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Buying A Summer Vacation Home

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There are lots of good reasons to want a vacation home, and hardly any of them are financial. There are psychological reasons, emotional reasons, and family reasons. These kinds of reasons tend to push financial considerations into the background. But the financial side can’t be overlooked.

As with any real estate, location counts more than any other single factor. The best vacation properties offer something special — a view of the ocean, a mountain vista, a dock on a lake. For maximum appeal to potential renters or future buyers, look for a place within three hours’ drive of a major metropolitan areas. Longer distances or difficult roads make weekend trips a pain, and that limits your market.

 

Making the purchase of the Vacation Home

Vacation-home buyers often make down payments of 20% to 50%. Some even pay cash if they’re buying a less expensive cabin or condo. Where do they get the money? A home-equity credit line drawn on their primary residence is a favorite source. Mortgage interest on a second home is deductible on as much as $1 million in principal for both homes combined.

Higher interest rates used to be the rule for mortgages on second homes because lenders considered them a greater risk than loans on primary residences. But these days you should be able to find a second-home mortgage at first-home rates. (Exception: If you’ll be counting on rent receipts to help pay the mortgage, the rates will probably be higher.)

Renting out a vacation home

About one fourth of vacation homes are rented to other people for part of the year, and the appeal of different kinds of properties varies with the seasons. For tax purposes, vacation homes are subject to what’s called the 14-day or 10% rule. You can rent your place for up to 14 days a year and pocket the rental income without having to declare it on your tax return. If you rent out the house for more than 14 days a year, you are considered a landlord by the Internal Revenue Service and you must report the income. But you also qualify to deduct certain expenses.

The way you divide the time between personal use and rental use of the place determines your status in the eyes of the IRS. If your own personal use amounts to more than 14 days a year, or more than 10% of the number of days the home is rented out, whichever is longer, the house is considered your personal residence. If you use it for fewer than 14 days (or less than 10 percent of the time it is rented to others), it’s considered a rental property.

Personal Use

Note that “personal use” is broadly defined by the IRS. It covers you or any member of your family, including your spouse, children, siblings, parents, grandparents and grandchildren. Any day you rent the place to anyone for less than fair market value counts as a personal day. Trading your place for a stay at some other place counts, too, as does any time you donate your property for charitable use.

If you don’t convert your vacation home to your principal residence, you’ll owe tax on any profit from the sale. If you have owned the place for more than 18 months, the profit is a long-term capital gain and is taxed at a rate of 15%, except for the profit created by depreciation deductions you claimed as a landlord. (Remember that depreciation lowers your cost basis in the property, thus increasing any profit when you sell.) Depreciation recapture, as this portion of the gain is called, is taxed at 25%.



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