H.R. 3648, The Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007
On December 14th - the Senate passed H.R. 3648, The Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007. Initially sent to the Senate on October 4th, the Senate passed this legislation on December 14th.
When debt is forgiven on a home loan, the homeowner must normally count that debt forgiveness as income and pay taxes on it. The bill -- an amendment to H.R. 3648 creates a three-year exception for debt forgiveness on home loans – helping families already unable to meet their mortgages to avoid incurring large tax bills as well.
The bill also extends a provision allowing homeowners to deduct mortgage insurance payments from their taxable income.
In addition to tax relief for debt forgiveness and mortgage insurance payments, the bill includes:
- Tax relief for volunteer firefighters and emergency medical technicians
- Help to expand housing options for college students with children
- Protection of tax relief for homeowners after the death of a spouse
- Flexibility to help co-op tenant/owners deduct real estate taxes and mortgage insurance
The bill is fully offset by increased penalties for failure to file S corporation returns or partnership returns, and new requirements for the payment of corporate estimated taxes.
Comment -- Before - the forgiven debt from a short sale was taxable income, Individuals in already unfortunate situations most likely faced IRS actions because they did not have the money to pay the additional taxes. Even bankruptcy did not get rid of the tax burden. This legislation will relieve that additional burden and may also encourage families to work with their lender to negotiate terms for a short sale (rather than letting their home fall into foreclosure), knowing they will now not be subject to an IRS bill.
Labels: approved, foreclosure, forgiven, forgiveness, H.R. 3648, income, president, short sale, tax



