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Dear Tax Talk:
I live in Arizona. I am currently $100,000 upside down in my house and have significant credit card debt. I was laid off
from my job and fell behind. I recently put it up for sale as a short sale.
What should I do to try and avoid the tax ramifications due to the short sale? The real estate agent
says the president has implemented something where the IRS will not go after people who do short sales on their property?
-- Denise
Dear Denise,
You may be off the hook from the IRS, but the lender will certainly want its money if it can get it. When you borrow money,
it is not considered income. When you fail to repay the debt, you have income.
The Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007 allows individuals to exclude from gross income a discharge
of qualified principal residence indebtedness. Qualified principal residence indebtedness is a mortgage you took out to buy,
build or substantially improve your principal residence.
If the amount of your original mortgage is more than the cost of your principal residence plus the cost of
any substantial improvements, only the debt that is not more than the cost of your principal residence plus improvements is
qualified principal residence indebtedness.
Any debt secured by your principal residence that you use to refinance qualified principal residence
indebtedness is treated as qualified principal residence indebtedness, but only up to the amount of the old mortgage principal
just before the refinancing.
For example, if you refinanced your
home and took out cash to use for other purposes
(such as to consolidate credit card debt or buy
a car), the cash-out part of the debt would not
qualify for exclusion under these rules. If you're
in this situation, other rules relating to insolvent
or bankrupt taxpayers may keep you from recognizing
income.
Your principal residence is the home where you ordinarily live most of the time. You can have only one
principal residence at any one time. You do not have to have lived in and owned the home for two years for it to be your
principal residence.
To claim the exclusion, you must file Form 982, Reduction of Tax Attributes Due to Discharge of Indebtedness
(and Section 1082 Basis Adjustment), with your tax return.
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