Tuesday, January 19, 2010 9:16 AM
Chaim Gleitmann
Internal Revenue Service Releases New Home Buyer Credit Form
The
Internal Revenue Service
recently released the new form that eligible home buyers need to claim
the first-time home buyer credit this tax season and announced
processing of those tax returns will begin in mid-February. The IRS
also announced new documentation requirements to deter fraud related to
the first-time home buyer credit.
The new form and instructions
follow major changes in November to the home buyer credit by the
Worker, Homeownership, and Business Assistance Act of 2009. The new law
extended the credit to a broader range of home purchasers and added new
documentation requirements to deter fraud and ensure taxpayers properly
claim the credit.
With the release of Form 5405,
First-Time Home Buyer Credit and Repayment of the Credit, and the
related instructions, eligible home buyers can now start to file their
2009 tax returns. Taxpayers claiming the home buyer credit must file a
paper tax return because of the added documentation requirements.
The
IRS expects to start processing 2009 tax returns claiming the home
buyer credit in mid-February after it completes the updating and
testing of systems to meet the law’s new requirements. The updates
allow the IRS to put in place critical systemic checks to deter fraud
related to the home buyer credit.
Some of these early taxpayers
claiming the home buyer credit may see tax refunds take an additional
two to three weeks. In addition to filling out a Form 5405, all
eligible home buyers must include with their 2009 tax returns one of
the following documents in order to receive the credit:
-A copy
of the settlement statement showing all parties’ names and signatures,
property address, sales price, and date of purchase. Normally, this is
the properly executed Form HUD-1, Settlement Statement.
-For
mobile home purchasers who are unable to get a settlement statement, a
copy of the executed retail sales contract showing all parties’ names
and signatures, property address, purchase price and date of purchase.
-For
a newly-constructed home where a settlement statement is not available,
a copy of the certificate of occupancy showing the owner’s name,
property address and date of the certificate.
In addition, the
new law allows a long-time resident of the same main home to claim the
home buyer credit if they purchase a new principal residence. To
qualify, eligible taxpayers must show that they lived in their old
homes for a five-consecutive-year period during the eight-year period
ending on the purchase date of the new home. The IRS has stepped up
compliance checks involving the home buyer credit, and it encourages
home buyers claiming this part of the credit to avoid refund delays by
attaching documentation covering the five-consecutive-year period:
-Form 1098, Mortgage Interest Statement, or substitute mortgage interest statements,
-Property tax records or
-Homeowner’s insurance records.
The
IRS also reminds home buyers that the new documentation requirements
mean that taxpayers claiming the credit cannot file electronically and
must file paper returns. Taxpayers can still use IRS Free File to
prepare their returns, but the returns must be printed out and sent to
the IRS, along with all required documentation.
Normally, it
takes about four to eight weeks to get a refund claimed on a complete
and accurate paper return where all required documents are attached.
For those home buyers filing early, the IRS expects the first refunds
based on the home buyer credit will be issued toward the end of March
2010. The IRS encourages taxpayers to use direct deposit to speed their
refund.
For more information, visit www.IRS.gov.
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