15 tagged with "Home Ownership"
Track home ownership costs, mortgage, and property expenses
California Proposition 19 and the End of the Old Parent-Child Property Tax Bargain: A 2026 Guide for Heirs of California Real Estate
How California's Proposition 19 replaced Section 63.1 for parent-child transfers after February 16, 2021 — the family home and farm rules, the one-year occupancy requirement, the BOE-19-P and BOE-266 filings, the $1,044,586 value cap floor, and the step-up-basis trade-off that determines whether to gift during life or transfer at death.
Form 1120-H vs. Form 1120 for HOAs: The Section 528 Election, the 60/90 Tests, and Revenue Ruling 70-604, Explained
A practical guide for HOA boards, treasurers, and small-firm CPAs on the Section 528 election, the four Form 1120-H eligibility tests, the 30% flat rate trade-off versus Form 1120, and why every association should record an annual Revenue Ruling 70-604 vote.
Section 25C Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit: A Final-Year Filing Guide Before the OBBBA Sunset
Section 25C's 30% federal credit for heat pumps, insulation, windows, and other home efficiency upgrades ends with the OBBBA sunset on December 31, 2025, making the 2025 return the last chance to claim up to $3,200 per household — provided you supply a valid 4-character QMID on Form 5695.
Form 1099-S Demystified: How the Right Closing-Day Certification Can Spare You a Surprise Tax Bill on Your Home Sale
Form 1099-S reports the gross sale price of a home, not the net, which routinely triggers IRS CP2000 notices for sellers whose gain is fully excluded under Section 121. This guide explains the Rev. Proc. 2007-12 certification that lets qualifying principal-residence sales bypass the form, the $250,000/$500,000 thresholds, the nonqualified use trap added in 2008, and how to defensibly report when the 1099-S cannot be skipped.
The $40,000 SALT Cap: Should You Re-Itemize in 2026?
OBBBA raised the SALT deduction cap to $40,400 for 2026, but a 30-cent-per-dollar MAGI phase-down between $505,000 and $606,333 creates a roughly 45% effective marginal rate — the "SALT torpedo." Here is how to decide whether to re-itemize.
Section 163(h) Mortgage Interest Deduction in 2026: $750K Cap, Grandfathered Loans, and HELOC Rules
Section 163(h) decides whether your largest Schedule A line is a $14,000 deduction or an $8,500 one. Here is how the permanent $750,000 TCJA cap, the grandfathered $1 million pre-2018 loans, the HELOC "substantial improvement" rule, and the 2026 return of the mortgage insurance premium deduction actually work — with worked examples and the records you need on audit.
Section 165(i) Disaster Loss Election: Pulling Casualty Losses Into the Prior Year for a Faster Refund
How Section 165(i) lets taxpayers in federally declared disaster areas deduct casualty losses on the prior year's return via Form 4684 and Form 1040-X — election mechanics, the six-month deadline, safe-harbor valuations, and when the prior-year election actually beats waiting.
Form 8829 Home Office Deduction: Why Picking the Wrong Method Could Cost You $3,000 a Year
A side-by-side comparison of the simplified $5-per-square-foot method and Form 8829's actual expense method for the 2026 home office deduction, with worked examples, depreciation recapture math, carryover rules, and a decision framework for self-employed filers.
Section 121 Home Sale Exclusion: How Homeowners Can Skip Up to $500,000 in Capital Gains Taxes
How Section 121 lets U.S. homeowners exclude up to $250,000 ($500,000 for joint filers) of capital gains on a primary home sale — covering the 24-month ownership and use tests, the two-year frequency rule, partial exclusions, depreciation recapture, and the nonqualified-use allocation.
Section 25D Residential Clean Energy Credit: Final-Year Claim, Carryforward, and TPO Alternatives
Section 25D's 30% residential clean energy credit ends December 31, 2025 under the OBBBA. How to file the final-year claim on Form 5695, carry unused credit forward indefinitely, and use TPO leases or Section 48E to capture value in 2026.
The Sales Tax Deduction in 2026: How the New $40,000 SALT Cap Could Save You Thousands
For 2026 the SALT cap rises to $40,000, reviving the sales tax deduction for homeowners and big-ticket buyers. Choose between sales tax and state income tax on Schedule A, use the IRS optional tables, and stack actual tax paid on vehicles, boats, or renovation materials on top of the table amount.
Property Tax Deduction in 2026: New $40,400 SALT Cap, Rules, and Strategies
The 2026 SALT cap rises to $40,400, restoring the property tax deduction for many homeowners in high-tax states. Here are the new rules, the MAGI phaseout starting at $505,000, the income-based deductions, and the bunching, recordkeeping, and rental-property strategies that maximize the benefit.