Interest is an amount you pay for the use of borrowed money. To deduct
interest you paid on a debt you must be legally liable for the debt. Additionally,
you generally must itemize your deductions, unless the interest is on rental
or business property or on a student loan.
If you prepay interest, you must allocate the interest over the tax years
to which it applies. You may deduct in each year only the interest that applies
to that year. However, there is an exception that applies to points.
The types of interest you can deduct as itemized deductions on Schedule
A Form 1040 (PDF) are investment interest and
home mortgage interest, including certain points. For information on points,
refer to Tax Topic 504 .
You can deduct student loan interest on Form 1040 (PDF) or Form 1040A (PDF). For information
on deducting student loan interest, refer to Tax Topic 456.
Home mortgage interest is interest you pay on a loan secured by your main
home or a second home. The loan may be a mortgage to buy your home, a second
mortgage, a home equity loan, or a line of credit.
Your main home is where you spend most of your time. It can be a house,
cooperative apartment, condominium, mobile home, house trailer, or houseboat
that has sleeping, cooking and toilet facilities.
A second home can include any other residence you own, whether or not you
use it as a home. But if you rent it to others, you must also use it as a
home during the year for more than the greater of 14 days or 10 percent of
the number of days you rent it, for the interest to qualify as home mortgage
interest.
Home mortgage interest and points are generally reported to you on Form 1098 (PDF), Mortgage Interest Statement,
by the financial institution to which you made the payments.
If all of your mortgages fit into one or more of the following three categories
at all times during the year, you can deduct all of the interest on these
mortgages:
- Mortgages you took out on or before October 13, 1987, called grandfathered
debt.
- Mortgages you took out after October 13, 1987, to buy, build, or improve
your home, but only if these mortgages plus any grandfathered debt totaled
$1 million or less throughout 2001. The limit is $500,000 if you are married
filing separately.
- Mortgages you took out after October 13, 1987, other than to buy, build,
or improve your home, but only if these mortgages totaled $100,000 or less
throughout 2001, and all mortgages on the home totaled no more than its fair
market value. The limit is $50,000 if you are married filing separately.
If one or more of your mortgages does not fit into any of these categories,
refer to Publication 936 (PDF), Home Mortgage Interest Deduction, to
figure the amount of interest you can deduct.
You may be able to take a credit against your federal income tax if you
were issued a mortgage credit certificate by a state or local government.
Use Form 8396 (PDF), Mortgage Interest Credit,
to figure the amount. If you claim the credit, you must reduce your mortgage
interest deduction by the amount of the credit.
You cannot deduct personal interest. Personal interest includes interest
paid on a loan to purchase a car for personal use, and credit card and installment
interest incurred for personal expenses. Items you cannot deduct as interest
include points (if you are a seller), service charges, credit investigation
fees, and interest relating to tax-exempt income, such as interest to
purchase or carry tax-exempt securities.
You may be subject to a limit on some of your itemized deductions including
mortgage interest. For 2001, this limit applies if your adjusted gross income
is more than $132,950, or $66,475 if you are married filing separately.
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