A right-leaning disgruntled Republican comments on the news of the day and any other thing he damn-well pleases.
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Wednesday, March 07, 2018
In Nashville owners of median-priced homes will lose their home tax deduction but end up with a lower overall tax bill.
Excerpted from Apartment List Rentonomics:
The
recently passed Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 makes significant changes
to longstanding tax benefits for homeowners: (1) the cap on the mortgage
interest deduction has been reduced from $1 million to $750,000; (2)
deductions for state and local taxes, including property taxes, have
been capped at $10,000; and (3) standard deductions have been doubled,
such that fewer homeowners will itemize their tax filings.
The
new legislation hits homeowners hardest in the expensive coastal markets
across California and throughout the Northeast. A homeowner with a
median-priced home in the San Francisco metro will receive approximately $4,500 dollars less annually in housing tax deductions under the new plan; in the Boston
metro, the median homeowner will receive $1,700 less. For Bay Area
homeowners of median-priced homes, the lost deductions could total more
than $100,00 over the course of a 30-year mortgage.
The
impact of the changes is felt disproportionately in left-leaning parts
of the country. There are 15 states in which the median homeowner will
receive at least $100 less in housing tax deductions under the new plan —
President Trump carried none of these states in the 2016 election.
With
the increased standard deduction, many households who lose housing tax
deductions may still end up with a lower overall tax bill, though the
loss of housing deductions still amounts to a shifting of incentives
that make homeownership less attractive. That said, the decision to
purchase a home is affected by numerous factors; changes to the tax code
will likely have limited impact on that decision in most parts of the
country, but could be more impactful in the nation’s most expensive
markets.
For a detailed report on the recently passed Tax Cut and Jobs Act and the impact on housing deductions and an interactive map showing the impact on each county in the United States, follow this link.
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