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Taxes for Foreclosed homes
See below:
Naples, FL Short Sales Information
Definition: A short sale occurs when a
property is sold and the lender agrees to accept a discounted
payoff, meaning the lender will release the lien that is secured
to the property upon receipt of less money than is actually
owed.
Also Known As: Shorted sale
Alternate Spellings:
Short-sale
Examples: If the unpaid balance of a
loan is, say, $100,000 and a property sells for $90,000, under a
short sale the lender might accept $90,000 as payment in full.
There are many ways to lose a home but signing away ownership in
a manner that destroys credit, embarrasses the family and strips
an owner of dignity is one of the hardest. For owners who can no
longer afford to keep mortgage payments current, there are
alternatives to bankruptcy or
foreclosure proceedings. One of those options is called a
"short sale."
When lenders agree to do a
short sale in real estate, it means the lender is accepting
less than the total amount due. Not all lenders will accept
short sales or discounted payoffs, especially if it would make
more financial sense to foreclose; moreover, not all sellers nor
all properties
qualify for short sales.
If you are considering
buying a short sale, there could be drawbacks. For your
protection, I suggest that all borrowers:
As a real estate agent, I am not licensed as a lawyer nor a
CPA and cannot advise on those consequences. Except for certain
conditions pursuant to the
Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007, be aware the
I.R.S. will consider debt forgiveness as income, and there is no
guarantee that a lender who accepts a short sale will not
legally pursue a borrower for the difference between the amount
owed and the amount paid. In some states, this amount is known
as a deficiency. A lawyer can determine whether your loan
qualifies for a deficiency judgment or claim.
Although all lenders have varying requirements and may demand
that a borrower submit a wide array of documentation, the
following steps will give you a pretty good idea of what to
expect.
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Call the Lender
You may need to make a half dozen phone calls before you
find the person responsible for handling short sales. You do
not want to talk to the "real estate short sale" or "work
out" department, you want the supervisor's name, the name of
the individual capable of making a decision.
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Submit Letter of Authorization
Lenders typically do not want to disclose any of your
personal information without written authorization to do so.
If you are working with a real estate agent, closing agent,
title company or lawyer, you will receive better cooperation
if you write a letter to the lender giving the lender
permission to talk with those specific interested parties
about your loan. The letter should include the following:
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Preliminary Net Sheet
This is an estimated closing statement that shows the sales
price you expect to receive and all the costs of sale,
unpaid loan balances, outstanding payments due and late
fees, including real estate commissions, if any. Your
closing agent or lawyer should be able to prepare this for
you, if you do not know how to calculate any of these fees.
If the bottom line shows cash to the seller, you will
probably not need a short sale.
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Hardship Letter
The sadder, the better. This statement of facts describes
how you got into this financial bind and makes a plea to the
lender to accept less than full payment. Lenders are not
inhumane and can understand if you lost your job, were
hospitalized or a truck ran over your entire family, but
lenders are not particularly empathetic to situations
involving dishonesty or criminal behavior.
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Proof of Income and Assets
It is best to be truthful and honest about your financial
situation and disclose assets. Lenders will want to know if
you have savings accounts, money market accounts, stocks or
bonds, negotiable instruments, cash or other real estate or
anything of tangible value. Lenders are not in the charity
business and often require assurance that the debtor cannot
pay back any of the debt that it is forgiving.
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Copies of Bank Statements
If your bank statements reflect unaccountable deposits,
large cash withdrawals or an unusual number of checks, it's
probably a good idea to explain each of those line items to
the lender. In addition, the lender might want you to
account for each and every deposit so it can determine
whether deposits will continue.
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Comparative Market Analysis
Sometimes markets decline and property values fall. If this
is part of the reason that you cannot sell your home for
enough to pay off the lender, this fact should be
substantiated for the lender through a
comparative market analysis (CMA). Your real estate
agent can prepare a CMA for you, which will show prices of
similar homes:
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Purchase Agreement &
Listing Agreement
When you reach an agreement to sell with a prospective
purchaser, the lender will want a copy of the offer, along
with a copy of your listing agreement. Be prepared for the
lender to renegotiate commissions and to refuse to allow
payment of certain items such as
home protection plans or termite inspections.
Now, if everything goes well, the lender will approve your
short sale. As part of the negotiation, you might ask that the
lender not report adverse credit to the credit reporting
agencies, but realize that the lender is under no obligation to
accommodate this request.
Foreclosure and Short Sale Taxes - Home Sellers Might Owe the
IRS
The IRS says there is no free lunch. If you transfer title on
your home, whether voluntarily through a
warranty deed or grant deed, or involuntarily through
foreclosure, you have sold your home. You might be subject
to taxes, even if you sold your home at a loss, either on a
short sale or by foreclosure.
It doesn't seem fair. What's worse is you might not even find
out that you owe taxes until the day you open your mail to find
a 1099.
But sellers of residences acquired within
the past two years or so are going to incur losses. Even
assuming no price declines, losses will result because of
expenses for real estate brokers, lawyers and the like. Sellers
will not be able to deduct those losses. Makes no difference
that they are forced to sell because of, for instance, job
changes or health reasons.
"Besides problems for sellers of personal residences, there
are tax troubles for investors who, say, bought several condos
in places like Florida and are unable to flip them because
prospective buyers are waiting for further price declines.
Often, it is not worthwhile for those investors to rent their
places; what they receive as rent payments will be insufficient
to cover their real estate taxes and mortgage interest. Their
only option is to sell at a loss."
Block on Offsetting Losses Against Gains
"Sellers can offset their capital losses against capital
gains. But in the absence of capital gains, the yearly cap is
$3,000 ($1,500 for married couples filing separately) on the
amount of losses they can offset against their "ordinary
income," meaning income from sources like salaries, pensions and
withdrawals from retirement plans. The law allows them to carry
forward unused losses to later years."
Block on Tax Rules for Foreclosures
"The IRS has tax rules for foreclosures or repossessions by
lenders of homes of owners who have fallen behind on their
mortgage payments. There can be severe and unexpected tax
consequences for an owner who simply walks away because he or
she has little or no equity and the lender takes over and sells
the place.
"In that situation, cancellation or forgiveness by the lender
of the debt usually means the debtor has reportable income,
though there are some exceptions -- for instance, insolvency."
Block on Personal Liability
"An example: Brown buys a condo and uses it as a personal
residence. He pays $300,000, down payment of $15,000 and takes a
mortgage loan of $285,000. He is personally liable for the
mortgage. When the remaining balance of the loan is $280,000,
Brown defaults and the lender bank accepts his voluntary
conveyance of the unit, canceling the loan. Similar condos at
the time sell for $230,000.
"The tax code treats the transaction as a sale. Brown incurs
a nondeductible loss of $70,000, the amount by which his condo's
adjusted basis of $300,000 exceeds its market value of $230,000.
No deduction for the loss because Brown uses the condo as a
personal residence.
"Brown also has reportable income of $50,000 when the bank
cancels the loan. The $50,000 is the amount by which the debt of
$280,000 exceeds market value of $230,000.
"Enter the IRS when the mortgaged property is foreclosed or
repossessed, and the bank reacquires it, or the bank knows Brown
has abandoned the property. The bank sends a Form 1099-A to
Brown and the IRS. Using the numbers in the example, the 1099-A
indicates the foreclosure bid price ($230,000), the amount of
Brown's debt ($280,000), and whether he was personally liable.
Debt cancellation (here, $50,000) is taxed at the rates for
ordinary income, same as for salary."
Secured Debt Without Personal Liability
The IRS says sellers who are not
personally liable for a debt will realize an amount that
includes the full canceled debt, even if the value of the
property that is security for the debt is less, which can be
offset depending on your adjusted basis in the property.
Purchase money loans secured by real property in California
carry no personal liability.
For example, Ms. Smith buys a home valued at $300,000, puts
down $30,000 and takes out a mortgage of $270,000. Smith stops
making payments. The bank forecloses on a loan balance of
$260,000, and the market value of the home has fallen to
$250,000. Smith has an adjusted basis of $265,000, due to a
$5,000 casualty loss. The amount Smith realizes on the
foreclosure is $260,000. Smith figures her gain or loss by
comparing $260,000, which is the amount realized, to her
adjusted basis of $265,000. She has a $5,000 realized gain.
Before Foreclosure or Selling, Plan Ahead
Before you sell on a short sale or go through a foreclosure,
seek legal and tax advice. Do tax planning ahead of time, before
it is too late.
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Great Buys!





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Investors still on tax
hook
TAMPA, Fla. – Aug. 21,
2008 – For homeowners in
trouble, a short sale
can be a lifesaver.
Lenders allow a house to
be sold for less than is
owed on the mortgage and
then write off the rest.
The homeowner just walks
away.
Unless the owner is an
investor, that is.
A short sale gets these
owners off the hook for
the loan, but many will
get a surprise from
Uncle Sam next tax
season: an income tax
bill based on the amount
forgiven by the lender.
“I’m telling you this is
going to be a big
issue,” said Ralph
Fisher, a Lutz attorney
who specializes in
foreclosure. “If you’re
an investor, watch out.”
As the Bay area’s
foreclosure rate
steadily increases each
month, short sales are
becoming a popular
alternative for
financially strapped
homeowners who owe more
than their homes are
worth.
Late last year, as
lenders started to
permit more short sales,
President Bush signed
the Mortgage Forgiveness
Debt Relief Act. Before
the legislation, all
homeowners had to pay
income tax on the loan
amount written off by
the lender. Under the
new law, owners won’t
have to pay taxes on
that amount, up to the
original mortgage amount
on the purchase of the
home. But that’s only if
the home is their
primary residence.
The president and
legislators apparently
took no pity on
investors who gobbled up
properties by the dozens
during Florida’s red-hot
housing boom and now
can’t pay their
mortgages. Those buyers,
if they’re lucky enough
to get a lender to agree
to a short sale, will be
stuck paying the
resulting income tax.
That goes for owners of
secondary homes as well,
said Sue Hales,
spokeswoman for the IRS.
Homeowners who work out
a short sale should
receive a 1099 tax form
with their lenders, she
said.
Once they get the form,
she said, they should
carefully check the
values of the shortfall
amount and the house
value.
For example, if a
homeowner owes $250,000
on a mortgage and the
lender agrees to let him
or her sell the home for
$200,000, the lender
would forgive the
$50,000. But if the
owner doesn’t live in
the home, he or she will
have to claim the
forgiven $50,000 as
income.
Until late last year,
the average homeowner
had never heard of a
short sale. Now,
neighborhoods throughout
the Bay area are dotted
with for sale signs
denoting the home as a
“short sale.”
Of the 16,677
Hillsborough County area
homes listed for sale in
the Multiple Listing
Service, nearly 20
percent are marked as a
short sale. Brad Monroe,
a real estate agent and
former president of the
Greater Tampa
Association of Realtors,
said he thinks the
actual number of short
sales occurring is much
higher. Agents in Pasco
County report short
sales are as high as 60
percent of the
properties they’re
selling.
With real estate
generally slow all over
Florida, some real
estate agents and title
companies are
specializing in getting
lenders to approve short
sales. Borrowers facing
foreclosure are jumping
on the opportunity.
Getting a short sale
approved at all is
difficult, and lenders
aren’t always willing to
approve them. However,
faced with millions of
dollars in losses in
foreclosures – plus
court costs – they are
more likely now to
approve short sales.
Still, real estate
agents say the approvals
are often delayed or
denied.
When homeowners do get
approved for a short
sale, a lot of borrowers
aren’t getting good tax
advice from some of the
real estate
professionals helping
them with their deals,
said Mike Edenfield, an
attorney who works with
foreclosures.
“Most people aren’t
aware of it at all,” he
said of the income tax
requirement. “Florida is
typically a debtor’s
paradise. But the IRS
has a super priority.
For the investor out
there who bought a bunch
of condos and is now in
trouble, they’re going
to get bitten.”
Ron Donalson, a
principal with
Alday-Donalson Title
Agencies of America,
travels the state
holding how-to workshops
for real estate agents.
He said it’s up to the
real estate agent to
inform sellers of this
rule. Often, though,
investors call him
looking for an easy way
out.
“You wouldn’t believe
all the investors who
come in wanting to sell
their three houses as
short sales,” he said.
“They took a gamble, and
they’ll have to pay
income tax just as they
normally would.”
Copyright © 2008, Tampa
Tribune, Fla., Shannon
Behnken. Distributed by
McClatchy-Tribune
Information Services.
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