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Showing posts with the label 8000 tax credit

How to Get Your Extended Home Buyer Tax Credit

You've decided to purchase a home and take advantage of the Extended Home Buyer Tax Credit. Here's what you have to do to get your benefit: Close on your home purchase between November 7, 2009 and April 30, 2010, or have a binding written contract in place by April 30, 2010 with a closing date no later than September 30, 2010 (original date was June 30, 2010). Decide whether to: apply the credit to your 2009 tax return, filed on or before April 15, 2010; file an amended 2009 return; or, apply the credit on your 2010 return, filed on or before April 15, 2011 Attach documentation of purchase to your return. Documentation of Purchase For more information on claiming the credit and on the documentation required for your 2009 or 2010 returns, see the IRS's First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit Questions and Answers . When to Apply the Credit Buyers purchasing homes on or before December 31, 2009 may claim the credit on their 2009 tax returns. Buyers purchasing in 2010 will have the o

CONGRESS PASSES TAX CREDIT CLOSING DATE EXTENSION!!!

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The US Senate voted unanimously to extend the tax credit closing date and the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) to September 30. According to the National Association of REALTORS, "After a close brush with the deadline, Congress has passed an extension of the Homebuyer Tax Credit closing deadline, the Homebuyer Assistance and Improvement Act (H.R. 5623)". The extension applies only to transactions that have ratified contracts in place as of April 30, 2010 that have not yet closed. The legislation is designed to create a seamless extension - the new closing deadline for eligible transactions is now September 30, 2010. This will allow transactions to move forward. The bill is retroactive and covers the lapse period from June 1, 2010 to the date of enactment of the extension.

180,000 to Lose Tax Credit if No Extension

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Up to 180,000 home buyers will lose their tax credit through no fault of their own if Congress fails to pass an extension to the home buyer tax credit by June 30 when the closing deadline expires. According to estimates by the National Association of REALTORS® there are home buyers in every state of the union that will be impacted, from 390 in Wyoming to 17,700 in California. These are not buyers who just entered into the market. These are buyers who previously met all the qualifications for the tax credit, but find themselves at the mercy of a workflow jam with lenders or other delays such as lapses in the National Flood Insurance Program, Rural Housing Service, and new home construction, and might not be able to complete the purchase of their homes by the current deadline. NAR issued the following state-by-state estimate of the number of home sales that would be delayed beyond the June 30 deadline (numbers are rounded to the nearest 10): Alabama, 2,590; Alaska, 830; Arizona, 5,440; A

TAX CREDIT CLOSING EXTENSION

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Yesterday, the U.S. Senate approved a three-month extension to the tax credit closing deadline, which would give buyers until Sept. 30 to close. It is not completely final since it is attached to another bill that still has to be passed by the House. The extension would apply only to buyers who met the April 30 deadline to have signed purchase contracts. NAR estimates up to 180,000 buyers who were hoping to close by June 30 and get the tax credit are likely to miss the current deadline, so the extension is essential.