Bondi Realty Group LLC - Norwalk CT Real Estate
February 2010

Norwalk CT Property Transfers January 16 - 31

February 10, 2010 by bettyb · 2 Comments 

8 Avon Street
Mark & Barbara Sibiskie to Nicholas & Arline Cioffi, $341,250

 20 Eastwood Road
Dorothy Provey to 20 Eastwood Road llc, $225,000

 163 Wolfpit Avenue
Joan Garrett to Gary &  Mary Beth Wetmore, $515,000

 97 Richards Avenue Unit A2
Nancy Kovacs to Caroline Rosenberg, $290,000

 16 Southwind Drive
Elliott Morales to Elizabeth Marmol, $225,000

 8 Mallard Road
Bernard McGuinness to Noel McGuiness & Heather Wingate, $340,000

 4 Van Zant Street Unit B1
Kathleen Giannitti to Ming Lu, $99,000

 10 North Taylor Avenue
Francisco & Olma Contreras to Joanna Kulis, $228,000

 91 Silvermine Avenue
Mark & Naomi Shapiro to Lawrence Kuizema, $750,000

 30 Brookhill Lane
Michael T. Nugent to Rocco & Susan Cundiari III, $465,000

 8 Oakwood Avenue Unit D2
Adrian Cardone to Marian Keshyan, $320,000

 14 Ferris Avenue Unit 8
The Bank of New York to Patricia McFarlane, $236,000

 18 Stonybrook Road
Elizabeth Kondub & Jeanne Brown to Sara Hilliard, $329,000

 11 Chipping Lane
US Bank NA to Jamie Herman & Leslie Pietruszewski, $595,000

 112 Foxboro Drive
Victoria B. Zlock to Zlock Realty Association, $405,000

 19 Ryan Avenue Unit B
CT Best Homes llc to Roderick & Sara Fludd, $391,000

 15 Madison Street Unit G7
Lou Johnson & Exie Smith to Arturo Soto, $126,200

 100 Seaview Avenue Unit 1H
Estate of Joan Whipple to James & Gleviz Kenny, $390,000

 43 Glenrock Road Unit 43
Randall Sogoloff to Marjorie Powell, $315,000

 3 Riordan Street
Estate of Jane Levesque to Leonel Sandoval & Ignacio Sandoval, $95,000

 16 Chatham Drive
Zenobio & Gyny Robles to Jose & Miriam Rodriguez, $280,000

 67 Cove Avenue
Estate of Dorothy G. O’Donohue to Amberst Exchange Corp, $675,000

 316 Chestnut Hill Road
Donald & Elizabeth Lockwood to Virginia M. McGuinn, $560,000

 6 Thorp Lane
David DiPanni to Suzane Lopiano, $487,500

 9 Deerwood Court
Peter Brehm & Gail Ann O’Leary trustees to Mark Lavallo, $430,000

Norwalk CT Property Transfers January 1 - 15 - 2010

February 5, 2010 by bettyb · Leave a Comment 

 

18 Gilbert Hill Road
Michael & Maria Manna to Anthony & Tara Ann Manna, $304,000

 136 South Main Street
J P Morgan Chase Bank N.A. to Emiliano Torvess, $131,789

 8 Elton Court
Wei Shi Tan to Scott Raven, $290,000

 62 Marlin Drive
US Bank N.A. to Ebony Crowder, $183,045.44

 16 Marlborough Road
Louise Golub to Eric Mount & Wei Shi Tan, $582,500

 94 North Taylor Avenue
Mariano Scialpi & Zaida Rizzo to Malgorzata Cwikla, $375,000

 44 Pine Hill Road
Edward & Carol Meyer to Philip Kaplan & Elisabeth Story, $720,000

 68 Cove Avenue
Robert & Carolotta Holster to Brett Holster, $483,000

 49 Day Street Unit 307
Patricia Junker to Peter Staley, $133,000

 15 Heron Road
William Shaw to Jean Daly, $735,000

 1 Marion Avenue
Laura Pardue to Jeffrey & Natalie Clarke, $530,500

 147.5 East Rocks Road
Deutshe Bank National Trust to G & G Construction, $215,000

 15 Possum Circle
Tuthill Finance & TDC Secured Strategies Fund llc to Blake Delanney & Katharine Smith, $480,000

 4 Golden Hill Street
Lucia Aloyo to Jose Garcia, $282,000

  22 Linden Street
Wells Fargo Bank NA to Lindey llc, $215,000

 206 Foxboro Drive
Beth DeMartino to Dric Forsander & Denise Levasseur, $391,000

 150 Main Street
Scott Shaw c/o Cartus to Mary Kokoth, $145,000

 14 Norman Avenue
Lee Gardella to Timothy & Robin Wood, $675,000

 25 Meridian Road
James Falsey to Lesley Helen Jacobs, trustee, $2,160,000

 11 Lower Rocks Road
Edward Pels to Patrick Stewart, $275,000

 2 Kristen Lane
David & Jennifer Pattillo to Michael O’Brien & Margaret Codan, $685,000

 144 East Avenue Unit 401B
RMS East Avenue llc to Louise Dobson, $520,000

 35 B France Street
Rafael & Caroline Camacho to David & Izabela O’Malley, $610,000

 338 Flax Hill Road
Samuel & Julie Russell to Stanley Kelley, $598,000

Home Buyers Tax Credit

February 3, 2010 by bettyb · Leave a Comment 

  

HomeBuyerTaxCredit    

 

  First Time Home Buyers “Step Up” Home Buyers (Long-Time Homeowners)
Credit Amount 10% of your purchase price, up to $8,000. 10% of your purchase price, up to $6,500.
Who is Eligible? To qualify as a first-time home buyer, you cannot have lived in a home you owned in the three years prior to closing. To qualify as a “step up” home buyer (i.e., a “long-time homeowner”), you must have lived in the principal residence that you owned for five consecutive years out of the last eight.
Income Qualifications Income of $125,000 for single filers, and $225,000 for joint filers, with a partial tax credit for people whose income is within $20,000 of limits.
Personal Qualifications You must be a United States citizen (or certain resident aliens), 18 years or older, and not a dependent on someone else’s tax return.
Property Qualifications Eligible property types include single-family homes, condominiums, cooperative apartments, multi-family homes, houseboats, and affixed manufactured homes and trailers. The property you are buying must be in the United States and must be purchased for $800,000 or less.
Deadline You must be in contract by April 30th 2010, and close by September 30, 2010.
Other Major Restrictions For married couples, both spouses must qualify for the tax credit in order for the couple to qualify.You must live in the property for three years, or you will have to pay the tax credit back.

You cannot buy from a close relative, or from a corporate entity you control.

You cannot sell or move out of the home for at least three years after closing, or you

have to pay the credit back.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HOME BUYER TAX CREDIT OVERVIEW

The United States government is providing an incentive for home buyers through a tax credit of up to $8,000 for first-time home buyers and $6,500 for “step up” home buyers. The tax credit is available for eligible purchasers who are in contract by April 30, 2010, and close by September 30, 2010.

The home buyer tax credit has a number of conditions and restrictions, though, so we have provided this thorough Overview to help you understand how it works. You can also take the homebuyertaxcredit.com eligibility test to see whether you qualify, take a look at our Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) page, or just get a quick review of the requirements on our At-A-Glance page.

This Overview is organized as follows:

  • Eligibility requirements for both first-time home buyers and “step-up” buyers.
  • Income limitations.
  • Personal eligibility requirements for home buyers.
  • Property eligibility requirements for types of homes.
  • Deadlines for getting into contract and closing.
  • Specific requirements for buying with a spouse or partner.
  • Exceptions for members of the armed forces or certain government employees.
  • Tax filing issues.
  • An explanation of how a tax credit works.

Obviously, this Overview is not intended to provide accounting or legal advice, and we urge you to speak with your accountant and attorney before making any final decisions on purchasing a property.

Requirements for First-Time Home Buyers and “Step-Up” Home Buyers

Unlike the first-time home buyer tax credit that was available for much of 2008 and 2009, the new home buyer tax credit is available to both first-time home buyers and “step-up” buyers (i.e., “long-time homeowners”). The tax credit for first-time home buyers is 10% of the purchase price, up to $8,000. The tax credit for long-time homeowners is 10% of the purchase price, up to $6,500.

To qualify for the first-time home buyer tax credit, you cannot have lived in a principal residence that you owned within three years of closing on your new home. So if you owned a home that you lived in within the past three years, you will not be eligible. But if you owned investment property that you did not live in during the past three years, you would still qualify as a first-time home buyer.

To qualify for the “step up” home buyer tax credit, you must have lived in the principal residence that you owned for at least five consecutive years out of the last eight. So if you have owned a home that you lived in for the past three or four years only, you will not be eligible. But if you have owned a home that you lived in for five consecutive years, and then rented it out for the last two, you would qualify as a “step-up” buyer. Although the law uses the term “step-up” buyer, it does not require that you “step up” in value in purchasing your new home, which is why we try to use the term “long-time homeowner” to more precisely define the tax credit. So you can get the tax credit even if your new home costs less than the home you own and currently reside in. Moreover, the law does not require that you sell your current residence, so if you otherwise qualify you could purchase a new home, live in it while you rent out your current property, and earn the $6,500 step-up buyer tax credit.

In order to obtain the tax credit, you have to qualify as either a first-time home buyer or a long-time homeowner. You cannot “mix” the qualification requirements. It’s one or the other.

Income Restrictions

The home buyer tax credit is only available to purchasers at certain income levels: yearly incomes of $125,000 for single taxpayers or $225,000 for married couples filing jointly. The tax credit starts to phase out above those levels, with partial tax credits available for taxpayers whose income is within $20,000 of the limits. The income level limits are the same for both the first-time home buyer tax credit and the longtime homeowner tax credit, so if your income is above those levels, you will not be eligible for either credit.

The partial tax credit is computed based on the amount of income you earn within the $20,000 phase-out range. For example, if your income is $135,000 for a single taxpayer, you would have $5,000 of income in that phase-out range (i.e., $5,000 above the $125,000 limit). That would “use up” 25% of the $20,000 phase-out range, so your partial tax credit would be the remaining 75%. So if you were otherwise eligible for the first-time home buyer tax credit of $8,000, your tax credit would be $6,000 (75% of $8,000).

The qualifying income levels are based on your “modified adjusted gross income” (”MAGI”), which includes your wages, salary, interest income, dividends, capital gains, and certain foreign investment income. Your MAGI is determined after making certain “above the line” deductions such as health savings account deductions, alimony, and others, but before the “itemized deductions” such as charitable contributions, state and local taxes, and home interest. Determining your qualifying income can be a complicated issue, so you should consult with your accountant before making any decisions.

Personal Requirements

Once we get beyond the income limitations, the rest of the personal requirements are fairly simple. You have to be a United States citizen (or legal resident aliens and permanent residents), you have to be 18 years or older, and you cannot be a dependent on someone else’s tax return. The purpose of these requirements is to prevent “sham” transactions that took place in early versions of the tax credit, in which parents were buying homes in the names of their underage dependent children to claim the tax credit. Similarly, you cannot get the tax credit if you do not actually purchase the property, but obtain it through inheritance or gift.

The law also requires that you intend to live in the home as your personal residence. Although the government has no way of reading your mind for your intentions, the law requires that you must pay the credit back if you move out or sell the home within three years of closing.

Property Requirements

The home buyer tax credit is available for almost all property types that home buyers might purchase, including single-family homes, condominiums, cooperative apartments, and multi-family homes. The credit is even available for “personal property” types that people use as residences, including houseboats, trailers, and certain mobile homes if they are affixed to the ground.

The only restrictions on the property are simple. The property has to be priced at $800,000 or below, must to be located in the United States, and it cannot be currently owned by someone to whom you are directly related. So you will not qualify if you are buying a home from your parent, grandparent, great-grandparent, child, grandchild, great-grandchild, or your spouse’s family. The government wants to prevent “sham” transactions in which a father might sell a home to an adult child and enable the child to obtain the tax credit.

Deadlines

In order to claim either the first-time home buyer or long-time homeowner tax credit, you have to be in contract on your purchase by April 30, 2010 and close by September 30, 2010. These are hard deadlines, so be careful to make sure you get your contracts signed and your closing completed on time. We expect that we will see a rush of buyers hurrying to meet both deadlines, so be prepared to avoid last-minute complications that might delay contract signings or closings.

You can claim the tax credit even if you were already in contract at the time that the law was passed on November 6, 2009. The law does not require you to be in contract after a certain date, only that you are in contract by April 30, 2010. So buyers who got into contract, say, in the summer of 2009 without thinking they were getting a tax credit would receive the credit if they are otherwise eligible.

For people who are buying new construction, the same deadlines apply: you have to be in contract by April 30, 2010 and closed by September 30, 2010. But if you are building your own home, you have to be moved in by September 30, 2010, which generally means getting a certificate of occupancy by that time.

Buying with a Spouse or a Partner

The home buyer tax credit is available for people buying on their own, buying with a spouse, or buying with an unmarried partner such as a significant other or a family member. If you are buying on your own, the rules are relatively straightforward - you need to qualify under all the relevant criteria, including income restrictions. If you are buying with someone else, though, the rules can be a little complicated.

For married couples, both spouses need to qualify for the tax credit in their own right. Thus, if the couple files separate tax returns, both spouses need to qualify under the income restrictions or the couple will be ineligible for the tax return. For example, if the couple files separate returns and the husband makes $70,000 but the wife makes $150,000, the couple would be ineligible because the wife’s income would exceed the limits. Even though their income is below the $225,000 joint taxpayer limitation, the fact that they file singly and one of the spouses is above the income limitation would render them both ineligible. Similarly, if the husband owned his primary residence before the couple got married, but the wife never owned before, the couple would be ineligible: he would be ineligible for the first-time home buyer tax credit and she would be ineligible for the long-time homeowner tax credit.

For two unmarried people buying the home together, either partner can get a full tax credit if he or she qualifies, even if the other does not. So if an unmarried couple is buying a home together, and he qualifies as a first-time home buyer and she does not (either because of income or other eligibility requirements), he can get the full first-time home buyer tax credit even though she will get nothing. The same goes for unmarried partners buying a home, such as a father buying with a child: so long as one of the two partners qualifies, the qualifying partner can get the full credit. If both partners qualify, they can share the credit in any reasonable way allowed under IRS guidelines.

Armed Forces Exceptions

Certain exceptions apply to people who are members of the uniformed services of the United States military, members of the Foreign Service, or employees in the intelligence community. If you are a member of one of those services and will be on “Official Extended Duty” for at least 90 days between December 31, 2008 and May 1, 2010, you have an extra year to get into contract and close on your qualifying purchase. So if you qualify for this exception, you don’t need to get into contract until April 30, 2011, and you don’t need to close until September 30, 2011.

Moreover, those qualifying military or government personnel are exempt from the requirement that they need to live in the home continuously for at least three years after purchase, if they are assigned to a period of extended duty for at least 90 days at least 50 miles away from the home they purchased.

Tax Filing Issues

You can claim the tax credit either for the year of your purchase, or the year prior. So if you purchase a home in 2010, you can claim the tax credit on your 2009 return. That will be relatively easy if you close before the April 15, 2010 federal tax return filing deadline, but even if you close after April 15, 2010 you can request a filing extension or file an amended return after the filing deadline. You can also claim the tax credit for your 2010 purchase on your 2010 return for April 15, 2011.

In order to claim the tax credit, you will have to fill out IRS Form 5405 to determine your tax credit amount and eligibility, and then apply the credit on line 67 of your 1040 federal tax return. You will need to provide proof of your purchase, through your HUD-1 statement, in order to prove your eligibility.

How the Tax Credit Works

The home buyer tax credit is an enormous incentive for people who are thinking of buying a house in 2010. A tax credit is a dollar-for-dollar reduction in your federal tax obligations. For example, if you qualify for the full first-time home buyer tax credit and at the end of the year you owe $15,000 in federal taxes, the $8,000 tax credit will offset your burden and reduce your taxes to $7,000. And if you don’t owe federal taxes at all, you will get a rebate check from the government for $8,000.

Note that this tax credit is different from a tax deduction, particularly the home interest tax deduction familiar to home owners and most home buyers. People who own their own homes are allowed to deduct both the interest on their mortgage and their home property taxes, and both deductions provide tremendous benefits for homeowners. But a tax deduction is simply a reduction in your taxable income, not a dollar-for-dollar credit on your taxes.

For example, a homeowner who pays $20,000 in mortgage interest every year and another $10,000 in property taxes can deduct that $30,000 from her yearly income to reduce her tax obligations. So if she has $120,000 in otherwise taxable income, her taxable income would go down to $90,000. If she was paying, say, a 40% tax rate on that income, the $30,000 reduction in her taxable income would save her $12,000 in taxes (i.e., 40% of the $30,000 that would otherwise be taxed). The interest and taxes come off her income, reducing her taxable income and reducing her taxes.

But the home buyer tax credit is a straight dollar-for-dollar reduction in her taxes. If her taxes are $20,000, the full first-time home buyer tax credit of $8,000 reduces that tax burden to $12,000. Think of it this way: most people have to earn about $14,000 in income to make $8,000 in their pocket (after taxes). So the first-time home buyer tax credit is the equivalent of a $14,000 raise in your salary.

Similarly, another way to think about it is as a reduction in the price of the property you are purchasing. Say you are buying a $265,000 home, and are eligible for the full $8,000 first time home buyer tax credit. That $8,000 amounts to a 3% reduction in the price of the home.

Conclusion

Again, you should always consult with your attorney and accountant before you make a purchase intending to claim the home buyer tax credit.

www.Homebuyertaxcredit.com

Bondi Realty Group LLC - Norwalk CT Real Estate