Related Links

Featured Links





Recommended Products



 

 
Featured Articles

Bad Credit Mortgage Loans – How To Get Approved
Persistence is the key working toward getting approved for a bad credit mortgage loan. There are many factors that you, as a borrower have control over that can help you get approved faster and easier. There are guidelines that most sub-prime lenders go ...

Fast Cash Loans - When You Should Borrow And When You Should Wait
A fast cash loan should be an option used as a last resort to avoid a financial emergency. With its interest rates, a cash loan should not be used to purchase the latest gadget or fashion item.Avoid A Late PaymentA late payment can cost you more than just ...

Fha Loans, What Do You Need To Qualify?
Most of us need to borough some money at least at one point of time in our life. When we want to buy a car, to study at the College or University, when we want to buy a house or home, when we need money to start our own Business even when we use our ...


Google
Home Loans and Mortgages – The Myth of Tax Deductible Interest
 

Without question, the best way to pay for a home is to pay cash. It’s the cheapest way to buy a home and once you pay for it, you are done. Few Americans are in a position to do so, however. Homes are expensive. And depending on economic conditions, it may actually be cheaper to take out a loan than to pay cash. If you could borrow money for thirty years at six percent and invest money at ten percent, you’d be better off borrowing and investing instead of paying cash. But lenders and others who mean well often mention that tax deduction as though it should be a deciding factor in how a home is purchased.

The interest on a primary residence is deductible on loans of up


to one million dollars. That means that the amount of interest paid in a calendar year can be deducted from taxable income, effectively reducing the amount of income tax paid. More often than not, this turns out to be of little benefit to taxpayers. It’s not as though the Government is paying your interest. For the typical American taxpayer who pays in the 28% tax bracket, the deduction amounts to a rebate of twenty eight cents for every dollar paid in interest. Complicating matters is the fact that this is only true for that portion of the interest that exceeds the standard deduction allowed for every taxpayer that files. That deduction, currently $10,000 per married couple, is usually greater than the amount of mortgage interest most couples pay during the year. What this means is that many, if not most, Americans derive no tax benefit from their mortgage interest whatsoever.

Of course, homeowners who pay more than 28% of their income in taxes or those who own homes with large mortgages can benefit more from the tax deduction. Most American homeowners, on the other hand, get nothing from it. The tax deduction isn’t entirely insignificant, but it shouldn’t be a deciding factor in determining how to pay for a home. Prospective buyers should realize that while the deduction is a potential perk of taking out a mortgage, the likely tax benefit from it ranges from “very small” to “nothing at all.”

About the Author
©Copyright 2005 by Retro Marketing. Charles Essmeier is the owner of Retro Marketing, a firm devoted to informational Websites, including HomeEquityHelp.com, a site devoted to information regarding mortgages and home equity loans .

News



LOW LOAN RATES HURT STUDENTS
Chicago Sun-Times
By Jay Ambrose May 25, 2012 8:14PM AP FILE PHOTO Education Secretary Arne Duncan says student loans don't push up tuition, but of course, they do, much like housing prices were pushed up by banks giving loans to people who could not afford the ...
A"loan" and HelplessThe Choate News
Letters: Student loans, debt and SUNYNewsday
Interest rate debate a sideshowWisconsin State Journal

all 11 news articles »

Student Loans: The Real Numbers to Worry About
Huffington Post
News stories about student loan debt have suddenly become as numerous as stories on the US economic recovery -- I counted over 20000 articles/blog posts for each in the past month. Why the firestorm of press coverage? First, there's the possible ...

and more »

Forbes

Student Loans: Stupid Is As Stupid Does
Forbes
Two, three, five sometimes even ten articles a day on the student loan crisis find their way into Google news and other feeds that I get on college-related topics. People have frequently asked me of late if I will write something on the student loan ...

and more »

Fort Worth Star Telegram

Machinists' 401(k) loans could be risky
Fort Worth Star Telegram
More than 1000 of 3600 strikers have loans from their 401(k) accounts, including hundreds who've borrowed from their plans this year, according to the company and union. That loan share is two to three times higher than in a typical 401(k) plan.

and more »

Forbes

Brazil loan defaults resume rise in April
Reuters
Loan defaults rise slightly, hit 2 1/2 year high * Consumers kept falling behind in payments in April * Stock of credit rose 18.1 pct y/y, above estimate SAO PAULO, May 25 (Reuters) - Loan delinquencies at Brazilian banks rose for the third month in ...
Defaults On Brazil Auto Loans Reach Record High In AprilFox Business
Brazil Facing Its Own 'Sub-Prime' Lending ProblemForbes
Credit Still Stoking Growth In Brazil, But At Slower PaceWall Street Journal
NASDAQ
all 13 news articles »