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An interest-ing investment deduction
More than 20 years ago, taxpayers found
that the various interest charges they paid on everything from mortgages
to credit card balances to auto loans provided them a bit of a tax
break. They could deduct that interest when they filed their returns.
Most interest deductions disappeared in 1986, when
lawmakers overhauled the tax code. Now, the only remaining interest
write-offs are for amounts paid on mortgage, student and investment
loans.
While millions still claim the mortgage-interest deduction
every year, the investment-interest break is generally overlooked.
But for some filers, it could provide additional tax savings.
What counts as investment interest?
The first step to claiming this deduction is to determine whether
you have, in the eyes of the Internal Revenue Service, investment
interest.
This deduction is typically used by people who borrow
money to buy stocks, bonds and other equities. Others buy investments
on margin; that is, they borrow money from their broker to make
purchases. The amount paid on that margin account is investment
interest.
But the deduction can be used for other investments.
And this is where it gets tricky.
"People don't understand what it means,"
says Cindy Hockenberry, a practicing enrolled agent and member of
the National Association
of Tax Professionals research staff in Appleton, Wis. "It's
basically any interest you incur to buy any investment, not just
stocks or bonds."
Interest paid on a loan to purchase land, for example,
could qualify for the deduction. So could, under the right circumstances,
interest you pay on a loan you took out to invest in a privately
held company, says Eva Rosenberg, a California-based enrolled agent
and the Web's TaxMama.
Investing in real estate
However, if the lot you purchased has a house on it, the availability
of the investment-interest deduction gets more complicated, since
the tax code contains varying rules when it comes to real estate.
Your primary residence gets the benefits of many
tax breaks, including the popular mortgage-interest deduction.
A mortgage on a second home is also eligible for the interest write-off,
as long as loans on both houses don't exceed $1 million. You also
need to make sure you use the second house enough for it to qualify
as a personal vacation
retreat.
Go beyond these two holdings, and you'll find the
tax treatment of real estate decidedly different.
When you own rental property, the IRS classifies that
as a passive investment, says Rosenberg. "The passive rules
are so complicated, even IRS auditors can't figure them out,"
she says, only partially in jest.
| -- Updated: March 16, 2009 |
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