What Is A Short Sale?
If you’ve taken out a large mortgage, and perhaps refinanced to cover remodeling or other expenses, you may find yourself unable to keep up with your mortgage payment after a layoff, divorce or illness. More and more people are finding they need to sell their homes for less than they owe on the mortgages, known as a“short sale.”
Selling short is definitely better than foreclosure, which stays on your credit record for ten years. But it’s best to try to working thing out with your lender before going through the embarrassing and laborious process of selling your home on a short sale.
Before you put your home on the market for a short sale, it’s best to talk with a tax advisor about possible tax repercussions. It’s likely the IRS will consider the difference between the value at which you sell your home and the mortgage balance as “income” on which you’ll have to pay taxes.
An exception to this rule is if you can prove that you were “insolvent” – that your debts were bigger than your assets- before your mortgage lender agreed to a short sale of your property. A tax advisor will be able to tell you for sure whether you’d be considered insolvent by IRS standards.
If you can’t prove you’re insolvent, and the tax bill on a short sale would be more than you can pay, you may have to let the mortgage lender foreclose or declare bankruptcy.
