I’m going to start a new thread on this, and I’m going to try to address the arcane but interesting question of whether previous ownership of a principal residence outside the USA (within the applicable three-year window) would disqualify a buyer from claiming the credit.
I’m flattered that Gretel and Barb appear to be waiting for me to hold forth on this issue, but I don’t have a real answer.
I think the text of the code itself is ambiguous, and could be read in two different ways.
The IRS publications and instructions do little to clarify the question, and in any event, these documents are not controlling or authoritative. There is certainly no case law on this yet. I don’t know whether there are any Treasury Regulations or Internal Revenue Bulletins that address this question. The IRS issued some formal guidance on how to deal with multiple unmarried buyers when one buyer qualifies and the other doesn’t. But I haven’t seen anything about ownership of a principal residence outside the US.
This question has nothing to do with the “old homebuyer credit” versus the “new homebuyer credit.” The new law merely amended the previous credit, to increase the amount, remove the repayment provision, and extend the period during which homes can be purchased. Yes, there’s a little more to it than that, but the amendment didn’t change the core definition of the term first-time homebuyer.
So what IS the definition of a first-time homebuyer, anyway?
Here’s the relevant text of the law:
36(a) ALLOWANCE OF CREDIT. –
In the case of an individual who is a first-time homebuyer of a principal residence in the United States during a taxable year, there shall be allowed as a credit against the tax imposed by this subtitle for such taxable year an amount equal to 10 percent of the purchase price of the residence.
<snip>
36(c) DEFINITIONS. –
For purposes of this section –
36(c)(1) FIRST-TIME HOMEBUYER. --
The term "first-time homebuyer" means any individual if such individual (and if married, such individual's spouse) had no present ownership interest in a principal residence during the 3-year period ending on the date of the purchase of the principal residence to which this section applies.
36(c)(2) PRINCIPAL RESIDENCE. --
The term "principal residence" has the same meaning as when used in section 121.
Note that the only reference to the United States is in 36(a), which authorizes the credit. The formal definition of first-time homebuyer makes no mention of the location of any previously owned principal residence.
Principal residence is defined by reference to Code Section 121.
Section 121 is the exclusion of gain on the sale of your principal residence.
Curiously, Section 121 does not contain a formal definition of the term principal residence. To the extent that Section 121 defines the term, it does so indirectly, by providing criteria that determine whether one can exclude gain upon the sale. There is no reference to the location of the home. A principal residence outside the US appears to qualify for exclusion of gain if the criteria are met. If Section 121 defines the term at all, it is a complex definition with an awful lot of baggage, i.e, two years out five, etc., with some intricate changes that were recently enacted to close some loopholes involving rental property.
I can’t find anything in Section 121 that limits the definition of a principal residence to one in the US.
The text of the homebuyer credit law, cited above, in Section 36(a), says:
And the devil is in the details.
My degree is in linguistics, and I think like a lawyer. It is a word game.
The ambiguity lies in the scope of the phrase “in the United States.” In other words, what does this phrase modify? Does it modify only the term “principal residence,” or does it modify the entire expression “first-time homebuyer of a principal residence”?
There is no answer. It can be read two different ways:
Reading #1, in plain English, would be:
You get this credit if:
(i) you buy a principal residence that is located in the US, and
(ii) within the last three years, you have not owned a principal residence.
Reading #2, in plain English, would be:
You get this credit if:
(i) you buy a principal residence that is located in the US, and
(ii) within the last three years, you have not owned a principal residence in the US.
The courts may actually have some precedential rulings on how to deal with this sort of question. There may be some sort of default interpretation for this type of modifying phrase.
Some staffer in Congress oughta be shot over this. The ambiguity probably could have been eliminated if they had put a comma in the right place, or added one more sentence.
Here’s an interesting analogy, to a different type of law: drunk driving penalties. I’m making up this example out of whole cloth, but I know that some states actually have this type of law. Suppose the text of the law reads as follows:
What is the scope of the phrase “in Kentucky”?
Does this law mean:
You can choose residential treatment instead of jail time if:
(i) you are convicted of drunk driving in Kentucky, and
(ii) within the last three years, you have not been convicted of drunk driving in Kentucky.
Or does it mean:
You can choose residential treatment instead of jail time if:
(i) you are convicted of drunk driving in Kentucky, and
(ii) within the last three years, you have not been convicted of drunk driving.
When writing this type of law, our state legislators usually have the good sense to put in a couple extra lines, to clarify that what they mean is that you are only a first offender if you haven’t been convicted of violating the Kentucky drunk driving statute or any similar statute of any other state.
But would that include convictions in a foreign country?
LMAO
BMK
I’m flattered that Gretel and Barb appear to be waiting for me to hold forth on this issue, but I don’t have a real answer.
I think the text of the code itself is ambiguous, and could be read in two different ways.
The IRS publications and instructions do little to clarify the question, and in any event, these documents are not controlling or authoritative. There is certainly no case law on this yet. I don’t know whether there are any Treasury Regulations or Internal Revenue Bulletins that address this question. The IRS issued some formal guidance on how to deal with multiple unmarried buyers when one buyer qualifies and the other doesn’t. But I haven’t seen anything about ownership of a principal residence outside the US.
This question has nothing to do with the “old homebuyer credit” versus the “new homebuyer credit.” The new law merely amended the previous credit, to increase the amount, remove the repayment provision, and extend the period during which homes can be purchased. Yes, there’s a little more to it than that, but the amendment didn’t change the core definition of the term first-time homebuyer.
So what IS the definition of a first-time homebuyer, anyway?
Here’s the relevant text of the law:
36(a) ALLOWANCE OF CREDIT. –
In the case of an individual who is a first-time homebuyer of a principal residence in the United States during a taxable year, there shall be allowed as a credit against the tax imposed by this subtitle for such taxable year an amount equal to 10 percent of the purchase price of the residence.
<snip>
36(c) DEFINITIONS. –
For purposes of this section –
36(c)(1) FIRST-TIME HOMEBUYER. --
The term "first-time homebuyer" means any individual if such individual (and if married, such individual's spouse) had no present ownership interest in a principal residence during the 3-year period ending on the date of the purchase of the principal residence to which this section applies.
36(c)(2) PRINCIPAL RESIDENCE. --
The term "principal residence" has the same meaning as when used in section 121.
Principal residence is defined by reference to Code Section 121.
Section 121 is the exclusion of gain on the sale of your principal residence.
Curiously, Section 121 does not contain a formal definition of the term principal residence. To the extent that Section 121 defines the term, it does so indirectly, by providing criteria that determine whether one can exclude gain upon the sale. There is no reference to the location of the home. A principal residence outside the US appears to qualify for exclusion of gain if the criteria are met. If Section 121 defines the term at all, it is a complex definition with an awful lot of baggage, i.e, two years out five, etc., with some intricate changes that were recently enacted to close some loopholes involving rental property.
I can’t find anything in Section 121 that limits the definition of a principal residence to one in the US.
The text of the homebuyer credit law, cited above, in Section 36(a), says:
In the case of an individual who is a first-time homebuyer of a principal residence in the United States during a taxable year, there shall be allowed as a credit…
My degree is in linguistics, and I think like a lawyer. It is a word game.
The ambiguity lies in the scope of the phrase “in the United States.” In other words, what does this phrase modify? Does it modify only the term “principal residence,” or does it modify the entire expression “first-time homebuyer of a principal residence”?
There is no answer. It can be read two different ways:
Reading #1, in plain English, would be:
You get this credit if:
(i) you buy a principal residence that is located in the US, and
(ii) within the last three years, you have not owned a principal residence.
Reading #2, in plain English, would be:
You get this credit if:
(i) you buy a principal residence that is located in the US, and
(ii) within the last three years, you have not owned a principal residence in the US.
The courts may actually have some precedential rulings on how to deal with this sort of question. There may be some sort of default interpretation for this type of modifying phrase.
Some staffer in Congress oughta be shot over this. The ambiguity probably could have been eliminated if they had put a comma in the right place, or added one more sentence.
Here’s an interesting analogy, to a different type of law: drunk driving penalties. I’m making up this example out of whole cloth, but I know that some states actually have this type of law. Suppose the text of the law reads as follows:
Residential treatment, in lieu of incarceration, shall be offered to first-time violators in Kentucky. First-time violator means a person who has not been convicted of operation of a motor vehicle while intoxicated during the three-year period preceding conviction under this statute.
Does this law mean:
You can choose residential treatment instead of jail time if:
(i) you are convicted of drunk driving in Kentucky, and
(ii) within the last three years, you have not been convicted of drunk driving in Kentucky.
Or does it mean:
You can choose residential treatment instead of jail time if:
(i) you are convicted of drunk driving in Kentucky, and
(ii) within the last three years, you have not been convicted of drunk driving.
When writing this type of law, our state legislators usually have the good sense to put in a couple extra lines, to clarify that what they mean is that you are only a first offender if you haven’t been convicted of violating the Kentucky drunk driving statute or any similar statute of any other state.
But would that include convictions in a foreign country?
LMAO
BMK
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