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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(107,881 posts)
Fri Nov 10, 2017, 09:54 PM Nov 2017

Rich homebuyers already know how to game the tax plan

Out in the Hamptons, Wall Street’s favored beach resort on Long Island, brokers and buyers already have a workaround for a tax plan provision under consideration in Congress that would take away the mortgage interest deduction for second homes.

A client of Brown Harris Stevens broker Jessica von Hagn who works at a hedge fund decided to turn the vacation home he’s buying into an investment property by setting up a limited liability company. That will allow him to deduct the interest and earn rental income at the height of the season from the modern home on Bridgehampton’s Lumber Lane, with four bedrooms, three baths and a swimming pool on an acre of land.

For the buyer: problem solved. For the Hamptons market: more high-end vacation properties getting listed as rentals, more competition and, most likely, falling rents.

“If you aren’t able to take advantage of the mortgage deduction for your second home, you’ll see more people putting their homes on the market and the inventory will grow,” von Hagn said. “There’s only a certain number of renters every season and we just keep adding more and more inventory.”

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/rich-homebuyers-already-know-how-to-game-the-tax-plan/ar-BBEOaX0?li=BBnb7Kz&ocid=edgsp

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Rich homebuyers already know how to game the tax plan (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Nov 2017 OP
Um, rich buyers don't need or get mortgages. PSPS Nov 2017 #1
Well, if not using your vacation home yourself marybourg Nov 2017 #2

marybourg

(12,609 posts)
2. Well, if not using your vacation home yourself
Fri Nov 10, 2017, 11:37 PM
Nov 2017

during the height of the summer season, but instead renting it out and paying tax on the entire rent received, then deducting the mortgage interest you paid is "gaming the tax plan", at least according to the headline writer, then I say "go for it"; bring in all the taxable income you can.

PS- he doesn't need to set up an LLC in order to deduct legitimate business expenses, which the mortgage interest will be if he rents out the house; he can do it just as well as an individual. The LLC may be useful in other ways, however.

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