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2nd Home Interest Deduction?

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  • 2nd Home Interest Deduction?

    Am I correct in that athe interest on a second (weekend) home loan is a tax deduction?

    Our primary home is not too far from being paid off (just in time to pay for college...)

    But we are planning to build a weekend place (modular) and will finance some of it especially for the interest deduction.

    Thx,

  • #2
    Re: 2nd Home Interest Deduction?

    Depends. Sometimes there will be certain stipulations requiring that the house be a primary residence or that at least you spend a certain amount of the year living there. You'll have to check local laws and with the person that does your taxes to see if it qualifies for a deduction.
    Brian

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    • #3
      Re: 2nd Home Interest Deduction?

      I thought this was a federal rule. :?

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      • #4
        Re: 2nd Home Interest Deduction?

        I does not matter if you live there as long as you don't rent it out. There are some unique rules if you have a 2nd home if you rent it out (some people have vacation homes they both use and rent).

        You can deduct the interest on up to 2 homes up to the first million dollars financed.

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        • #5
          Re: 2nd Home Interest Deduction?

          YAHOO! We are not going to rent it. (I used to have rental property and know those rules pretty well). THX mama!

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          • #6
            Re: 2nd Home Interest Deduction?

            What if you lived in it Janurary - July, then got married and started renting it in August? I've been wondering on that one.

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            • #7
              Re: 2nd Home Interest Deduction?

              I had a condo before marraige. We bought a house and rented the condo for 6 years.

              As I recall, you declare the rental as income and choose a method to 'depreciate' the property (either over a set period or all at once). Read the rules as I can't remember the details.

              However, the CATCH on rental property is this: When you sell the property you will have to pay taxes on the profit from the sales unless you use the profit to buy another rental property. Example: you bought the home for $100,000. You rent it for awhile but sell for $150,000. You pay taxes on the $50,000 at your current bracket (probably ~20%). This is $10,000!! Only by using the $50,000 for a down payment on another rental can you avoid paying so much.

              What we did: We sold our rental and bit the bullet on the taxes. Our profit was enough to buy an undeveloped 5-acre in the country (no water, no power, dirt roads) plus a camper to use for a little 'house'. About $5,000 went to taxes

              We have been saving successfully for 5 years to build a modular on the land in the next couple years.

              Hope this info helps.

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