This article was published on:
10/01/2007

Loan forgiveness
After the Short Sale: Taxing What Isn't There
Too often, real estate practitioners are unaware of the
tax liabilities arising from the cancellation of debt and fail to advise
their clients accordingly.
BY LANCE CHURCHILL
You’ve just spent several stressful weeks
helping your beleaguered seller negotiate a short sale. You’ve helped
demonstrate to the lender that the home’s price has fallen and that to close
the deal with the new buyer, the lender will have to forgive $10,000 of the
seller’s outstanding mortgage loan not covered by the sale proceeds. But you
did it, and now everyone is happy. The buyer gets a home, the lender avoids
a messy foreclosure, and the seller walks away with no further financial
burdens. Well, not quite.
Whenever real estate is sold, whether in a
standard transaction, a short sale or a foreclosure auction, there are
potential tax consequences for the seller. In this little scenario, the
seller may still owe taxes to Uncle Sam — both in the form of capital gains
on the home and on the unpaid portion of the mortgage. Yet, too often, real
estate practitioners are unaware of the tax liabilities arising from the
cancellation of debt and fail to advise their clients accordingly. Don’t
make that mistake with your clients.
How Debt Forgiveness Works
With a short sale, the lender has three
possible ways to handle the deficiency balance, which is the portion of the
mortgage debt not covered by the sale of the home. First, the lender can
attempt to collect the deficiency balance from the seller
after the property has closed. Second,
the lender may require the seller to sign an unsecured promissory note for
the deficiency balance
as a condition of agreeing to the short
sale. If the new note is for less than the balance of the original debt, the
difference would be considered canceled, or forgiven, debt. Third, the
lender may agree to cancel the entire deficiency balance.
On the surface, option three would be seem to
be the best alternative for a seller. However, the IRS considers any
canceled mortgage debt ordinary income. This means that the amount forgiven
is taxed at the same rate — somewhere between 15 percent and 30 percent — as
the sellers’ salaries. In addition, because the IRS requires the lender to
file a 1099-C form stating the amount of the canceled debt, Uncle Sam will
have a record of the exact amount of the debt that was cancelled. A seller
will also receive a copy of the 1099-C to use in filing income taxes. The
seller’s home state would also consider the cancelled debt as ordinary
income.
4 Exceptions to the Rule
The IRS does recognize four situations in which
cancellation of debt will not result in tax liability for the seller. A
seller may avoid tax liability:
- When the borrower receives a bankruptcy
discharge and the deficiency was included in the bankruptcy
- When the borrower is insolvent at the
time of the cancellation of the debt. Insolvency would occur when a
borrower’s liabilities exceed assets. Note that seller would have to
prove this insolvency to the IRS when filing a tax return.
- When the debt was secured by a
nonrecourse loan. Under a nonrecourse loan, the lender does not have the
legal right to collect a deficiency judgment from any assets of the
debtor not pledged to secure the loan. While most home mortgages are do
not fall into this category, purchase money loans on a person’s
residence are nonrecourse in some states.
- When the tax liability from the
cancellation of debt on an
investment property can be
offset against other business liabilities and expenses. This exception
does not apply to properties occupied as a residence by the mortgagor.
In many short sales, a seller would be able to
qualify under the first two of these exemptions, especially since it was
almost certainly necessary to show financial hardship in order to convince
the lender to agree to a short sale. However, it is the seller’s
responsibility to notify the IRS why the amount in the 1099-C should not be
counted as ordinary income. Otherwise, the IRS will consider the forgiven
debt as income and penalize the seller for unpaid taxes.
What to Tell Clients
To ensure that your sellers don’t run afoul of
the IRS and blame you, you should notify all sellers in writing that they
should seek professional tax advice regarding the possible tax consequences
of selling their home.
While you certainly don’t want to give specific
tax advice, you should also alert short sellers to the basic facts about the
tax consequences of short sales. With the current foreclosure crisis in this
country, many, including NAR, are working to reverse this law. However,
until that time, real estate sales associates must be aware of the potential
tax issues for a seller in a short sale.
Editor’s note:
The NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® has long
worked to change the tax laws and eliminate this “phantom
tax” on income. Currently NAR is
supporting the passage of S. 1394, the Mortgage Cancellation Tax Relief Act,
which would repeal the law that requires home owners to pay taxes on
forgiven debt for their principal residents as part of a short sale or
foreclosure.
Learn more about this topic
at REALTOR.org.
About the Author: Lance Churchill is vice
president of
FrontLine Seminars,
which educates and certifies real estate practitioners in foreclosure,
preforeclosure, and short sales. Visit the company's Web site for
information about courses on foreclosures and short sales. It's blog,
FrontlineForeclosureForum.com,
includes a discussion board for real estate practitioners working with
foreclosures and short sales. Churchill can be reached at 208/846-9644 or
lance@frontlinescompanies.com.