| FS-2010-06, January 2010
Video: New Homebuyer Credit -
Claim It
ENG |
SPA
Video: New Homebuyer Credit - Claim It (Military)
ENG
Tax Credit in General
For first time homebuyers, there
is a refundable credit equal to 10 percent of the purchase price
up to a maximum of $8,000 ($4,000 if married filing separately).
A first-time homebuyer is an individual who, with his or her
spouse if married, has not owned any other principal residence
for three years prior to the date of purchase of the new
principal residence for which the credit is being claimed.
There are several
situations in which a taxpayer cannot claim the credit:
- The taxpayer is a
nonresident alien;
- The taxpayer purchases a
home located outside the United States;
- The taxpayer sells the home
or if it stops being the taxpayer’s principal residence in
the year the taxpayer purchased the home;
- The taxpayer receives the
home, or any portion of the home, as a gift or as an
inheritance; and
- The taxpayer exceeds the
income limits.
The Worker, Homeownership, and Business Assistance Act of 2009
extended and expanded the tax credit for first time homebuyers
that had been created in 2008. The new law extends the deadline
for qualifying home purchases from Nov. 30, 2009, to April 30,
2010. If a buyer enters into a binding contract by April 30,
2010, the buyer has until June 30, 2010, to settle on the
purchase.
Members of the Armed Forces and
certain federal employees serving outside the U.S. have an extra
year to buy a principal residence in the U.S. and still qualify
for the credit. An eligible taxpayer must buy or enter into a
binding contract to buy a home by April 30, 2011, and settle on
the purchase by June 30, 2011.
Purchases made after Nov.
6, 2009
Taxpayers should be aware of some
changes to the law that apply to home purchases after Nov. 6,
2009, the date of enactment of the new law.
The new law expands the tax
credit to include not just first-time buyers but also long-time
residents who buy a new principal residence. They are eligible
for a credit of 10 percent of the purchase price up to a maximum
credit of $6,500. A long-time resident is an individual who,
with his or her spouse if married, has owned and used the same
home as a principal residence for any period of 5 consecutive
years during the 8-year period ending on the date of purchase of
the new principal residence for which the credit is being
claimed.
Income Limitation
For people who purchase homes
after Nov. 6, the full credit will be available to taxpayers
with a modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) up to $125,000, or
$225,000 for joint filers. MAGI is your adjusted gross income
plus the total of certain foreign earned income. Those with MAGI
between $125,000 and $145,000, or $225,000 and $245,000 for
joint filers, are eligible for a reduced credit. Those with
higher incomes do not qualify.
However, for homes purchased
before Nov. 7, 2009, existing income limits remain in place. The
full credit is available to taxpayers with MAGI up to $75,000,
or $150,000 for joint filers. Those with MAGI between $75,000
and $95,000, or $150,000 and $170,000 for joint filers, are
eligible for a reduced credit. Those with higher incomes do not
qualify.
Several new restrictions
apply to purchases that occur after Nov. 6:
- Dependents are not eligible
to claim the credit;
- No credit is available if
the purchase price of a home is more than $800,000; and
- A purchaser must be at least
18 years of age on the date of purchase.
Credit Claimed on a 2009
or 2010 Tax Return
For all qualifying purchases in
2010, taxpayers have the option of claiming the credit on either
their 2009 or 2010 tax returns.
A new version of Form 5405,
First-Time Homebuyer Credit, is expected to be available by Jan.
15, 2010, for taxpayers who purchased a home after Nov. 6; this
new version of the form must be used to claim the credit.
Likewise, taxpayers claiming the credit on their 2009 returns,
no matter when the house was purchased, must also use the new
version of Form 5405. Taxpayers who claim the credit on their
2009 tax return will not be able to file an electronic return,
but instead will need to file a paper return.
Credit Claimed on a 2008
Tax Return
The maximum credit was originally
$7,500 ($3,750 if married filing separately). A taxpayer who
chose to claim the credit on the 2008 tax return for a home
purchased in 2009 and who also did not use the February 2009
revision of Form 5405 may now be able to claim the additional
$500 on an amended 2008 tax return.
Selling the Home and
Other Events that Require Repaying the Credit
Taxpayers who bought homes in
2009 or 2010 and sold them within a 36 month period that begins
on the purchase date, must repay the credit. They also must
repay the credit if they convert the home to a business or
rental property or the lender forecloses on the home. The
taxpayer repays the credit by including the amount of the credit
as additional tax on the tax return for the year in which the
repayment event occurs.
However, taxpayers do not have to
repay all or a portion of the credit under the following
circumstances:
- Taxpayers sell the home to
someone who is not related to them, the repayment in the
year of sale is limited to the amount of gain on the sale;
- If the home is destroyed,
condemned, or disposed of under threat of condemnation and
the taxpayer acquires a new principal residence within 2
years of the event, the taxpayer does not have to repay the
credit; and
- If, as part of a divorce
settlement, the home is transferred to a spouse or former
spouse, the spouse who receives the home is responsible for
repaying the credit if required.
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