Monday, February 19, 2007

PMI (or How I Learned to Stop Hating my Lender and Loving Tax Reform)




Back in the good ol' days, if a home buyer did not have at least a 20% downpayment towards the purchase of a property, the mortgage lender stuck a little gift called PMI (private mortgage insurance) onto the home buyer's monthly mortgage payment. This PMI was, in fact, an insurance policy to protect the LENDER from possible future default on the loan by the BORROWER. But the borrower was forced to pay for the insurance policy, and received no benefit from having that insurance policy applied to his/her loan. The additional charge on the monthly mortgage payment could easily run anywhere from 0.19% to 0.9% of the total loan amount. Things were rather dismal for the borrower when it came to PMI.


Until now.


Effective in 2007, a tax reform measure regarding PMI now gives the borrower a reason to smile just a little bit. Here's the scoop: if household income is less than $100,000, mortgage insurance premiums are now tax deductible, just like mortgage INTEREST is deductible. Hoorah! This tax reform change applies to PMI, as well as FHA mortgage insurance and the VA funding fee. The purchase of a home or the refinance loans that involve such mortgage premiums must have closed on or after January 1, 2007.


For more detailed information on how this tax change might be helpful to you, please talk with your tax advisor, or contact my local (Winnetka) Baird & Warner mortgage expert, Reed Brunzell, at 847-446-1855.

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