It is a common misconception that you can write off all real estate taxes you paid when you purchase a house.
If you buy or sell real estate during the year, the deductible real estate tax is divided by the buyer and seller according to the number of days each owned the property during the year.
During settlement, if they handle it correctly, you will reimburse the seller for RE taxes he already paid for days you will own the home. In this case, you can include the RE taxes you pay on the HUD form because they are for days in which you own the home, regardless of the fact that they are being paid directly to the seller and not the tax authority.
However, you can NOT deduct RE taxes you pay on behalf of the seller for days in which the seller owned the house. Conversely, if the seller pays RE taxes for days in which YOU own the house, regardless whether your reimburse the seller or not, you get to include those on Schedule A.
In summary, all RE paid for days in which you own the house, regardless who pays them, are a deduction on your Schedule A. All RE taxes you pay for days in which you do NOT own the house are not deductible by you on your Schedule A....they are added to the basis of your house, but you can not write them off.
Hope this helps :)
2006-10-04 06:21:28
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answer #1
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answered by TaxMan 5
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Yes, property taxes are deductible on Form 1040 Sch A under the taxes section, to the person(s) who is (are) on title and are legally responsible to pay these taxes, deducted in the year paid.
By January 31 of new year, Mortgage companies send out previous year activity by way of Form 1098, Interest/points/real property taxes paid on home loans, and it may be included on this form. Sometimes it is not.
Another issue to be aware of is that escrow may take out 6 - months of property taxes and hold them in your escrow account until due and disbursed. Be careful the amount on the escrow settlement statement doesn't spand 2 tax years.
2006-10-07 12:07:32
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answer #2
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answered by Brown Eyes 2
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The taxes that were paid at settlement (the taxes to reimburse the previous owners for the portion of the year they already paid for) are deductible. They will appear on the front (or in the first column) of your settlement sheet.
HOWEVER, amounts placed into escrow for future tax payments (i.e. they make up put up XX # of months in advance for your next year's tax bill) are NOT deductible until they are paid the following year.
2006-10-04 04:05:12
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answer #3
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answered by Dee 4
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Yes they are deductible - simply write down the amount of property taxes paid on the HUD-1 form.
Also remember to include any credits for property taxes should you sell your house.
2006-10-03 17:40:10
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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sure, supplies taxes are deductible. factors, in case you pay them are additionally deductible. the different products are actually not deductible. shop song of money you spend on advancements and the different products from the remaining. do in no way throw out the remaining archives. in case you have a capital earnings on the homestead once you sell you would be including a number of those products on your cost foundation to shrink your earnings.
2016-10-15 12:09:52
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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Absolutely
2006-10-03 17:41:36
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answer #6
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answered by feanor 7
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YES.
2006-10-03 18:03:07
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answer #7
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answered by MeInUSA 5
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