A buck's still a buck where I come from....so unless your deduction is significant I would not bother.
You don't put the word "boat" on the tax form. You use the 1099 form from the mortgage company that you paid the interest to.My accountant in Florida told me whenever you put the word "boat" on a tax return for any reason you are screaming to be audited. Just saying.
In post 2, Weinie did not give us the source of his post, but any IRS booklet on mortgage interest will have the same rules spelled out for all you nay-sayers. UPDATE- th pdf finally downloaded. It is the IRS publication, Read it for yourselves, folks. Thanks Weinie.... I figure if it's all legal and on the up-and-up then I wouldn't worry about doing it. I'll have to say at this point, based on the fact that we don't use it as a second home, we'll probably pass on claiming it as a second home. Thanks everyone.
It's a given, Stu :dance:...Oh, "warm honey" isn't in the rules??? Why not?![]()
He's right that you COULD, if your cirmstances meet the test, but if you can't itemized (interest paid), then you can't do it anyway.... A fellow boat owner says I should claim my boat as a second home. Is this even something worth considering? We're nowhere near being able to itemize.
Actually we are claiming a tax credit for the solar panel and wind generator we installed last year. 30% of installed cost (including labor). IRS rules specifically allow it for boats that are homes whether primary or secondaryIf you had a purchase money lien on the boat you could deduct the interest. It could also qualify for investment in some energy efficient appliances and other home benefits. I think Don is providing fair warning. The IRS might look a little closer when tax loopholes are used to help maintain boats so unless your deduction is significant I would not bother.
Exactly. What. Stu. Said.Been doing it for 35 years.
What's the issue?
"Boat" does NOT initiate anything. BS.
It's legal, given the stipulations: head, berth, stove and "warm honey."
Use it.
Oh, "warm honey" isn't in the rules???
Why not?![]()
Therein lies the issue. You need an address of the second home, not a marina address, a mooring or a driveway trailer. Minimizing taxes is fine. Avoiding taxes isn't.You don't put the word "boat" on the tax form. You use the 1099 form from the mortgage company that you paid the interest to.