If the market value of your home is less than what you owe on your
current mortgage, you may qualify for a legal, lender approved solution
known as a Short Sale. The short sale transaction is a legal and much
more beneficial alternative to foreclosure or even bankruptcy. Lenders
are motivated to accept short sale offers because it saves them the time
and money of proceeding with the foreclosure process.
As the owner of the home you have the opportunity to get out from
under a financial predicament with a clean transaction and a salvaged
credit score. Your property is saved from foreclosure, thus helping you
to save your credit rating!
If you owe a debt to someone else and they cancel or forgive that debt, the canceled amount may be taxable.
The Mortgage Debt Relief Act of 2007 generally allows taxpayers to
exclude income from the discharge of debt on their principal residence.
Debt reduced through mortgage restructuring, as well as mortgage debt
forgiven in connection with a foreclosure, qualifies for the relief.
This provision applies to debt forgiven in calendar years 2007
through 2012. Up to $2 million of forgiven debt is eligible for this
exclusion ($1 million if married filing separately). The exclusion does
not apply if the discharge is due to services performed for the lender
or any other reason not directly related to a decline in the home’s
value or the taxpayer’s financial condition.
More information, including detailed examples can be found in
Publication 4681, Canceled Debts, Foreclosures, Repossessions, and Abandonment's. Also see IRS news release IR-2008-17.
The following are the most commonly asked questions and answers about
The Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act and debt cancellation:
What is Cancellation of Debt?
If you borrow money from a commercial lender and the lender later
cancels or forgives the debt, you may have to include the cancelled
amount in income for tax purposes, depending on the circumstances. When
you borrowed the money you were not required to include the loan
proceeds in income because you had an obligation to repay the lender.
When that obligation is subsequently forgiven, the amount you received
as loan proceeds is normally reportable as income because you no longer
have an obligation to repay the lender. The lender is usually required
to report the amount of the canceled debt to you and the IRS on a Form
1099-C, Cancellation of Debt.
Here’s a very simplified example. You borrow $10,000 and default on
the loan after paying back $2,000. If the lender is unable to collect
the remaining debt from you, there is a cancellation of debt of $8,000,
which generally is taxable income to you.
Is Cancellation of Debt income always taxable?
Not always. There are some exceptions. The most common situations when cancellation of debt income is not taxable involve:
•Qualified principal residence indebtedness: This is the exception
created by the Mortgage Debt Relief Act of 2007 and applies to most
homeowners.
•Bankruptcy: Debts discharged through bankruptcy are not considered taxable income.
•Insolvency: If you are insolvent when the debt is cancelled, some or
all of the cancelled debt may not be taxable to you. You are insolvent
when your total debts are more than the fair market value of your total
assets.
•Certain farm debts: If you incurred the debt directly in operation of a
farm, more than half your income from the prior three years was from
farming, and the loan was owed to a person or agency regularly engaged
in lending, your cancelled debt is generally not considered taxable
income.
•Non-recourse loans: A non-recourse loan is a loan for which the
lender’s only remedy in case of default is to repossess the property
being financed or used as collateral. That is, the lender cannot pursue
you personally in case of default. Forgiveness of a non-recourse loan
resulting from a foreclosure does not result in cancellation of debt
income. However, it may result in other tax consequences.
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