Final score: $8,000 for homebuyers
First-time purchasers get a tax credit windfall if they buy
before December.
By Les Christie, CNNMoney.com staff writer
Last Updated: February 17, 2009: 12:13 PM ET
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- There's a nice windfall for some
homebuyers in the economic stimulus bill awaiting President
Obama's signature on Tuesday. First-time buyers can claim
a credit worth $8,000 - or 10% of the home's value, whichever
is less - on their 2008 or 2009 taxes.
A big plus is that the credit is refundable, meaning tax
filers see a refund of the full $8,000 even if their total
tax bill - the amount of witholding they paid during the
year plus anything extra they had to pony up when they filed
their returns - was less than that amount. But there has
been a lot of confusion over this provision. Adam Billings
of Knoxville, Tenn. wrote to CNNMoney.com asking:
"I will qualify as a first-time home buyer, and I am
currently set to get a small tax refund for 2008. Does that
mean if I purchased now that I would get an extra $8,000
added on top of my current refund?"
The short answer? Yes, Billings would get back the $8,000
plus what he'd overpaid. The long answer? It depends. Here
are three scenarios:
Scenario 1: Your final tax liability is normally $6,000.
You've had taxes withheld from every paycheck and at the
end of the year you've paid Uncle Sam $6,000. Since you've
already paid him all you owe, you get the entire $8,000 tax
credit as a refund check.
Scenario 2: Your final tax liability is $6,000, but you've
overpaid by $1,000 through your payroll witholding. Normally
you would get a $1,000 refund check. In this scenario, you
get $9,000, the $8,000 credit plus the $1,000 you overpaid.
Scenario 3: Your final tax liability is $6,000, but you've
underpaid through your payroll witholding by $1,000. Normally,
you would have to write the IRS a $1,000 check. This time,
the first $1,000 of the tax credit pays your bill, and you
get the remaining $7,000 as a refund.
To qualify for the credit, the purchase must be made between
Jan. 1, 2009 and Nov. 30, 2009. Buyers may not have owned
a home for the past three years to qualify as "first
time" buyer. They must also live in the house for at
least three years, or they will be obligated to pay back
the credit.
Additionally, there are income restrictions: To qualify,
buyers must make less than $75,000 for singles or $150,000
for couples. (Higher-income buyers may receive a partial
credit.)
Applying for the credit will be easy - or at least as easy
as doing your income taxes. Just claim it on your return.
No other forms or papers have to be filed. Taxpayers who
have already completed their returns can file amended returns
for 2008 to claim the credit.
Lukewarm reception
The housing industry is somewhat pleased with the result
because the stimulus plan improves on the current $7,500
tax credit, which was passed in July and was more of a
low-interest loan than an actual credit. But the industry
was also disappointed that Congress did not go even further
and adopt the Senate's proposal of a $15,000 non-refundable
credit for all homebuyers.
"[The Senate version] would have done a lot more to
turn around the housing market," said Bernard Markstein,
an economist and director of forecasting for the National
Association of Homebuilders (NAHB). "We have a lot of
reports of people who would be coming off the fence because
of it."
Even so, the $8,000 credit will bring an additional 300,000
new homebuyers into the market, according to estimates by
Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association
of Realtors.
The credit could also create a domino effect, he said, because
each first-time homebuyer sale will lead to two more trade-up
transactions down the line. "I think there are many
homeowners who would be trading-up but they have had no buyers
for their own homes," Yun said.
Who won't benefit, according to Mark Goldman, a real estate
lecturer at San Diego State University, are those first-time
homebuyers struggling to come up with down payments. The
credit does not help get them over that hurdle - they still
have to close the sale before claiming the bonus.
One state, Missouri, is trying to get around that problem
by creating a short-term loan on the tax credit of up to
$6,750. The state would loan borrowers the money so they
could use it at closing as part of the downpayment. Then,
when the buyers receive their tax credit from the IRS, they
pay back the state. Other states may follow with similar
programs, according to NAHB's Dietz.
Many may look at the tax credit as a discount on the home
price, according to Yun. A $100,000 purchase effectively
becomes a $92,000 one. That can reassure buyers apprehensive
about purchasing and then watching prices continue falling,
he added.
And it provides a nice nest egg for the often-difficult
early years of homeownership, when unexpected repairs and
expenses often crop up. Recipients could also use the money
to buy new stuff for their home - a lawnmower, a rug, a sofa
- and, in that way, help stimulate the economy.