New Laws Include Tax Changes
In December, Congress passed three laws that include significant tax changes. These
include a one-year AMT patch, mortgage and housing related tax changes, and an extension
of the surcharge on employee wages under the Federal Unemployment Tax Act.
Tax Increase Prevention Act of 2007
This legislation
provides a one-year alternative minimum tax (AMT) patch for 2007. The
AMT exemption amounts were increased for 2007 and, as in prior years, you are allowed to
use personal tax credits to offset your 2007 AMT bill. The new law will keep the number of
taxpayers subject to AMT about the same as last year.
Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007
The centerpiece of this legislation, also known as the Mortgage Relief Act,
is a temporary
taxable income exclusion for qualifying discharges of home mortgage debt (when a lender
lets a borrower off the hook for some or all of a loan balance). The Mortgage Relief Act
creates a retroactive new exception for qualifying discharges of home mortgage debt that
occur in 2007Ð2009, up to $2 million of debt discharge income from "qualified principal
residence indebtedness" -- debt that was used to acquire, construct, or improve the
taxpayer's principal residence and is secured by that residence. The basis of the taxpayer's
principal residence is reduced by the excluded amount, but not below zero.
This law also
liberalizes the home sale gain exclusion for surviving spouses. You can have
a federal-income-tax-free home sale gain of up to $250,000 if you are unmarried, or up to
$500,000 if you file jointly with your spouse. Effective for sales after 12/31/07, the
Mortgage Relief Act allows an unmarried surviving spouse to take advantage of the larger
$500,000 exclusion if the home sale occurs within two years after the spouse's death.
Subject to limitations, premiums for qualified mortgage insurance to acquire a qualified
personal residence are treated as deductible home mortgage interest. Before the Mortgage
Relief Act, this favorable rule only applied to premiums paid during 2007. The new law
extends the mortgage insurance premium deduction for three years to cover premiums paid
through the end of 2010. However, a phase-out rule applies for those with adjusted gross
income above $100,000 -- the deduction is phased out by 10% for each $1,000 over
$100,000.
The Mortgage Relief Act includes the following
new tax increases.
- Increase in Failure-to-file partnership return penalty. The period for charging the
monthly partnership return failure-to-file-penalty is extended from five to 12 months
and the monthly per-partner penalty goes from $50 to $85.
- New Failure-to-file Penalty for S Corporations. The new monthly penalty for failing to file an S
corporation return or failing to provide information required to be shown on the return is $85 per
shareholder per month up to a maximum of 12 months.
Please contact us if you have questions or want more information about any of these tax
changes.