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#1
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Taxpayer has lived in a mobile home for past 10 years. She owns the mobile home(which is considered personal, not real property in her state), but pays rent on the land beneath it.
1. She is in the process of buying a condo; will complete purchase by end of December. 2. She has her mobile home up for sale, but sales are very slow. It may take several months to sell. 3. She owned and lived in a house for many years before moving to mobile home. Is she eligible for the 6500 credit? |
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#2
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The $6500 credit for puchasing a new home only applies if the taxpayer has lived in their current home for five consecutive years. If the $6500 Credit guidelines are the same as the $8000 New Homebuyer credit then the mobile home will not count for the $6500 credit
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#3
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but would she qualify for the 8K instead? I know there have been a couple of discussion about the effect of a mobile home on the credit. You might want to search the board for "mobile homes" and see what comes up.
ATG
__________________
"Congress has spoken to this issue through its audible silence." Anyone ever notice they beat the daylights out of the definition of a child, but they don't spend much time at all defining "parent"? |
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#4
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The mobile is your principal residence and you are purchasing another personal residence. You lived in it over 5 of the last 8 years,,you qualify for the $6,500, not the $8,000 (not a first time homebuyer)
You are not required to sell the mobile, keep it for a rental if allowed, however if you sell it you qualify for Sec 121 exclusion. ($250,000 or $500,000)
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Confucius say: He who sits on tack is better off. Last edited by RLymanC : 11-18-2009 at 01:38 PM. |
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#5
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Agree with RLymanC. If a double wide (what a mobile home is called down South) can be
financed and mortgage interest on a 1098 deducted on schedule a, this is a case where a house is a home. (Not all houses are homes.) |
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#6
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Quote:
ATG
__________________
"Congress has spoken to this issue through its audible silence." Anyone ever notice they beat the daylights out of the definition of a child, but they don't spend much time at all defining "parent"? |
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#7
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something from the Form 5405 instructions:
Main Home. Your main home is the one you lived in most of the time. It can be a house, houseboat, housetrailer, cooperative apartment, condominium, or other type of residence. |
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#8
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I did answer incorrectly on the first answer. I do know that a mobile home does not count as a first time homebuyer for the $8000 credit. If a taxpayer owns a mobile home and purchases a single family dwelling, condo, townhome I believe they will qualify for the $8000 first time buyer in that as IRS code state that a mobile home won't count as a first time homebuyer it seems logical the taxpayer can own a mobile home and has never owned another home then they should qualify for the $8000 1st time homebuyer credit.
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#9
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Quote:
Quote:
Last edited by Jesse : 11-18-2009 at 03:04 PM. Reason: To add quote |
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#10
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You mean it didn't say "double wide?" (grin
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#11
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Welcome to the board and congratulations on your candor (I've been tryin' to get my dentally-challenged fellow poster, Snaggletooth, to 'fess up to his mistakes for five years and cain't get the peckerwood to do it)
Quote:
Quote:
. C'mon back. Thanx. BBLast edited by Black Bart : 11-18-2009 at 09:39 PM. |
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#12
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I'd have to holler that I'm offended by that racist...um...no, no...I mean redneckish term.
P.S. I've got an overweight friend they call "Double-wide." |
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#13
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http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/...206291,00.html
Q. If a taxpayer purchases a mobile home (manufactured home) with land and qualifies for the credit, is the amount of the credit based on the combined cost of the home and land? A. Yes. The first-time homebuyer credit is ten percent of the purchase price of a principal residence. The total purchase price (mobile home and land) is used to determine the amount of the first-time homebuyer credit. Q. Is a taxpayer who purchases a mobile home and places the home on leased land eligible for the first-time homebuyer credit? A. Yes. A mobile home may qualify as a principal residence and it is not necessary that the taxpayer own the land to qualify for the first-time homebuyer credit. Q. Can a taxpayer who purchases a travel trailer qualify for the credit? A. A travel trailer that is affixed to land may qualify as a principal residence. |
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#14
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In some parts of NC, the correct term would be a "Wheeled Estate".
__________________
"The single most important thing to remember about any enterprise is that there are no results inside its walls. The RESULT of a business is a satisfied customer." - Peter Drucker |
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