Publication 17
taxmap/pub17/p17-086.htm#en_us_publink1000172480If you financed your home under a federally subsidized program
(loans from tax-exempt qualified mortgage bonds or loans with mortgage credit
certificates), you may have to recapture all or part of the benefit you received
from that program when you sell or otherwise dispose of your home. You recapture
the benefit by increasing your federal income tax for the year of the sale. You
may have to pay this recapture tax even if you can exclude your gain from income
under the rules discussed earlier; that exclusion does not affect the recapture
tax.
taxmap/pub17/p17-086.htm#en_us_publink1000172481The recapture applies to loans that:
- Came from the proceeds of qualified mortgage bonds, or
- Were based on mortgage credit certificates.
The recapture also applies to assumptions of these loans.
taxmap/pub17/p17-086.htm#en_us_publink1000172482Recapture of the federal mortgage subsidy applies only if you
meet both of the following conditions.
- Within the first 9 years after the date you close your mortgage
loan, you sell or otherwise dispose of your home at a gain.
- Your income for the year of disposition is more than that
year's adjusted qualifying income for your family size for that year (related to
the income requirements a person must meet to qualify for the federally
subsidized program).
taxmap/pub17/p17-086.htm#en_us_publink1000172483Recapture does not apply in any of the following situations.
- Your mortgage loan was a qualified home improvement loan (QHIL)
of not more than $15,000 used for alterations, repairs, and improvements that
protect or improve the basic livability or energy efficiency of your home.
- Your mortgage loan was a QHIL of not more than $150,000 in
the case of a QHIL used to repair damage from Hurricane Katrina to homes in the
hurricane disaster area; a QHIL funded by a qualified mortgage bond that is a
qualified Gulf Opportunity Zone Bond; or a QHIL for an owner-occupied home in
the Gulf Opportunity Zone (GO Zone), Rita GO Zone, or Wilma GO Zone. For more
information, see Publication 4492, Information for Taxpayers Affected by
Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma. Also see Publication 4492-B, Information
for Affected Taxpayers in the Midwestern Disaster Areas.
- The home is disposed of as a result of your death.
- You dispose of the home more than 9 years after the date you
closed your mortgage loan.
- You transfer the home to your spouse, or to your former spouse
incident to a divorce, where no gain is included in your income.
- You dispose of the home at a loss.
- Your home is destroyed by a casualty, and you replace it on
its original site within 2 years after the end of the tax year when the
destruction happened (within 5 years if the home was in the Hurricane Katrina
disaster area and was destroyed by reason of the hurricane after August 24,
2005). If your home was located in the Kansas disaster area, one of the
Midwestern disaster areas, or another federally declared disaster area, see
Replacement Period in Publication 547.
- You refinance your mortgage loan (unless you later meet the
conditions listed previously under
When recapture applies).
taxmap/pub17/p17-086.htm#en_us_publink1000172485At or near the time of settlement of your mortgage loan, you
should receive a notice that provides the federally subsidized amount and other
information you will need to figure your recapture tax.
taxmap/pub17/p17-086.htm#en_us_publink1000172486
The recapture tax is figured on Form 8828. If you sell your home and your
mortgage is subject to recapture rules, you must file Form 8828 even if you do
not owe a recapture tax. Attach Form 8828 to your Form 1040. For more
information, see Form 8828 and its instructions.