Personal Residence / Seller-paid points

Points—up-front fees charged by a mortgage lender, expressed as a percentage of the loan principal—are normally the buyer's obligation. But sellers will sometimes sweeten a deal by agreeing to pay the points on the buyer's mortgage loan.

In most cases, points the buyer pays are a deductible interest expense. And IRS says that seller-paid points are also deductible.

Suppose, for example, that you bought a home for $600,000. In connection with a $500,000 mortgage loan, your bank charged two points, or $10,000. The seller agreed to pay the points in order to close the sale.

You can deduct the $10,000 in the year of sale. The only disadvantage is that your tax basis is reduced to $590,000, which will mean more gain if and when you sell the home for more than that amount. But that may not happen until many years later, and the gain may not be taxable anyway. You may qualify for an exclusion for up to $250,000 ($500,000 for a husband and wife who file jointly) of gain on the sale of a principal residence. Or, if you die owning the home, its basis becomes its then fair market value and the gain is eliminated.

There are some important limitations on the rule allowing a deduction for seller-paid points. The rule doesn't apply:

. . . to points that are allocated to the part of a mortgage above $1 million;

. . . to points on a loan used to improve (rather than buy) a home;

. . . to points on a loan used to buy a vacation or second home, investment property, or business property; and

. . . to points paid on a refinancing, home equity loan, or line of credit.

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