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Expanded Tax Break Available for
2009 First-Time Homebuyers
IR-2009-14, Feb. 25, 2009
WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue
Service announced today that
taxpayers who qualify for the
first-time homebuyer credit and
purchase a home this year before
Dec. 1 have a special option
available for claiming the tax
credit either on their 2008 tax
returns due April 15 or on their
2009 tax returns next year.
Qualifying taxpayers who buy a home
this year before Dec. 1 can get up
to $8,000, or $4,000 for married
filing separately.
“For
first-time homebuyers this year,
this special feature can put money
in their pockets right now rather
than waiting another year to claim
the tax credit," said IRS
Commissioner Doug Shulman. “This
important change gives qualifying
homebuyers cash they do not have to
pay back.”
The IRS
has posted a revised version of Form
5405, First-Time Homebuyer Credit,
on IRS.gov. The revised form
incorporates provisions from the
American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009. The instructions to the
revised Form 5405 provide additional
information on who can and cannot
claim the credit, income limitations
and repayment of the credit.
This
year, qualifying taxpayers who buy a
home before Dec. 1, 2009, can claim
the credit on either their 2008 or
2009 tax returns. They do not have
to repay the credit, provided the
home remains their main home for 36
months after the purchase date. They
can claim 10 percent of the purchase
price up to $8,000, or $4,000 for
married individuals filing
separately.
The
amount of the credit begins to phase
out for taxpayers whose adjusted
gross income is more than $75,000,
or $150,000 for joint filers.
For
purposes of the credit, you are
considered to be a first-time
homebuyer if you, and your spouse if
you are married, did not own any
other main home during the
three-year period ending on the date
of purchase.
The IRS
also alerted taxpayers that the new
law does not affect people who
purchased a home after April 8,
2008, and on or before Dec. 31,
2008. For these taxpayers who are
claiming the credit on their 2008
tax returns, the maximum credit
remains 10 percent of the purchase
price, up to $7,500, or $3,750 for
married individuals filing
separately. In addition, the credit
for these 2008 purchases must be
repaid in 15 equal installments over
15 years, beginning with the 2010
tax year. |