Short Sale Results In Large Tax Bill
REM #A724
By Ilyce R. Glink
Summary: A reader owes more on the mortgage for her home than the home is worth. Therefore, if she sells her home she may not have enough money to pay off the mortgage and home equity loan. Ilyce explains that the bank may agree to a short sale but that will result in a larger income tax bill.
Q: We need to get out from under a lot of debt including our home mortgage
and home equity line of credit. What happens if we sell and don't make enough
to pay off both mortgages?
A: When you owe more on your mortgage than the property is worth, you're considered
by the lender to be "under water" on your debt.
If you want to sell the property, you'll have to come to the closing table with
enough cash to make the lender whole, plus pay closing costs and fees. These
closing costs might include a broker's commission (unless you sell by-owner),
transfer taxes, title charges, among others. Closing costs, including a broker's
commission, can run between 8 to 10 percent of the sales price of the home.
If you don't have any cash, and you owe more than the property is worth, you
can ask the lender to do a "short sale" on the property. That means
the lender will accept whatever cash you get from the sale of the property in
full payment of the loan.
That might sounds like the good news you've been waiting for, but there are
a couple of issues to think about: First, not every lender will do a short sale,
and second, if you do a short sale, the IRS will consider the amount that the
lender forgives you as phantom income.
In other words, you could face a huge tax bill the following April 15th for
the amount of the loan you didn't repay.
For example, if you sell your home for $50,000 less than the mortgaged amount,
and the lender agrees to accept a short sale, the IRS would consider the $50,000
not repaid as income to you, the borrower. When you're calculating next year's
tax bill, you'll have to inflate your income by about $50,000, and pay tax on
the money as if you've earned it. Depending on your income, that phantom $50,000
could push you into a much higher tax bracket.
Finally, the lender may not accept a short sale. In this case, you’d
still owe whatever part of the debt that was not paid off by the sales proceeds.
Before you do anything, please talk to a knowledgeable real estate attorney
who can walk you through your legal and financial options.
NOTE: This column is distributed by Real Estate Matters Syndicate, PO Box 366, Glencoe, Illinois, 60022. This column may not be resold, reprinted, resyndicated or redistributed without written permission from the publisher.
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