Taxpayer & wife were living in a home she and her brother had inherited from her parents. There was no mortgage on the house. Taxpayer's wife died in 2008. A few months later the taxpayer had the house appraised for $230K, and taxpayer took out a reverse mortgage to pay the brother (in-law) $115K & acquire full ownership. Reverse mortgage amount was $150K due to some other debts he wished to settle at the time - unrelated to the residence.
Taxpayer lived in the home until 2011, when he remarried and moved into home of new spouse.
From time-to-time, his adult children would live in the house with no rent charged.
In 2014, the house was sold for $220K and the reverse mortgage was paid off.
Payoff amount was $176K.
As I see it, the loss is non-deductible due to the home being taxpayer's primary residence from 2008-2011, and a second residence from 2011-2104.
It's also my understanding that the reverse mortgage interest deduction can be taken when the loan is paid off. But reverse mortgage is considered home equity debt and in this case the interest deduction is subject to the $100K limitation. So I'm thinking a simple way to calculate the interest deduction would be to based it on the ratio of 100K/163K, or 61% of the accrued interest. (The $163K is the average balance over the life of the loan).
Anybody have any thoughts on my method, or am I way off base on the whole matter?
Taxpayer lived in the home until 2011, when he remarried and moved into home of new spouse.
From time-to-time, his adult children would live in the house with no rent charged.
In 2014, the house was sold for $220K and the reverse mortgage was paid off.
Payoff amount was $176K.
As I see it, the loss is non-deductible due to the home being taxpayer's primary residence from 2008-2011, and a second residence from 2011-2104.
It's also my understanding that the reverse mortgage interest deduction can be taken when the loan is paid off. But reverse mortgage is considered home equity debt and in this case the interest deduction is subject to the $100K limitation. So I'm thinking a simple way to calculate the interest deduction would be to based it on the ratio of 100K/163K, or 61% of the accrued interest. (The $163K is the average balance over the life of the loan).
Anybody have any thoughts on my method, or am I way off base on the whole matter?
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