For the average consumer who has
managed to acquire credit card debt, automobile loans, and various
other small debts, is the mortgage interest, especially with an
interest only loan an answer to mortgage interest deductions and
elimination of non-deductible interest?
What
options does the average consumer have in accommodating the tax need in
relation to the housing need? What about the interest only loan option
on a new mortgage? Today’s housing and mortgage market has
seen a tremendous growth in mortgage packages, variety and amount. The
mortgage interest deductible on the interest only loan option, once
thought to have gone the way of the Edsel automobile, is back today and
in use by the masses. The mortgage market has seen an unbelievable
increase in the interest only loans from just a mere sliver of the
market a few years ago, to around 25% of the market share today.
That’s huge growth, especially when you talk less than 5
years to experience that growth.
What benefit does the
mortgage interest (especially the interest only loan) bring to the
table, and does this benefit the homeowner as a taxpayer? This is one
question the mortgage lender probably won’t be able to answer
for you, and one you probably won’t think to ask. But you
should, because it’s one question that can make a difference
to you and to your tax return and the amount of the mortgage interest
that will actually provide you with a tax deduction.
The interest only
loan and the amount of interest you can deduct on your tax return are
one and the same if your income levels are low enough; the concern for
the average consumer is the total dollar value they get to take off
their tax return. Quite often, the deductions for the consumer
aren’t enough to contribute to the bottom line, because the
income level the percentage of deductible interest is calculated on is
simply too high. Higher dollar amounts in interest will usually mean a
greater possibility of a greater deduction.
That would be the
only advantage to the interest only loan as far as the taxpayer is
concerned, unless of course, they use the money saved from the interest
only loan to fund a 401k, an IRA, or an MSA (that’s a topic
for a completely different paper). The mortgage interest and especially
the interest only loan is sold to the consumer as a way to afford more
house, pay off credit card debt, or provide a means to fund a savings
of some kind, and that’s true, it can be used for that
purpose. And if you’re considering paying off those high
interest credit cards, the mortgage interest you’re charged
on the interest only loan is fully deductible, while the credit cards
are not; a word of caution, however, make sure you don’t turn
around and use those credit cards again, putting yourself right back
where you started from, just with a bigger interest payment and less
house equity.
Why has the market experienced such growth? It’s not totally
related to the tax benefit; the home mortgages of today satisfy a
common desire for the consumer: instant gratification of bigger and
better. Such is the case when it’s time to make those needed
repairs, or house expansion. A second mortgage makes it possible to
retain the same monthly mortgage payment, and still pull a lot of
equity out of your home. This may sound like the ultimate solution, but
is it really? It also adds to the amount of interest an individual can
deduct at the end of the year; and if income levels are growing, the
interest expense must grow in order to keep up. Now, this is a somewhat
skewed way of looking at the benefit of a mortgage, but it figures
right into the same scheme as the elimination of credit card debt and
saving for 401(k) s as a valid reason to borrow money against your home.
The mortgage and the resulting interest are great tools,
when used by the right people, in the right situation. For the average
consumer and long-term homeowner, unless you think a better deduction
on your tax return is worth the forfeiture of equity in your home,
you’d better think twice before re-financing with a second
mortgage that generates more interest, but less equity.