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Home acquisition mortgage debt limit

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This entry was posted on 5/23/2007 5:20 PM and is filed under uncategorized.

There are limits on the amount of mortgage interest you can deduct. One of them has to do with what you can think of as your primary mortgage. You are allowed to deduct interest on the first 1 million dollars of home acquisition debt plus you can generally deduct the interest on another $100,000 of what is called home equity debt. This makes your grand total, $1.1 million of debt on your house. These numbers also apply to a second home you may own. The grand total for two homes is the same $1.1 million. Divide the above numbers in half if your filing status is, Married Filing Separate. This leads us to one drastic way around these limits for some married people. It seems that two single people jointly owning a house could each have half the debt, and claim half the interest deduction, in effect doubling the limits.

These limits illustrate something quite common in the tax code. I don't recall the last time these amounts were raised for inflation or any other reason. So, it's logical to assume they effect more and more people each year. It is a back door tax increase, the failure to index key numbers in the tax code. This reflects poorly on those making our tax laws.

I have only covered a limited amount of the home interest deduction rules here. More information is available in IRS Publication 936:  Interest

 

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