file jointly now get 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. Single folks and married taxpayers who file separately get to keep up to $250,000 apiece tax free -- including single people who own a home jointly. (For more information, see Tax Breaks for Selling Your Home.)

9. Moving Costs

If you move because you got a new job, you may be able to deduct some of your moving costs. To qualify for these deductions you must meet all of the following requirements, which get more and more complicated as you read on:

  • You must move within one year of starting your new job.
  • Your new job must be at least 50 miles farther from your old home than your old job was.
  • The distance between your new home and new job can't be greater than between your new home and new job -- in other words, you can't have created a situation where your commute is longer than if you'd stayed put. (An exception, however, is made if your new commute will, in practice, save you time or money, or if your employer insisted on the move as a condition of your employment.)
  • You must work full-time at the new workplace for 39 of the 52 weeks following the move. If you are self-employed, you must work full-time for at least 39 weeks during the first 12 months and a total of 78 weeks during the first 24 months after arriving at the new job location.

Deductions include travel or transportation costs and expenses for lodging and storing your household goods.

10. Mortgage Tax Credit

A homebuying program called mortgage credit certificate (MCC) allows low-income first time homebuyers to benefit from a mortgage interest tax credit of up to 20% of the mortgage interest payments made on a home (the amount of the credit varies by jurisdiction). This credit is available each year you keep the loan and live in the house purchased with the certificate.

The credit is subtracted, dollar for dollar, from the income tax owed. For example, if you paid $10,000 in interest, your tax credit would be $2,000. If you make, say $20,000 per year and owe $2,000 in income taxes without the credit, you would end up owing nothing to the IRS after the credit was applied. You would take the remaining 80% of the interest -- $8,000 -- as a mortgage interest deduction.

More Tax Deduction Information

For more information on tax laws involving real estate transactions, visit the IRS website at http://www.irs.gov/. You will find much useful information, including basic information for first-time homeowners (IRS Publication 530) and publications about selling your house (IRS Publication 523), business use of your home (Publication 587), moving expenses (Publication 521), and home mortgage interest deductions (Publication 936).