The Government Tries To Motivate First Time Homebuyers

by Rick Gibson

Coming up with money to buy a first home is brutally tough. This is particularly true with the current market which is such a nightmare. Fortunately, the government is helping people in addition to the banks.

The housing market is a bottom up feeder system. Simply put, you buy a home, build some equity in it over time and then sell it. You use your gain to buy a bigger house and so on through life.

As a long time homeowner, you might scoff at first time buyers. You should not. Without them, you will never sell your home? Why? Well, who is going to buy it? If they people below you cannot sell, they have no money to offer to you. Without first time buyers, this is exactly what happens.

The current market is bereft of first time buyers. Without these buyers, the market is stagnating. While there are all kinds of finance problems contributing to this, the government has acted to motivate first time buyers to get back into the market.

The big carrot being dangled is a tax credit created as part of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008. It is a very big carrot, indeed. How big? Try a $7,500 tax credit for first time homebuyers.

Stop whining about tax deductions disappearing. Yes, they are valuable, but not like a tax credit. Tax deductions reduce your income and then taxes are figured based on the reduced amount. Tax credits reduce your taxes directly dollar for dollar.

An example always helps show the power of a tax credit. Assume I can claim a tax credit of $5,000. Assume I owe the IRS four thousand dollars at the end of the year. After applying my tax credit, the IRS now owes me $1,000. Check, please!

You are probably wondering if it is realistic to ask for more than I actually owed. Yes. This is a fully refundable tax credit. In plain language, this means that it does not matter what I owe. Not bad, eh?

Before you go rushing off to look at homes, you should know there is a slight catch. Okay, a huge catch. The government wants the tax credit back. You have 15 years to repay it, which means about $500 buck a year if you take the max credit amount.

Can anyone claim the credit? No. It is limited by the amount of money you make. If you are married and making more than $170,000, you are ineligible. Other taxpayers making more than 75K need to talk to an accountant to get an answer.

Everyone gripes about the loss of tax deductions, but they miss the points. Tax credits are the real golden egg for taxpayers. Claim as many as you can. If you are considering buying a home, this one should help a bunch.

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