Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Use Your Home to Your Tax Advantage

Homeowners get some nice perks when it comes to paying their income taxes.

With tax time less than one week away, don't forget to make your homeownership work for you. You can often make deductions for repairs, mortgage interest and home-offices.

The most talked about deduction that homeowners receive involves the interest you pay on your home mortgage. This deduction is used in many ways by brokers, lenders and real estate agents as a persuasion into owning a home. For the first years of your mortgage, the deduction will probably be quite a bit of money. But remember that as time goes by, your deduction will go down.

Most mortgages front-load the interest payments. You pay more interest and less principal at first. With time, the principal amount increases as the interest amount decreases. Think of it as a thirty-year teeter totter.

At some point in the life of your mortgage, you may realize that the interest isn't enough to help you out at tax time. You may even choose to go ahead and pay off the mortgage entirely. Most loans do not include prepayment penalties, but if yours does -- they too may be tax deductible.

Until you sell a home, you don't realize how important it is to keep all those receipts for repairs on the home. Keep every improvement or repair receipt. When you sell the home, you can use these expenses to offset the profits you make on the sale. If you have to pay taxes on the profits, the receipts will help you reduce those taxes.

For example, you may put a new roof on the home or simply remodel the bathroom. It doesn't matter the nature, the cost of the improvements can be added to the price you bought the home for. You should keep a file especially for those receipts so that you can find them without searching through years of receipts.

If you relocate because of your job, you could qualify for a mortgage deduction. It doesn't have to be a new job. It could be your first job, a new job or the same job. Your job office has to be at least 50 miles away from where you live.

Homeowners get some nice perks when it comes to paying their income taxes.

With tax time less than one week away, don't forget to make your homeownership work for you. You can often make deductions for repairs, mortgage interest and home-offices.

The most talked about deduction that homeowners receive involves the interest you pay on your home mortgage. This deduction is used in many ways by brokers, lenders and real estate agents as a persuasion into owning a home. For the first years of your mortgage, the deduction will probably be quite a bit of money. But remember that as time goes by, your deduction will go down.

Most mortgages front-load the interest payments. You pay more interest and less principal at first. With time, the principal amount increases as the interest amount decreases. Think of it as a thirty-year teeter totter.

At some point in the life of your mortgage, you may realize that the interest isn't enough to help you out at tax time. You may even choose to go ahead and pay off the mortgage entirely. Most loans do not include prepayment penalties, but if yours does -- they too may be tax deductible.

Until you sell a home, you don't realize how important it is to keep all those receipts for repairs on the home. Keep every improvement or repair receipt. When you sell the home, you can use these expenses to offset the profits you make on the sale. If you have to pay taxes on the profits, the receipts will help you reduce those taxes.

For example, you may put a new roof on the home or simply remodel the bathroom. It doesn't matter the nature, the cost of the improvements can be added to the price you bought the home for. You should keep a file especially for those receipts so that you can find them without searching through years of receipts.

If you relocate because of your job, you could qualify for a mortgage deduction. It doesn't have to be a new job. It could be your first job, a new job or the same job. Your job office has to be at least 50 miles away from where you live.

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