Reverse mortgage loans were quite popular several years ago. You don't hear much about them these days, but most of the ones taken out in the past are still out there and will have to be paid off some day.
When they are, assuming the home's former owner/occupant has died, who can deduct the interest? There are at least two scenarios: (1) The loan is paid off during the administration of the decedent's estate, or (2) the home passes to an heir who then pays off the loan. Can the estate or the heir deduct all the interest, even though much/most/all of that interest accumulated before the loan became an obligation of the new entity? I wonder.
Also, RevMo loans are "home equity" loans, so are subject to the $100,000 limit for interest deductibility ... something to keep in mind when we run into a payoff situation. This could require a fairly involved calculation, especially if the loan was the type that allowed the borrower to take draws up to the maximum loan limit ... starting out low and eventually building up to and beyond the $100k interest cutoff point.
When they are, assuming the home's former owner/occupant has died, who can deduct the interest? There are at least two scenarios: (1) The loan is paid off during the administration of the decedent's estate, or (2) the home passes to an heir who then pays off the loan. Can the estate or the heir deduct all the interest, even though much/most/all of that interest accumulated before the loan became an obligation of the new entity? I wonder.
Also, RevMo loans are "home equity" loans, so are subject to the $100,000 limit for interest deductibility ... something to keep in mind when we run into a payoff situation. This could require a fairly involved calculation, especially if the loan was the type that allowed the borrower to take draws up to the maximum loan limit ... starting out low and eventually building up to and beyond the $100k interest cutoff point.
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