Posted by Collette | Posted in Tax Credits | Posted on 14-03-2010
If you have purchased a home and have less than 20% equity in the property chances are you are required to pay for private mortgage insurance in conjunction with your regular home mortgage principle and interest payment.
Before you start thinking to yourself about all the drawback to paying for private mortgage insurance. This column is not going to focus on the pros or cons. We are are just going to focus on the tax advantages if you find yourself with a mortgage that requires PMI.
The following information was taken directly from the IRS’s website:
In general, if you itemize deductions, you may deduct premiums paid for mortgage insurance provided by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), the Rural Housing Service (Rural Housing), or private mortgage insurers in connection with a mortgage for the purchase of your main home. The amount you may deduct is limited if your adjusted gross income is more than $100,000 ($50,000 if married filing separately). No deduction is allowed if your adjusted gross income is more than $109,000 ($54,500 if married filing separately). See the instructions and worksheet for Schedule A, Line 13, to figure your deduction.
Box 4 of Form 1098 may show the total amount of premiums received from you in 2008. If you paid a lump-sum premium that pays for insurance for 2008 and later years, in most cases you must figure your deduction based only on the portion of the premium that pays for insurance for 2008. See Question 2 below if you paid a lump-sum premium that also covers years after 2008.
If you paid a lump-sum premium for insurance provided by FHA or a private mortgage insurer that also covers years after you purchased your home, you must determine the portion of the premium that pays for insurance for this tax year by dividing the total premium by the stated term (number of months) of your mortgage, or 84 months, whichever is shorter. Multiply that amount by the number of months during the tax year that your home was covered by the mortgage insurance. Enter the amount allocated to this tax year in the worksheet for Schedule A, Line 13, to figure your deduction for this tax year. You figure your deduction in later years based on the amounts allocated to those years. If your mortgage is satisfied before the end of your allocation period, you cannot deduct the amounts that are allocated to periods after the mortgage is satisfied.
If you paid a lump-sum premium for insurance provided by VA or Rural Housing, commonly known as a funding fee and guaranty fee respectively, no allocation is necessary, and you figure your deduction for this tax year based on the full amount of the payment. Enter the full amount in the worksheet for Schedule A, Line 13, to figure your deduction.
Make sure you check with a tax provider or CPA as to how this information applies directly to you.



