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    | Instructions for Form 1098 | 2006 Tax Year |  
                  
                     
                        
                           Instructions for Form 1098 - Main Contents
                            This is archived information that pertains only to the 2006 Tax Year. If youare looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
 
                     
                        
                           
                              Specific Instructions for Form 1098
                               Use Form 1098, Mortgage Interest Statement, to report mortgage interest (including points, defined later) of $600 or more
                        received by you during
                        the year in the course of your trade or business from an individual, including a sole proprietor. Report only interest on
                        a mortgage defined below.
                        
                      The $600 threshold applies separately to each mortgage; thus, file a separate Form 1098 for each mortgage. You may, at your
                        option, file Form 1098
                        to report mortgage interest of less than $600, but you are subject to the rules in these instructions.
                        
                      If an overpayment of interest on an adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) or other mortgage was made in a prior year and you refund
                        (or credit) such
                        overpayment, you may have to file Form 1098 to report the refund (or credit) of the overpayment. See Reimbursement of Overpaid Interest on
                        page 1098-3.
                        
                      
                        
                        You need not file Form 1098 for interest received from a corporation, partnership, trust, estate, association, or company
                           (other than a sole
                           proprietor) even if an individual is a coborrower and all the trustees, beneficiaries, partners, members, or shareholders
                           of the payer of record are
                           individuals.
                           
                         
                        
                        A mortgage is any obligation secured by real property. Use the table below to determine which obligations are mortgages.
                           
                         Real property is land and generally anything built on it, growing on it, or attached to the land. Among other things, real
                           property includes a
                           manufactured home or mobile home with a minimum living space of 400 square feet and a minimum width of more than 102 inches
                           and which is of a kind
                           customarily used at a fixed location. See section 25(e)(10).
                           
                         If property that secures the loan is not real property, you are not required to file Form 1098. However, the borrower may
                           be entitled to a
                           deduction for qualified residence interest, such as may be the case for a boat, which has sleeping space and cooking and toilet
                           facilities, that the
                           borrower uses as a home.
                           
                         Lines of credit and credit card obligations.
                                   Interest (other than points) received on any mortgage that is in the form of a line of credit or credit card obligation
                           is reportable regardless of
                           how you classified the obligation. A borrower incurs a line of credit or credit card obligation when the borrower first has
                           the right to borrow
                           against the line of credit or credit card, whether or not the borrower actually borrows an amount at that time.
                           
                            
                        
                        File this form if you are engaged in a trade or business and, in the course of such trade or business, you receive from an
                           individual $600 or more
                           of mortgage interest on any one mortgage during the calendar year. You are not required to file this form if the interest
                           is not received in the
                           course of your trade or business. For example, you hold the mortgage on your former personal residence. The buyer makes mortgage
                           payments to you. You
                           are not required to file Form 1098.
                           
                         For information about who must file to report points, see Points on page 1098-2.
                           
                         Not in the lending business.
                                   If you receive $600 or more of mortgage interest in the course of your trade or business, you are subject to the requirement
                           to file Form 1098,
                           even if you are not in the business of lending money. For example, if you are a real estate developer and you provide financing
                           to an individual to
                           buy a home in your subdivision, and that home is security for the financing, you are subject to this reporting requirement.
                           However, if you are a
                           physician not engaged in any other business and you lend money to an individual to buy your home, you are not subject to this
                           reporting requirement
                           because you did not receive the interest in the course of your trade or business as a physician.
                           
                            Governmental unit.
                                   A governmental unit (or any subsidiary agency) receiving mortgage interest from an individual of $600 or more must
                           file this form.
                           
                            Cooperative housing corporation.
                                   A cooperative housing corporation is an interest recipient and must file Form 1098 to report an amount received from
                           its tenant-stockholders that
                           represents the tenant-stockholders' proportionate share of interest described in section 216(a)(2). This rule applies only
                           to tenant-stockholders who
                           are individuals and from whom the cooperative has received at least $600 of interest during the year. See the TIP under box
                           1 on page 1098-4.
                           
                            Collection agents.
                                   Generally, if you receive reportable interest payments (other than points) on behalf of someone else and you are the
                           first person to receive the
                           interest, such as a servicing bank collecting payments for a lender, you must file this form. Enter your name, address, taxpayer
                           identification number
                           (TIN), and telephone number in the recipient entity area. You must file this form even though you do not include the interest
                           received in your income
                           but you merely transfer it to another person. If you wish, you may enter the name of the person for whom you collected the
                           interest in box 4. The
                           person for whom you collected the interest need not file Form 1098.
                           
                            
                                   However, there is an exception to this rule for any period that (a) the first person to receive or collect the interest
                           does not have the
                           information needed to report on Form 1098 and (b) the person for whom the interest is received or collected would receive
                           the interest in its trade or
                           business if the interest were paid directly to such person. If (a) and (b) apply, the person on whose behalf the interest
                           is received or collected is
                           required to report on Form 1098. If interest is received or collected on behalf of another person other than an individual,
                           such person is presumed to
                           receive the interest in a trade or business.
                           
                            Foreign interest recipient.
                                   If you are not a U.S. person, you must file Form 1098 if the interest is received in the United States. A U.S. person
                           is a citizen or resident of
                           the United States, a domestic partnership or corporation, or a nonforeign estate or trust. If the interest is received outside
                           the United States, you
                           must file Form 1098 if (a) you are a controlled foreign corporation or (b) at least 50% of your gross income from all sources
                           for the 3-year period
                           ending with the close of the tax year preceding the receipt of interest (or for such part of the period as you were in existence)
                           was effectively
                           connected with the conduct of a trade or business in the United States.
                           
                            Designation agreement.
                                   An interest recipient, including a recipient of points, can designate a qualified person to file Form 1098 and to
                           provide a statement to the payer
                           of record.
                           
                            
                                   A qualified person is either (a) a trade or business in which the interest recipient is under common control as specified
                           in Regulations section
                           1.414(c)-2 or (b) a designee, named by the lender of record or by a qualified person, who either was involved in the original
                           loan transaction or is a
                           subsequent purchaser of the loan.
                           
                            
                                   A lender of record is the person who, at the time the loan is made, is named as the lender on the loan documents and
                           whose right to receive payment
                           from the payer of record is secured by the payer of record's principal residence. Even if the lender of record intends to
                           sell or otherwise transfer
                           the loan to a third party after the close of the transaction, such intention does not change who is the lender of record.
                           
                            
                                   The agreement must be in writing, identify the mortgage(s) and calendar years for which the qualified person must
                           report, and be signed by the
                           designator and the designee. A designee may report points on Form 1098 (as having been paid directly by the payer of record)
                           only if the designation
                           agreement contains the designator's representation that it did not lend such amount to the payer of record as part of the
                           overall transaction. The
                           agreement need not be filed with the IRS, but the designator must keep a copy of it for 4 years after the close of the year
                           in which the loan is made.
                           
                            
                                   A designated qualified person is subject to any applicable penalties as if it were the interest recipient. Thus, a
                           designator is relieved from
                           liability for any applicable penalties.
                           
                            
                        
                           
                              
                                 Nonresident Alien Interest Payer You must file Form 1098 to report interest paid by a nonresident alien only if all or part of the security for the mortgage
                           is real property
                           located in the United States.
                           
                         Report the interest based on the following.
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 If the interest is paid within the United States, you must request from the payer the applicable Form W-8 (withholding certificate)
                                    as
                                    described in Regulations section 1.1441-1(e)(1).
                                 
                                 If the interest is paid outside the United States, you must satisfy the documentary evidence standard described in Regulations
                                    section
                                    1.6049-5(c).
                                  
                           
                         
                        
                        The payer of record is the individual carried on your books and records as the principal borrower. If your books and records
                           do not indicate which
                           borrower is the principal borrower, you must designate one.
                           
                         If you permit a subsequent purchaser of the property to assume the loan without releasing the first purchaser from personal
                           liability, the
                           subsequent purchaser is the payer of record. Such subsequent purchaser's name, address, and TIN must appear on Form 1098.
                           
                         Multiple borrowers.
                                Even though there may be more than one borrower on the mortgage, you are required to prepare Form 1098 only for the
                        payer of record, and only if
                        such payer of record is an individual, showing the total interest received on the mortgage. Even if an individual is a coborrower,
                        no Form 1098 is
                        required unless the payer of record is also an individual.
                        
                         
                        
                        Report all interest received on the mortgage as received from the borrower, except as explained under Seller Payments below. For
                           example, if the borrower's mother makes payments on the mortgage, the interest received from the mother is reportable on Form
                           1098 as received from
                           the borrower.
                           
                         However, do not report mortgage interest received from any governmental unit (or any subsidiary agency). For example, do not
                           report any interest
                           received as housing assistance payments from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) on mortgages insured under
                           section 235 of the
                           National Housing Act.
                           
                         
                        
                        Do not report in box 1 of Form 1098 any interest paid by a seller on a purchaser's/borrower's mortgage, such as on a “buy-down” mortgage. For
                           example, if a real estate developer deposits an amount in escrow and tells you to draw on that escrow account to pay interest
                           on the borrower's
                           mortgage, do not report in box 1 the interest received from that escrow account. Also, do not report in box 1 any lump sum
                           paid by a real estate
                           developer to pay interest on a purchaser's/borrower's mortgage. However, if you wish, you may use box 4 to report to the payer
                           of record any interest
                           paid by the seller. See Points below for information about reporting seller-paid points in box 2.
                           
                         
                        You must report certain points paid for the purchase of the payer of record's principal residence on Form 1098. You must report
                           points if the
                           points, plus other interest on the mortgage, are $600 or more. For example, if a borrower pays points of $300 and other mortgage
                           interest of $300, the
                           lender has received $600 of mortgage interest and must file Form 1098.
                           
                         Report the total points on Form 1098 for the year of closing regardless of the accounting method you use to report the points
                           as income for federal
                           income tax purposes.
                           
                         Who must report points.
                                   The lender of record or a qualified person must file Form 1098 to report all points paid by the payer of record in
                           connection with the purchase of
                           the principal residence. If a designation agreement is in effect for a mortgage, only the person designated in the agreement
                           must file Form 1098 to
                           report all points on that mortgage. See Designation agreement earlier.
                           
                            
                                   Amounts received directly or indirectly by a mortgage broker are treated as points to the same extent they would be
                           treated as points if paid to
                           and retained by the lender of record. The lender of record must report those points paid to a mortgage broker.
                           
                            Reportable points.
                                   Report on Form 1098 points that meet all the following conditions.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    They are clearly designated on the Uniform Settlement Statement (Form HUD-1) as points; for example, “loan origination fee” (including
                                       amounts for VA and FHA loans), “loan discount,” “discount points,” or “points.”
                                    
                                    They are computed as a percentage of the stated principal loan amount.
                                    They are charged under an established business practice of charging points in the area where the loan was issued and do not
                                       exceed the
                                       amount generally charged in that area.
                                    
                                    They are paid for the acquisition of the payer of record's principal residence, and the loan is secured by that residence. You
                                       may rely on a signed written statement from the payer of record that states that the proceeds of the loan are for the purchase
                                       of the payer of
                                       record's principal residence.
                                    
                                    They are paid directly by the payer of record. Points are paid directly if either a or b below applies.
                                       
                                     
                                       
                                          
                                             The payer of record provides funds that were not borrowed from the lender of record for this purpose as part of the overall
                                                transaction. The
                                                funds may include down payments, escrow deposits, earnest money applied at closing, and other funds actually paid over by
                                                the payer of record at or
                                                before closing.
                                             
                                             The seller pays points on behalf of the payer of record. Points paid by the seller to the interest recipient on behalf of
                                                the payer of
                                                record are treated as paid to the payer of record and then paid directly by the payer of record to the interest recipient.
                                              
                                   Report points paid under 5a and 5b on the payer of record's Form 1098 in box 2.
                           
                            
                           
                           
                         Exceptions.
                                   Do not report as points on Form 1098 amounts paid:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    For loans to improve a principal residence;
                                    For loans to purchase or improve a residence that is not the payer of record's principal residence, such as a second home,
                                       vacation,
                                       investment, or trade or business property even though the borrower may be entitled to amortize points paid for the purchase
                                       of a second home, vacation
                                       home, etc. and deduct them over the life of the loan;
                                    
                                    For a home equity or line of credit loan, even if secured by the principal residence;
                                    For a refinancing (but see Construction loans below), including a loan to refinance a debt owed by the borrower under a land
                                       contract, a contract for deed, or similar forms of seller financing;
                                    
                                    In lieu of items ordinarily stated separately on the Form HUD-1, such as appraisal fees, inspection fees, title fees, attorney
                                       fees, and
                                       property taxes; and
                                    
                                    To acquire a principal residence to the extent the points are allocable to an amount of principal in excess of $1 million. Construction loans.
                                Amounts paid on a loan to construct a residence (construction loan) or to refinance a loan incurred to construct a
                        residence are reportable on Form
                        1098 as points if they:
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 Are clearly designated on the loan documents as points incurred in connection with the loan, such as loan origination fees,
                                    loan discount,
                                    discount points, or points;
                                 
                                 Are computed as a percentage of the stated principal loan amount;
                                 Conform to an established business practice of charging points in the area where the loan is issued and do not exceed the
                                    amount generally
                                    charged in the area;
                                 
                                 Are paid in connection with a loan incurred by the payer of record to construct (or refinance construction of) a residence
                                    that is to be
                                    used, when completed, as the principal residence of the payer of record;
                                 
                                 Are paid directly by the payer of record; and
                                 Are not allocable to an amount of principal in excess of $1 million. 
                                Amounts paid to refinance a loan to construct a residence are not points to the extent they are allocable to debt
                        that exceeds the debt incurred to
                        construct the residence.
                        
                         
                        
                        Report prepaid interest (other than points) only in the year in which it properly accrues.
                           
                         Example.
                                   Interest received on December 20, 2007, that accrues by December 31 but is not due until January 31, 2008, is reportable
                           on the 2007 Form 1098.
                           
                            Exception.
                                   Interest received during the current year that will properly accrue in full by January 15 of the following year may
                           be considered received in the
                           current year, at your option, and is reportable on Form 1098 for the current year. However, if any part of an interest payment
                           accrues after January
                           15, then only the amount that properly accrues by December 31 of the current year is reportable on Form 1098 for the current
                           year. For example, if you
                           receive a payment of interest that accrues for the period December 20 through January 20, you cannot report any of the interest
                           that accrues after
                           December 31 for the current year. You must report the interest that accrues after December 31 on Form 1098 for the following
                           year.
                           
                            
                        
                           
                              
                                 Reimbursement of Overpaid Interest You are required to report reimbursements of overpaid interest aggregating $600 or more to a payer of record on Form 1098.
                           You are not required to
                           report reimbursements of overpaid interest aggregating less than $600 unless you are otherwise required to file Form 1098.
                           That is, if you did not
                           receive at least $600 of mortgage interest during the year of reimbursement from the person to whom you made the reimbursement,
                           you are not required
                           to file Form 1098 merely to report a reimbursement of less than $600. However, you may report any reimbursement of overpaid
                           interest that you are not
                           otherwise required to report, but you are subject to the rules in these instructions.
                           
                         The reimbursement must be reported on Form 1098 for the year in which the reimbursement is made. No change should be made
                           to the prior year Form
                           1098 because of this reimbursement. Report the total reimbursement even if it is for overpayments made in more than 1 year.
                           
                         To be reportable, the reimbursement must be a refund or credit of mortgage interest received in a prior year that was required
                           to be reported for
                           that prior year by any interest recipient on Form 1098. Only the person who makes the reimbursement is required to report
                           it on Form 1098. For
                           example, if you bought a mortgage on which interest was overpaid in a prior year, you made a reimbursement of the overpaid
                           interest, and the previous
                           mortgage holder was required to report mortgage interest on Form 1098 in the prior year, you must file Form 1098 to report
                           the reimbursement because
                           you are the one making the reimbursement.
                           
                         Example.
                                   In 2005, you received $5,000 of mortgage interest from the payer/borrower and reported that amount on Form 1098 for
                           2005. In 2007, you determined
                           that interest due on the mortgage for 2005 was $4,500, and the payer/borrower had overpaid $500. You refunded the $500 overpayment
                           to the
                           payer/borrower in 2007. If you received $600 or more of interest on the mortgage from the payer/borrower in 2007, you must
                           report the $500 refund in
                           box 3 of the 2007 Form 1098. No change to the 2005 Form 1098 is required. If, instead of refunding the $500 overpayment, you
                           credited the
                           payer/borrower's 2007 mortgage interest payments due, $500 is still shown in box 3, and the interest received from the payer/borrower
                           in 2007 shown in
                           box 1 must include the $500 credit.
                           
                            Overpayment and reimbursement in same year.
                                   If you reimburse interest in the same year it is overpaid, do not report the overpayment on Form 1098 as interest
                           received during the year or as a
                           reimbursement of overpaid interest. For example, if the borrower paid $5,000 and you reimbursed $500 of that amount in 2007,
                           enter $4,500 in box 1 as
                           interest paid by the borrower. Do not enter the $500 reimbursement in box 3.
                           
                            Interest on reimbursement.
                                   A financial institution (or its middleman) that pays interest of $10 or more on the reimbursement must report that
                           interest (under section 6049) on
                           Form 1099-INT, Interest Income. Others that pay interest of $600 or more on the reimbursement must report that interest (under
                           section 6041) on Form
                           1099-INT. Do not include such interest on Form 1098.
                           
                            
                        
                           
                              
                                 Statements to Payers of Record If you are required to file Form 1098, you must provide a statement to the payer of record. For more information about the
                           requirement to furnish a
                           statement to the payer of record, see part M in the 2007 General Instructions for Forms 1099, 1098, 5498, and W-2G.
                           
                         
                        
                           
                              
                                 Recipient's/Lender's Name and Address Box Enter the name and address of the filer of Form 1098. Use this same name and address on Form 1096.
                           
                         
                        
                           
                              
                                 Payer's/Borrower's Name and Address Box Enter the name and address of the person who paid the interest (payer of record).
                           
                         
                           
                        Be careful to enter the recipient's and payer's information in the proper boxes.
                        
                      
                        
                        The account number is required if you have multiple accounts for a payer/borrower for whom you are filing more than one Form
                           1098. Additionally,
                           the IRS encourages you to designate an account number for all Forms 1098 that you file. See part L in the 2007 General Instructions
                           for Forms 1099,
                           1098, 5498, and W-2G.
                           
                         
                        
                           
                              
                                 Box 1. Mortgage Interest Received From Payer(s)/Borrower(s) Enter the interest (not including points) received on the mortgage from borrowers during the calendar year. Include interest
                           on a mortgage, a home
                           equity loan, or a line of credit or credit card loan secured by real property. Do not include government subsidy payments,
                           seller payments, or prepaid
                           interest that does not meet the exception explained under Prepaid Interest on page 1098-3. Interest includes prepayment penalties and late
                           charges unless the late charges are for a specific mortgage service.
                           
                         
                           
                        A cooperative housing corporation that receives any cash part of a patronage dividend from the National Consumer
                        Cooperative Bank must reduce the interest to be reported on each tenant-stockholder's Form 1098 by a proportionate amount
                        of the cash payment in the
                        year the cooperative receives the cash payment. See Rev. Proc. 94-40, 1994-1 C.B. 711.
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              
                                 Box 2. Points Paid on Purchase of Principal Residence Enter points paid on the purchase of the payer of record's principal residence. For an explanation of reportable points, see
                           Points on
                           page 1098-2.
                           
                         
                        
                           
                              
                                 Box 3. Refund of Overpaid Interest Enter the total refund or credit of a prior year(s) overpayment of interest. See Reimbursement of Overpaid Interest on page 1098-3.
                           
                         
                        Enter any other item you wish to report to the payer, such as the address of the property that secures the debt, real estate
                           taxes, insurance, or
                           if you are a collection agent, the name of the person for whom you collected the interest. This box is optional and is provided
                           only for your
                           convenience. You do not have to report to the IRS any information provided in this box.
                           
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