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About 1.4 million first-time homebuyers have qualified for the credit through August. The National Association of Realtors estimates that 350,000 of them would not have purchased their homes without the credit. "The housing market would not have moved without this tax credit," said Lucien Salvant, spokesman for the National Association of Realtors. "It's a fragile recovery, which is why we think it should be extended." The IRS began special screening procedures for tax returns claiming the credit after it was enacted, said IRS spokesman Frank Keith. For example, taxpayers who previously claimed the mortgage interest deduction would warrant a second look if they claimed the first-time homebuyers credit, he said. Processing claims presented special challenges for the IRS during the spring tax filing season because homebuyers were eligible for different credits, depending on when they purchased their homes.
First-time homebuyers who purchased homes in 2008 were eligible for only $7,500 in tax credits, and the credits had to be repaid over the following 15 years. Those who bought homes in 2009 were eligible for up to $8,000, and there was no requirement to repay the money. Also, people who bought homes in 2009 were allowed to claim the credit on their 2008 tax returns. An audit by the agency's inspector general found that 93 percent of the returns claiming credits for homes bought in 2009 were coded incorrectly, meaning those taxpayers could be incorrectly identified as liable for repaying the credit. The audit was released in September by the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration. It reviewed 47,276 electronically filed returns. The IRS, in a response to the audit, said it plans to track the returns and confirm that taxpayers are liable to repay the credit before pursuing them.
[Associated
Press;
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