Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plan to buy a second house under my name for my child to live in and rent it to him and claim it as an investment property. However there are of course higher rates associated with a loan on an investment property. Can I instead cosign a loan with my son, and since he is the primary house resident, get the non-investment interest rate and claim the house as an investment propoerty on my taxes?
Mortgage and tax fraud - a two-fer.
I wouldn't worry so much about it either. The mortgage company charges a higher rate for investment oroperty because if yo get into financial trouble you are more likely to default on a investment mortgage over your home mortgage. I still think the bigger problem is saddling son with a debt and no ownership of the home. Why not actually consign for him and both go on the deed? If that doesn't work out then you can rent it to a third party, no fraud involved.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why would an IRS auditor care? She has to claim the income and deduct the expenses but the auditor does not care what interest rate the mortgagee charged. In fact, she could deduct more with the higher interest rate she is trying to avoid.Anonymous wrote:Try to explain this to an IRS auditor.
Yeah, it's possible this is only mortgage fraud and not tax evasion. Which I assume is what OP was originally asking. OP does not seem to be worried about the "committing fraud" aspect of it.
Anonymous wrote:why would an IRS auditor care? She has to claim the income and deduct the expenses but the auditor does not care what interest rate the mortgagee charged. In fact, she could deduct more with the higher interest rate she is trying to avoid.Anonymous wrote:Try to explain this to an IRS auditor.
Anonymous wrote:why would an IRS auditor care? She has to claim the income and deduct the expenses but the auditor does not care what interest rate the mortgagee charged. In fact, she could deduct more with the higher interest rate she is trying to avoid.Anonymous wrote:Try to explain this to an IRS auditor.
why would an IRS auditor care? She has to claim the income and deduct the expenses but the auditor does not care what interest rate the mortgagee charged. In fact, she could deduct more with the higher interest rate she is trying to avoid.Anonymous wrote:Try to explain this to an IRS auditor.
Anonymous wrote:Mortgage and tax fraud - a two-fer.
+1
Mortgage and tax fraud - a two-fer.
Anonymous wrote:Plan to buy a second house under my name for my child to live in and rent it to him and claim it as an investment property. However there are of course higher rates associated with a loan on an investment property. Can I instead cosign a loan with my son, and since he is the primary house resident, get the non-investment interest rate and claim the house as an investment propoerty on my taxes?