Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The first-time homebuyer tax credit no longer exists; the U.S. government offered this program for first-time homebuyers from 2008-2010.
For instance, Baltimore County, Maryland’s Homeowner’s Tax Credit Program has an annual household income cap of $60,000, and recipients’ assets — not counting the property that the tax ...
The first-time homebuyer tax credit encouraged many buyers to take the leap in 2010. Though the deadline to close on a qualifying home purchase was Sept. 30, 2010, those buyers who did qualify now ...
Besides extending the $8,000 tax credit for first time home buyers until April 2010, the Act also provides a $6,500 tax credit for current homeowners who purchase a home between November 6, 2009 and end of April 2010. [7] The Act also increases the income limits to qualify for the credit.
Could this month's dreadful home sales numbers prompt the feds to offer another homebuyer tax credit? Mum's the word on Capitol Hill, but HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan would not rule out the option ...
The first-time homebuyer credit is a new tax credit included in the recently enacted Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008. For homes purchased in 2008, the credit operates like an interest ...
While Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.), pictured left, wants to talk about renewing the homebuyer tax credit, just about everyone else is discussing whether or not to change the mortgage deduction. Over ...
The first-time home-buyer tax credit is set to expire. The New York Times reports that "After several disastrous months for home sales across the country, when volume dropped by 23%, the pace ...