Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== IRS Publication 936: The Ultimate Guide to the Home Mortgage Interest Deduction ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney or certified tax professional. Always consult with an expert for guidance on your specific financial and legal situation. ===== What is IRS Publication 936? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine you've just bought your first home. It's an exciting, terrifying, and expensive milestone. Then, your first tax season as a homeowner arrives. You receive a document in the mail called `[[form_1098]]` from your mortgage lender, filled with numbers and boxes that look like a foreign language. A quick, panicked search for "how to handle mortgage on taxes" leads you to a dense, 40-page document from the `[[internal_revenue_service]]` called "Publication 936, Home Mortgage Interest Deduction." Your heart sinks. It looks more complicated than your closing paperwork. This guide is here to be your translator and your calm, reassuring mentor. **IRS Publication 936 is not a form you fill out; it is an instruction manual from the IRS.** It is the official rulebook that explains how you, as a homeowner, can potentially lower your taxable income by deducting the interest you pay on your mortgage. This deduction is one of the most significant tax benefits available to American taxpayers, but its rules are complex and have changed dramatically in recent years. We will break down every part of it, step by step, so you can approach your taxes with confidence. * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:** * **Your Personal Tax GPS:** **IRS Publication 936** is the official guide from the [[internal_revenue_service]] that details the rules for claiming the [[home_mortgage_interest_deduction]]. * **A Benefit with Big Limits:** This deduction allows you to subtract interest paid on a loan secured by your main or second home, but a 2017 tax law significantly lowered the debt limits for newer mortgages, which directly impacts how much you can deduct. [[tax_cuts_and_jobs_act]]. * **Action is Required:** You can only claim this benefit if you choose to [[itemize_deductions]] on your tax return using [[schedule_a_(form_1040)]]; it's not an automatic credit, and you must decide if it's more beneficial than taking the [[standard_deduction]]. ===== Part 1: The Foundations of the Home Mortgage Interest Deduction ===== ==== The Story of the Deduction: A Historical Journey ==== The idea of deducting mortgage interest wasn't born overnight. It has a long and debated history, evolving with America's economic goals. Its story begins over a century ago. * **The Beginning (1913):** When the modern federal `[[income_tax]]` was established with the `[[sixteenth_amendment]]`, the law allowed a deduction for **all** interest paid on any kind of debt, not just mortgages. It wasn't designed to encourage homeownership; it was based on the accounting principle that interest was an expense that reduced a person's net income. * **The Post-War Boom (1940s-1950s):** After World War II, the U.S. government actively promoted homeownership as a cornerstone of the American Dream. The mortgage interest deduction, though already existing, became a powerful, implicit subsidy. With the creation of agencies like the Federal Housing Administration ([[fha]]), homeownership rates soared, and the deduction became an entrenched part of the U.S. tax system. * **The First Major Limits (1986):** The [[tax_reform_act_of_1986]] was a massive overhaul of the tax code. It eliminated the deduction for most personal interest (like on credit cards and car loans) but specifically preserved the **home mortgage interest deduction**. However, it introduced the first real limits, capping the deduction to interest on up to $1 million of acquisition debt (money to buy, build, or improve a home) plus $100,000 of home equity debt (money borrowed against the home's value for any purpose). * **The Modern Shake-Up (2017):** The [[tax_cuts_and_jobs_act]] (TCJA) represented the most significant change in decades. For mortgages taken out after December 15, 2017, the law drastically lowered the limit on acquisition debt to **$750,000** (or $375,000 if married filing separately). More critically, it **suspended the deduction for interest on home equity debt** from 2018 through 2025, unless the funds are used to "buy, build, or substantially improve" the taxpayer's home. This fundamentally changed the calculation for millions of homeowners. ==== The Law on the Books: The Internal Revenue Code ==== The ultimate authority for this deduction isn't just Publication 936; it's the [[internal_revenue_code]] (IRC) itself. The key statute is **26 U.S. Code § 163 - Interest**. Specifically, § 163(h)(2)(D) and § 163(h)(3) define what the government calls "qualified residence interest." This is the only type of personal interest that remains deductible. A key piece of statutory language in § 163(h)(3)(B)(i) defines "acquisition indebtedness" as any debt that is: > "...incurred in acquiring, constructing, or substantially improving any qualified residence of the taxpayer, and is secured by such residence." **In plain English, this means:** To be deductible, the interest must come from a loan you took out specifically to buy, build, or make major improvements to your home, and that home must be the collateral for the loan. This is the legal bedrock that all the rules in Publication 936 are built upon. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: Federal vs. State Rules ==== The home mortgage interest deduction is primarily a **federal** tax benefit. However, states that have an income tax often have their own rules that can either mirror the federal system or create unique benefits. ^ **Jurisdiction** ^ **How It Handles Mortgage Interest** ^ **What It Means For You** ^ | **Federal (IRS)** | **Allows itemized deduction** for interest on up to $750,000 of acquisition debt (for loans after 12/15/17). Home equity interest is only deductible if used to improve the home. | This is the baseline rule for your federal tax return (Form 1040). It sets the maximum deduction you can claim nationally. | | **California** | **Conforms to federal law** but with different debt limits ($1 million). Also offers a **Mortgage Interest Credit** for qualified low-income, first-time homebuyers. | You might be able to deduct more interest on your state tax return than on your federal return if your loan is between $750k and $1M. You could also be eligible for a separate state tax credit. | | **Texas** | **No state income tax.** | The federal deduction is the only one that matters. There is no state-level tax benefit for mortgage interest because there is no state income tax to deduct it from. | | **New York** | **Largely conforms to federal rules,** including the $750,000 debt limit for the state itemized deduction. | Your state deduction will generally be calculated using the same rules and limits as your federal deduction, simplifying the process. | | **Florida** | **No state income tax.** | Similar to Texas, the federal deduction is the only one available to you as a resident. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements of Publication 936 ===== To truly master this deduction, you need to understand the language the IRS uses. Let's break down the five most critical components from Publication 936. ==== Element 1: What is a Qualified Home? ==== You can't deduct interest on just any property. The loan must be for a **qualified home**, which means one of two things: * **Your Main Home:** This is the primary place where you live most of the time. The IRS uses a facts-and-circumstances test, looking at factors like your mailing address, voter registration, and where your family lives. * **Your Second Home:** You can also deduct interest on one other home. You don't have to live in it for any minimum amount of time unless you also rent it out. If you rent out your second home, you must personally use it for more than 14 days or more than 10% of the days it was rented out (whichever is longer) for it to qualify as your second home for this deduction. A "home" can be more than just a traditional house. The IRS allows a house, condominium, co-op, mobile home, house trailer, or even a boat or recreational vehicle (RV) to qualify, as long as it has sleeping, cooking, and toilet facilities. ==== Element 2: What is Secured Debt? ==== This is a non-negotiable requirement. For interest to be deductible, the loan must be a **secured debt**. This means you signed a legal instrument—like a `[[mortgage]]`, `[[deed_of_trust]]`, or `[[land_contract]]`—that pledges your qualified home as collateral for the loan. **Hypothetical Example:** * **Deductible:** You take out a $400,000 mortgage from a bank to buy your house. The mortgage agreement legally ties the debt to the property. If you fail to pay, the bank can foreclose on the house. This is a secured debt, and the interest is potentially deductible. * **Not Deductible:** You borrow $50,000 from a family member on a personal loan to use as a down payment. There is no legal document making your house the collateral. This is an unsecured debt, and the interest you pay them is not deductible as mortgage interest. ==== Element 3: Understanding Your Debt Limits (The Most Important Part) ==== This is where the [[tax_cuts_and_jobs_act]] (TCJA) caused the most confusion. The amount of debt on which you can deduct interest depends on when you took out the mortgage. ^ **Debt Type** ^ **Pre-TCJA (Loans before 12/16/2017)** ^ **Post-TCJA (Loans after 12/15/2017)** ^ | **Home Acquisition Debt** | You can deduct interest on up to **$1 million** of debt used to buy, build, or substantially improve your home(s). | You can deduct interest on up to **$750,000** of debt used to buy, build, or substantially improve your home(s). | | **Home Equity Debt** | You could deduct interest on up to **$100,000** of debt borrowed against your home's equity, **regardless of how you used the money**. | The deduction for home equity interest is **suspended until 2026**. **Crucial Exception:** You can still deduct interest on a home equity loan if the proceeds are used to buy, build, or substantially improve the home securing the loan. In that case, the IRS treats it as acquisition debt subject to the $750k/$1M total limit. | | **Grandfathered Debt** | Mortgages taken out on or before October 13, 1987, are not subject to these limits. | N/A | **Example of the new rule:** In 2024, Sarah takes out a $50,000 home equity line of credit ([[heloc]]). * **Scenario A:** She uses the $50,000 to remodel her kitchen. Because the money was used to "substantially improve" her home, the interest is deductible (assuming her total home-related debt is under $750,000). * **Scenario B:** She uses the $50,000 to pay off credit card debt and take a vacation. Because the money was not used to improve the home, **none of the interest is deductible** under the TCJA rules. ==== Element 4: Deducting Mortgage Points ==== "Points" (sometimes called loan origination fees or discount points) are a form of prepaid interest. You might pay points to your lender at closing in exchange for a lower interest rate on your mortgage. The rules for deducting them can be tricky. * **General Rule:** You must deduct points over the life of the loan. For example, if you pay $3,000 in points on a 30-year (360-month) mortgage, you can generally deduct $100 per year ($3,000 / 30 years). * **The "Fully Deductible in Year Paid" Exception:** You can deduct the full amount of points in the year you paid them **if you meet all eight of the following tests** outlined by the IRS: 1. The loan is secured by your main home. 2. Paying points is an established business practice in your area. 3. The points paid were not more than the amount generally charged in that area. 4. You use the cash method of accounting (which almost all individuals do). 5. The points were not for items that are usually listed separately on the settlement sheet (like appraisal fees). 6. The funds you provided at or before closing were at least as much as the points charged. 7. You use your loan to buy or build your main home. 8. The points were computed as a percentage of the principal amount of the mortgage. ==== Element 5: Mortgage Insurance Premiums (PMI) ==== If you made a down payment of less than 20% on your home, your lender likely required you to pay for Private Mortgage Insurance ([[pmi]]). For years, Congress allowed taxpayers to treat these insurance premiums as deductible mortgage interest, subject to income limitations. However, this deduction has a history of expiring and being retroactively renewed. **As of the 2022 tax year, the deduction for mortgage insurance premiums has expired.** Congress may choose to extend it again for future tax years, but it is crucial to check the most current tax laws or consult Publication 936 for the specific year you are filing. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook ===== Knowing the rules is one thing; applying them is another. This section provides a clear, step-by-step process for claiming the deduction. === Step 1: Gather Your Documents (Form 1098) === By January 31st each year, anyone who paid you mortgage interest (like your bank or lending institution) must send you `[[form_1098]]`, the Mortgage Interest Statement. This form is your starting point. Key boxes include: * **Box 1: Mortgage interest received from payer(s)/borrower(s):** This is the total amount of interest your lender says you paid during the year. * **Box 2: Outstanding mortgage principal:** This can help you determine if you are below the debt limits. * **Box 6: Points paid on purchase of principal residence:** This tells you the amount of potentially deductible points you paid. Keep this form handy, along with your closing documents from when you purchased or refinanced the home. === Step 2: Decide: Itemize or Take the Standard Deduction? === This is the most important decision you'll make. You only get a benefit from your mortgage interest if you [[itemize_deductions]]. Itemizing means you add up all your eligible expenses (mortgage interest, state and local taxes up to $10,000, charitable contributions, etc.) on `[[schedule_a_(form_1040)]]`. You should only itemize if your **total itemized deductions** are **GREATER THAN** your standard deduction amount. The [[standard_deduction]] is a fixed dollar amount that you can subtract from your income if you choose not to itemize. ^ **Filing Status (2023)** ^ **Standard Deduction Amount** ^ | Single | $13,850 | | Married Filing Separately | $13,850 | | Married Filing Jointly | $27,700 | | Head of Household | $20,800 | **Actionable Advice:** Add up your mortgage interest (from Form 1098), your state and local taxes (up to the $10,000 limit), and any significant charitable donations. If that total is less than your standard deduction, claiming the mortgage interest deduction won't help you, and you should take the simpler standard deduction. === Step 3: Calculate Your Deductible Interest === If you've decided to itemize, now you calculate the final number. 1. **Check your loan balance.** Is your total mortgage principal for acquisition debt under the $750,000 (or $1 million) limit? If yes, you can generally deduct the full amount of interest from Box 1 of your Form 1098. 2. **If your loan is over the limit,** you must do a calculation. Publication 936 provides a detailed worksheet for this. In simple terms, you find the percentage of your loan that is under the limit and apply that percentage to the interest you paid. (Example: If you have a $1,000,000 loan, 75% of it is under the $750,000 limit. You can deduct 75% of the total interest you paid). 3. **Add in any deductible points.** If you are deducting points over the life of the loan, add in this year's portion. If you meet the 8-point test for a new home purchase, you can add the full amount. === Step 4: Complete Schedule A (Form 1040) === The final step is to report the number on your tax return. * Your final calculated deductible mortgage interest goes on **Line 8a of Schedule A, "Home mortgage interest and points reported to you on Form 1098."** * If you paid interest to a seller who financed your loan directly (and didn't issue a 1098), you would report that on Line 8b. * The total from Schedule A then transfers to your main Form 1040, reducing your taxable income. ==== Essential Paperwork: Key Forms and Documents ==== * **[[form_1098_mortgage_interest_statement]]**: This is the official statement from your lender detailing the interest and points you paid for the year. It's the primary source document for your deduction. * **[[schedule_a_(form_1040)]]**: This is the form for Itemized Deductions. It's where you list your mortgage interest, state and local taxes, charitable gifts, and other deductible expenses. It is an attachment to your main tax return, Form 1040. * **Closing Disclosure / Settlement Statement**: This document from your home purchase or refinance is critical. It shows exactly how much you paid in points and can be essential for proving your deduction in case of an `[[irs_audit]]`. ===== Part 4: Key Legislation and Rulings That Defined the Deduction ===== The rules in Publication 936 are not arbitrary; they are the result of major laws and court interpretations that have shaped the deduction over decades. ==== Act 1: The Tax Reform Act of 1986 ==== * **Backstory:** Before 1986, the tax code was riddled with loopholes, and people could deduct interest on almost any personal debt. The government wanted to simplify the code and eliminate deductions that didn't serve a clear public purpose. * **The Legislative Action:** This sweeping act eliminated most personal interest deductions but specifically carved out an exception for "qualified residence interest." It established the dual-debt system of $1 million in acquisition debt and $100,000 in home equity debt. * **Impact on You Today:** The 1986 Act is the reason the home mortgage interest deduction still exists while deductions for credit card and auto loan interest do not. It cemented the idea of homeownership as a specially favored activity in the U.S. tax code. ==== Act 2: The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) ==== * **Backstory:** The TCJA was the most significant tax overhaul since 1986, aimed at lowering corporate and individual tax rates. To pay for these cuts, Congress needed to scale back or eliminate many popular deductions. * **The Legislative Action:** The TCJA took direct aim at the mortgage interest deduction. It lowered the acquisition debt limit to $750,000 for new loans and, most notably, suspended the deduction for home equity interest unless the funds were used to improve the home. It also nearly doubled the standard deduction, making itemizing (and thus, using the mortgage interest deduction) less attractive for millions of taxpayers. * **Impact on You Today:** If you bought your home after December 15, 2017, the TCJA's $750,000 limit applies directly to you. It also requires you to track the use of any home equity loan proceeds, a record-keeping burden that didn't exist before. ==== Case Study: Voss v. Commissioner (2015) ==== * **Backstory:** Two unmarried domestic partners, Charles Sophy and Bruce Voss, co-owned two homes and had mortgages totaling over $2 million. They each claimed a deduction on interest up to the $1 million acquisition debt limit on their individual tax returns. The IRS argued that the $1 million limit applied to the property itself, not to each individual owner. * **The Legal Question:** Does the mortgage debt limit apply per taxpayer or per residence? * **The Court's Holding:** The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of the taxpayers, stating that the debt limits in the IRC apply on a **per-taxpayer basis** to unmarried co-owners. * **Impact on You Today:** This ruling is a significant benefit for unmarried couples or individuals who co-own a home. It means that, under the law, they can potentially combine their individual debt limits, allowing for a much larger total deduction on an expensive property than a married couple filing jointly could claim. ===== Part 5: The Future of the Deduction ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Current Controversies and Debates ==== The home mortgage interest deduction is one of the most hotly debated tax provisions. * **Arguments For:** Proponents argue that it is a critical tool for promoting homeownership, which is linked to stable communities and wealth-building for the middle class. They contend that eliminating it would harm the housing market and unfairly penalize existing homeowners. * **Arguments Against:** Many economists and policy experts argue the deduction is inefficient and regressive. They claim it disproportionately benefits higher-income taxpayers who are more likely to itemize and have large mortgages. Critics also argue that it inflates home prices, making housing less affordable for first-time buyers. They advocate for replacing the deduction with a targeted tax credit available to all homeowners, regardless of income. ==== On the Horizon: How Society is Changing the Law ==== The very definition of a "home" and "work" is changing, which could impact the future of this deduction. * **The Rise of Remote Work:** As more Americans work from home, the line between a personal residence and a place of business blurs. This could lead to future rule changes or clarifications from the IRS regarding the `[[home_office_deduction]]` and how it interacts with the mortgage interest deduction. * **Future Tax Reform:** The key provisions of the TCJA, including the $750,000 limit and the suspension of the home equity interest deduction, are set to **expire after 2025**. This means that unless Congress acts, the rules are scheduled to revert to the pre-2018 limits ($1 million acquisition debt and $100,000 home equity debt). This upcoming deadline guarantees a major political and legislative battle over the future of the deduction. * **Housing Affordability Crisis:** As home prices continue to outpace wages, there will be increasing pressure on lawmakers to reform housing-related tax policy. The debate will intensify over whether the current deduction is the best way to support homeownership or if a different model, like a universal homebuyer tax credit, would be more effective and equitable. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **[[acquisition_debt]]**: A loan taken out to buy, build, or substantially improve a qualified home. * **[[amortization]]**: The process of paying off a loan over time with regular payments that cover both principal and interest. * **[[closing_costs]]**: Fees paid at the closing of a real estate transaction, which may include points. * **[[deed_of_trust]]**: A legal document used in some states in place of a mortgage to secure a loan with real property. * **[[form_1098]]**: The tax form a lender sends you that reports the amount of mortgage interest and points you paid during the year. * **[[home_equity_debt]]**: A loan, such as a HELOC, that is secured by the equity in your home but is not for its acquisition. * **[[heloc]]**: A Home Equity Line of Credit, a revolving line of credit secured by your home. * **[[internal_revenue_service]]**: The U.S. government agency responsible for tax collection and enforcement. * **[[itemize_deductions]]**: The act of listing individual deductible expenses on Schedule A rather than taking the standard deduction. * **[[mortgage]]**: A legal agreement by which a bank or other creditor lends money at interest in exchange for taking title of the debtor's property. * **[[pmi]]**: Private Mortgage Insurance, a type of insurance required by lenders for borrowers with a low down payment. * **[[points]]**: Prepaid interest a borrower can pay to a lender to get a lower interest rate on a mortgage. * **[[schedule_a_(form_1040)]]**: The U.S. Individual Income Tax Return form used for itemized deductions. * **[[secured_debt]]**: A debt that is backed by collateral, such as a home. * **[[standard_deduction]]**: A fixed dollar amount that taxpayers can subtract from their income if they choose not to itemize deductions. ===== See Also ===== * [[tax_cuts_and_jobs_act]] * [[standard_deduction]] * [[itemize_deductions]] * [[internal_revenue_service]] * [[home_office_deduction]] * [[property_tax]] * [[tax_law]]