| January 31, 2005 |
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Congress has just toted up the billions in taxes America's homeowners will save this year through various federal housing writeoffs and credits. The number is huge and the underlying message is loud and clear: If you don't own a home, you are missing out on Congress's most generous lump of tax goodies served up to any category of individual taxpayers. Here's what the Congressional Joint Committee on Taxation estimates homeowners will keep in their pockets in 2005, rather than sending to Washington:
Add in a handful of related housing tax subsidies -- $4.7 billion in federal tax credits for low-income housing, $3.8 billion for certain "excess" rental housing depreciation writeoffs, $0.3 billion in rental housing bond subsidies, and $0.3 billion in tax credits for historic structure rehabilitations -- and the total direct federal tax benefits to housing are expected to exceed a record $125 billion for the year, according to the joint tax committee. These deductions and credits not only remain in homeowners' pockets in the form of foregone federal taxes, they also increase the financial attractiveness of homeownership and ultimately the market values of houses. How do the tax goodies get split up among homeowners? As you might expect, people with bigger mortgages and higher property taxes get to write off more and save more than homeowners with small loans and low property taxes. Using data from the 2004 tax year usage of mortgage interest deductions as computed by the IRS, here is how the pie got sliced:
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