home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
-
-
- LET THE IRS PAY FOR YOUR NEW HOME
-
- Another strategy to consider when you purchase or
- sell a home is how you can take advantage of the
- deductibility of home mortgage interest. This is one
- case where debt can be useful. But, briefly, the trick
- is to mortgage your property (especially at low
- interest rates) and then put the money into tax-free
- investments. Thus, if you mortgage the property at
- 6%...and put the money into tax-free investments
- yielding 6%...it looks like a wash. But you actually
- end up ahead. Say the amount is $100. Your mortgage
- costs you $6, which you deduct from your taxes. At a
- 40% tax rate, the real cost of the $6 payment is only
- $3.60. That is, it reduces your taxable income by
- $6...thereby sparing you $2.40 in taxes. Plus, you get
- another $6 in tax-free interest. Using this technique,
- you'll end up with $8.40 in tax-free earnings...or 8.4%
- tax free, instead of only 6%. In other words, you
- increased your tax-free earnings by 40% with no
- increase in risk.
- If you sell a home for a $100,000 gain, and buy
- another one at the same price, using this trick you'll
- put $200 in your pocket, tax free, each month!
- While your home can, in a sense, be free to you
- because of its long-term wealth-generating potential,
- it can also be free for all the years you live in it --
- as you continue to build wealth. The key is to make
- your home a deductible expense.
- If moving away is just not possible for you right
- now, set up a business within your home. You can deduct
- some of your home expenses through the business.
- If you buy a personal residence for $300,000 and
- are taxed at a 40% rate -- which many, if not most,
- people are -- you would have to earn at least $500,000
- to pay for it. And that doesn't include a penny of
- interest on the mortgage (which is deductible). No
- matter how much you pay, your investment is worth
- whatever the property is worth -- which, as we have
- seen, might be a lot less than you anticipated.
- But suppose you could make the purchase a
- deductible expense? In some special situations, you
- can. If a business purchases a property for $300,000,
- and depreciates the expense over the mortgage period,
- the cost to the company would be only $300,000 rather
- than $500,000 -- a $200,000 savings. Remember, though,
- land is not depreciable -- to anyone.
- Similarly, investment property may be depreciated
- (deducted over a period of years). Here again, the real
- cost of acquisition is greatly reduced.
- The trick then is to turn residential property
- into business or investment property, thus allowing you
- to deduct the cost of acquisition and thereby save
- enough money to give you a new home free.
- You cannot depreciate your primary residence. By
- definition, the place you live is a personal expense,
- not a business or investment expense. But if you buy
- another home, for investment purposes, you would be
- able to deduct the expenses, including the
- depreciation. Likewise, if you have a business of your
- own (this is just one of the many instances in which
- having a business can pay off), and the business needs
- a place to operate from, you can -- in certain cases --
- have the business buy a property and deduct the
- expenses. In this case, the business would buy a place
- from which to conduct business. And you would rent from
- the business a portion of the property as a living
- space.
- This is the opposite of the typical "office in the
- home" situation...from a tax perspective. At the same
- time, it is precisely the same arrangement. But in
- this case, the property is business property, and as
- such, fully deductible. You just have to pay fair
- market rent for the part of the place you occupy. The
- value of the portion you occupy will be significantly
- depressed by the fact that you share the residence with
- a business. You can imagine how much less it would be
- worth to you if you had to share with such a business
- and adjust the rent accordingly.
- The rent is not, of course, a business expense.
- It is a personal living expense and cannot be deducted.
- Still, the savings may be significant.
- Your incorporated business buys a house (watch out
- for zoning and other regulatory problems) from which to
- conduct business. It pays $200,000 and deducts both
- the interest and the principal (as depreciation) over
- the life of the mortgage. Thus the total cost of
- acquisition is $200,000...before tax dollars. The
- house would rent for $1,500 a month. But since you
- have to share the property with a business...a fair
- market rent may be just $750, maybe even including
- utilities. Meanwhile, the business gets to deduct the
- maintenance, utilities, and other costs of operation.
- The only taxable amounts involved are the monthly
- payments you make to the business in rent. And you
- have to watch out that you don't end up getting these
- amounts taxed twice, or even three times...by ending up
- with a profit in the company, which is taxed at the
- corporate rate, and then paying it out to you again ...
- where it is taxed at your personal rate. You have to
- pay attention, in other words, to the details in a
- transaction like this.
- How much can this arrangement save you? Let's say
- the mortgage payments are $2,000 per month for 20
- years. You can only depreciate the improvements, not
- the lot, of course, but let's not make this example too
- complicated by assuming that the lot has minimal value.
- So you get to deduct the entire $200,000 purchase price
- over the 20-year period. (Be sure to check allowable
- depreciation schedules.) Plus, let's say upkeep and
- utilities average $200 per month...all deductible as
- well, for a deduction of another $48,000. This brings
- a total deductible amount of $248,000... which is a
- savings of $99,200 in taxes.
- But, remember that we still have to pay the tax on
- the rent we pay. Alas, that amount works out to
- $72,000. So the net effect is a savings of a little
- more than $27,000.
- However, the savings do not occur all at once.
- They're spread out over 20 years. Thus, the magic of
- compounding comes into play. Each year, you save about
- $1,350. With compounding at 10%...at the end of 20
- years, you'd have $55,806. Here's another variation:
- Your corporation can lease your land from you and
- build a house on it. You rent the house until it
- reverts to you at the expiration of the lease. The
- house can be in Hawaii...or the Upper East Side of New
- York City. The corporation depreciates the cost of
- construction and deducts the cost of maintaining the
- house.
- The corporation's lease payments to you for the
- use of the land are deductible to the corporation.
- Your rental payments for the use of the house are
- income to the corporation.
- When the land lease ends, say after 20 years, the
- land and building are both yours. You need not
- recognize any income as a result of the improvements
- the corporation made to your land. Your basis in the
- house will be zero, because you recognized no income.
- If you sell the house, all proceeds will be long
- term capital gains. If you occupy the house as your
- residence and are qualified (over age 55, file a joint
- return with your spouse, and have lived in the house
- for three out of five years), you can take advantage of
- the one-time $125,000 exclusion. On the other hand, if
- you leave the property to your heirs, the value to them
- will be the fair market value at the time of your
- death, and the capital gains will never be taxed.
- Now, having said all that, we hasten to add that
- any time you start to fool around with IRS regulations
- you run into problems. Basically, the IRS has the job
- of collecting money from people. And though it is well
- established that you have the right to organize your
- affairs in any way you please in an attempt to lower
- your tax liability, the IRS and Congress are determined
- to try to prevent you from exercising that right.
- We'll have a lot more to say about taxes in this
- book. Because they are by far the biggest single item
- in most family budgets. As such, they are also the
- most fertile field for growing your personal wealth by
- reducing the amount of taxes you pay.
- But for now, let us just point out that you need
- expert advice to set up a tax-avoiding structure such
- as the one we are explaining here. The specific form
- of the structure will depend on your own personal
- situation and your goals.
-
-
-
-