Disclaimer: This is part of a series of posts that forum moderators have identified as containing “bogus information.”
A recent tax court decision held that falling real estate values did not constitute reasonable cause for underpayment of additional taxes due when the IRS denied mortgage interest deductions on a home equity loan because the FMV of the home had dropped below the original purchase price. According to the ruling, since the homeowner had no equity he obviously could not claim home equity interest—a prudent person would monitor neighborhood values and move to a cheaper home before getting “upside down” on his most valuable asset.
An IRS spokeswoman stated the agency plans to use this judgment to audit Schedule A taxpayers in communities where property values have gone down, and disallow mortgage interest deductions not supported by a contemporaneous appraisal.
A recent tax court decision held that falling real estate values did not constitute reasonable cause for underpayment of additional taxes due when the IRS denied mortgage interest deductions on a home equity loan because the FMV of the home had dropped below the original purchase price. According to the ruling, since the homeowner had no equity he obviously could not claim home equity interest—a prudent person would monitor neighborhood values and move to a cheaper home before getting “upside down” on his most valuable asset.
An IRS spokeswoman stated the agency plans to use this judgment to audit Schedule A taxpayers in communities where property values have gone down, and disallow mortgage interest deductions not supported by a contemporaneous appraisal.
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