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Do I qualify as a First Time Homebuyer if my name is on deed only and I Refinance this month?

Posted on: 22nd Feb, 2009 03:27 pm
do i qualify as a first time homebuyer if my name is on deed only and i refinance this month?...if my name is listed on the deed but not on the mortgage would i qualify as a first time homebuyer for the $8,000 stimulus credit if i refinance this month and put both the mortgatge and the deed in just my name due to a divorce. i have never bought a home before this is the first one ever.
princes,

you can not qualify as your name is not on mortgage
Posted on: 25th Jul, 2009 06:46 am
princes,

you can not qualify as first time buyer as your name is not on mortgage
Posted on: 25th Jul, 2009 06:48 am
hoosier, you gave so little detail that it's impossible to give you a straight answer.
Posted on: 27th Jul, 2009 08:14 am
I am getting ready to purchase a home with just my name on the mortgage, but have owned a home before. If I put my boyfriend on the title but not the actual mortgage can he be eligible for the credit?
Posted on: 01st Aug, 2009 01:59 pm
Linny

These are the guidign rules for $8000/- tax credit.

- The tax credit is for first-time home buyers only. For the tax credit program, the IRS defines a first-time home buyer as someone who has not owned a principal residence during the three-year period prior to the purchase.
-The tax credit does not have to be repaid, if you stay in the house for atleast 3 years.
-The tax credit is equal to 10 percent of the home purchase price up to a maximum of $8,000.
-The credit is available for homes purchased on or after January 1, 2009 and before December 1, 2009.
-Single taxpayers with incomes up to $75,000 and married couples with incomes up to $150,000 qualify for the full tax credit.
-For married taxpayers, the law tests the homeownership history of both the home buyer and his/her spouse
- Cannot purchase a home from your ancestors (parents, grandparents, etc.), your lineal descendants (children, grandchildren, etc.) or your spouse


Good luck and feel free to ask

I am not sure how youare goign to out yoru biy friends name on the mortgae with his name on the title

.
Posted on: 02nd Aug, 2009 01:30 pm
if you were given an acre of land with a old worthless mobile on it, can you still qualify for the tax credit to buy a house or have one built
Posted on: 16th Sep, 2009 05:07 pm
If there Is a house quick deed to me can I claim the house on my 09 taxes in 2010? And will I be able to recieve the 8,000 credit?
Posted on: 20th Sep, 2009 01:00 am
I was quit claimed onto a property in 2006 but had no financial investment in the property, I was not on the mortgage. In 2007 I was quit claimed off as the mortgaged owner let the house go back to the bank and didn't want me to take a possible hit with my credit. I am non-related to the person who owned the house.

I am buying the first house of my own in FLorida, to close in Oct. 09. Do I qualify as a first time home buyer? Or does that brief time that i was quit-claimed onto that property ruin my chances to receive the tax credit?
Posted on: 10th Oct, 2009 10:05 am
If your name was not on the title in the last three years then you are eligibale for $8000/- tax credit
Posted on: 10th Oct, 2009 11:46 am
check with your tax advisor - that's your best bet to determine whether or not you're eligible.
Posted on: 11th Oct, 2009 09:44 pm
Probably they can, but the person who's name was on the title will be able to dettermine if his/her name was any house in the last threee years
Posted on: 12th Oct, 2009 05:43 pm
a lay person is not in any position to make a determination about qualification for a tax credit allowed to a first time homebuyer. one should either request such a ruling from the irs directly, or do precisely what the irs itself suggests - go to a tax advisor to have the question answered.
Posted on: 12th Oct, 2009 09:18 pm
Probably best place to check it out would be

http://www.federalhousingtaxcredit.com/2009/index.html
Posted on: 12th Oct, 2009 09:20 pm
au contraire - the one site that will answer every question, without fail, is irs.gov - the irs' website itself. there are plentiful organizations who purport to have expertise in the matter, but only one agency of the us government is tasked with administering the credit and publishing the rules and regulations - that is the irs. to go elsewhere may not be harmful, but it may not be completely accurate, as we will naturally expect the irs to be.

i will never recommend that a person go to a site owned and operated by a private concern when there is valuable information on a site such as in this case, where the irs has exclusive responsibility.
Posted on: 12th Oct, 2009 09:40 pm
No issues george.

IRS.gov would be the best place at the end
Posted on: 13th Oct, 2009 08:57 am
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