If you fit the criteria and are considering buying another Santa Cruz County house in the coming year, you might want to speed up the process and close by the June 30 expiration date.
Reporting from Washington - Take a close, hard look at the new $6,500 federal tax credit for so-called move-up home buyers that passed the Senate and House recently. Though it's been getting second billing to the original $8,000 credit for first-time purchasers -- now extended by Congress through June 30 -- the $6,500 credit for current homeowners just might have your name on it.
How does it work? When will it be available?
The new credit is available now. It took effect Nov. 6, the day President Obama signed the legislation that created it. This means that if you fit the key criteria -- you've owned and lived in your home for a consecutive five out of the last eight years, and your adjusted household income doesn't exceed $125,000 if you file taxes singly or $225,000 if you are married filing jointly -- you can claim the credit as soon as you close on a qualifying house.
That could be next week, next month or next spring. There is no "move-up" requirement in the new credit. In fact, homeowners who plan to downsize into a smaller dwelling may prove to be significant users of the credit, along with people who are moving because of employment changes.
If you fit the criteria and are considering buying another house sometime in the coming year, you might want to speed up the process and sign a contract by April 30 and close by the June 30 expiration date. Think of it this way: If the government is willing to give you $6,500 to act a little faster than you had planned, hey, why not?
Some other key features of the $6,500 credit you ought to know about:
If you aren't sure if you can make the deadlines established for the new credit -- a binding contract by April 30 and a settlement by June 30 -- do not assume that Congress will provide another extension. All the political and budgetary signs point the other way, and some of the primary authors of the credit insist that this is it -- no more extensions next year. Take them at their word.
One consumer resource that answers frequently asked questions about both the $6,500 and $8,000 extended credits is www.federalhousingtaxcredit.com, sponsored by the National Assn. of Home Builders.
Distributed by the Washington Post Writers Group.
Copyright © 2009, The Los Angeles Times
