NEWSLETTER
VA HOME LOAN NEWS ON: FACEBOOK | TWITTER | FORUM
|

Foreclosed? The IRS Tax Man Needs His Cut of the Action

Foreclosed? The tax man may want his cut

Did you lose your house to foreclosure this year? Did your lender forgive some of your mortgage debt because the house sold for less than it the mortgage balance?

If so, you could be facing a big tax hit.

It is IRS policy to tax forgiven debt you are personally responsible for as if it is income. Say, for example, your credit card company settled a $10,000 debt for 50 cents on the dollar. You’d have a debt forgiveness of $5,000, which the IRS would count just like your wages.

The same policy held true for most mortgage debt until 2007, when Congress passed the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act. That ended the liability for many homeowners — but not all.

In general, if you lose your home to foreclosure or short sale, where you sell your home for less than you owe, the IRS won’t add insult to injury by counting the difference as income, at least until 2012, when the act expires.

There are four major exceptions to the rule:

1. You did a cash-out refinance and splurged.

Many homeowners took cash out when they refinanced their homes and used the extra dough to pay for new cars, boats, vacations or other spending.

Say you did that and then got into trouble, losing the house through a foreclosure or short sale. Even if your lender waived the remaining debt, the IRS will treat as income the portion of the forgiven debt that you took out as cash and spent.

We’re getting a $54,000 tax refund

Only the funds used to actually improve your home won’t be taxed (plus the costs of refinancing the loan). Yes, even if you spent the money on paying off your student loans or credit cards.

The IRS’ reasoning is that only the money spent on home improvement actually added to your home’s value. And that, presumably, diminished the difference between what you owed on your mortgage and the value of your home when it was foreclosed.

Beware: Some lenders made refinancing offers contingent on homeowners paying off credit card debt, according to Kent Anderson, a Eugene, Ore.-based attorney and tax expert. If you took one of those deals, the refinance money will be reported to the IRS and you will owe taxes on it.

2. You have a home-equity line of credit.

The same rules that apply to refinancings also apply to home-equity loans: The IRS will only forgive the tax liability if the loan money was spent on home improvements. And, tax experts advise, be prepared to show receipts to prove it.

3. You lost your vacation home or investment property.

So the market tanked and you lost your vacation home. Unfortunately, if you didn’t use it as your primary residence for at least two of the previous five years, you’re going to pay the tax man.

More common, however, may be the case of investment properties gone sour. During the housing boom, buying homes for investment purposes soared, accounting for 28% of all sales during 2005, according to the National Association of Realtors. (Vacation homes made up 12%.) And many of these purchases were made with little down payment.

When the bust hit, second home prices cratered. The median price for investment properties fell nearly in half to $94,000 by 2010, according to NAR. For vacation homes, the median price paid dropped 26% to $150,000.

If an investor bought a property in 2005 at the median price and sold it in 2010, she could have run up almost $90,000 in forgiven debt. If she’s in the 25% tax bracket, that would add more than $22,000 to her tax liability. Ouch!

4. You owned a multi-million-dollar home.

It may be hard for Americans struggling in this weak economy to sympathize with anyone wealthy enough, at one time, to afford a multi-million-dollar home, but owners losing one could be on the hook for a huge tax bill.
Houses: What a million dollars buys

Only the first $2 million in forgiven debt will be voided under the relief act; all the overage is taxable as income.

So, say, for example, you’re ex-ballpayer and self-styled stock-picker Lenny Dykstra and paid $18.5 million to Wayne Gretzky for a mansion in Thousand Oaks, Calif. When you defaulted on the loan in 2009 and the house was auctioned in 2010 for $10.5 million, you could be on the hook for $6.5 million of the $8.5 million in forgiven debt.
Other ways out

The good news? Even if you fall under any of these four scenarios, you may have a way out, according to Anderson. “If the taxpayer was insolvent at the time of the foreclosure, the forgiven debt can be excluded for tax purposes,” he said. “It can also be discharged in a bankruptcy and approved by court order.”

People like Dykstra could elude taxes because California is a “non-recourse” state. Lenders there accept homes as the collateral for the debt and when a bank forecloses, the loan is regarded as paid in full. Since there’s no debt to forgive there’s no taxable income.

It’s not always that simple, though. Many homeowners in California and other non-recourse states have refinanced their mortgages and refis are, as a rule, recourse loans, according to attorney Bill Purdy in Santa Cruz,. “A refi destroys your non-recourse status,” he said. If a big debt is forgiven, borrowers may owe taxes.

Purdy also explained that banks often file 1099 forms with the IRS that mistakenly list debt forgiveness when there was none.

“People need to regard the 1099s with suspicion,” he said. “I’ve had clients in here who have been making payments to the IRS when they had non-recourse loans.”

As long as the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act stays in effect, only borrowers for the most expensive properties in foreclosure will have to worry. After that, though, it may pay for any homeowner in foreclosure to be very aware of their tax exposure — and plan accordingly.

Short URL: http://www.vahomeloannews.com/?p=427

The views expressed herein are the views of the author exclusively and not necessarily the views of VHLN or any other VHLN authors, affiliates, advertisers, sponsors or partners. Notices

Posted by on Apr 19 2011, With 0 Reads, Filed under Foreclosure. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
Apply for Your VA Home Loan Now Apply for VA Loan Now Education Get Educated at Excelsior College Get Educated at Excelsior College Get Your Loan Now Get Your Loan Now Get Your Loan Now Apply for your VA Home Loan Now Apply for your VA Home Loan Now Apply for your VA Home Loan Now Apply for Jobs on HireVeterans.com Now Apply for Jobs on HireVeterans.com Now Apply for Jobs on HireVeterans.com Now

COMMENTS

To post a comment, you must login using Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, or Hotmail in the box below.
Don't have a social network account? Register and Login direct with our site and post your comment.
Before you post, read our Comment Policy - Legal Notice


Comments Closed

1 Comment for “Foreclosed? The IRS Tax Man Needs His Cut of the Action”

  1. Mortgage Forgiveness Relief Act sounds good… IRS’ policy of taxing forgiven debt as income put away quite a lot of money from the pockets of those who sold their house for less that they owe. The exceptions seem quite logical to me.

Comments are closed

 

Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Join Our Daily Newsletter
  View Newsletter ARCHIVE

WHAT'S HOT

  1. VA Participates in Settlement with Mortgage Banks
  2. Does a VA Loan Limit, Limit you?
  3. VA Home Loans Surf to the Safest Bet on the Block
  4. Obama “Sounding” Strong at the State of the Union
  5. VA Home Loans not Affected by S&P’s U.S. Credit Rating Downgrade
  6. Is a VA Home Loan an Option for you?
  7. VA Loans Soar in Texas, and California
  8. Housing Market 2012
  9. American Jobs Act Is Funded By Veterans Using VA Home Loan
  10. Obama Signs HR 2112 to Extend FHA and VA Loan Limits Through 2013
  11. This Veterans Day, VA Loans Are More Important Than Ever
  12. Montana Board of Housing launches home loan program for state’s veterans
  13. Mortgage Bond Investors Seek ‘Obama Button’ To Divine Trades
  14. Obama Offers Mortgage Relief On Western Trip
  15. Bill Would Boost Access to VA Loan Program to Surviving Military Spouses
  16. Loans closed on or after October 1,2011
  17. Good time to refinance mortgages
  18. VA to cover extra costs amid home loan confusion
  19. UNIFORM APPRAISAL DATASET (UAD)
  20. VA Specialty Lender Offers Reduced Funding Fee
  1. lomtevas: VA benefits are not wide ranging at all. A service member has to overcome two major obstacles in order to...
  2. lomtevas: This is rhetoric intended for election year bling. The federal government is the last place a veteran can...
  3. lomtevas: This is all bull*t rhetoric. No service member coming off of active duty with freshly lost income will...
  4. Managing Editor: We hope the info provided herein gives insight to the mortgage issues Americans face
  5. Julie: Mortgage Forgiveness Relief Act sounds good… IRS’ policy of taxing forgiven debt as income put...
Apply for VA Home Loan Now!

Archives