Tired of Another Big IRS Bill? Here's a Solution

For years, Congress has extended very powerful tax credits to attract investment into areas that Congress wanted to promote. Tax credits are about three times more valuable than a tax deduction. When you get a tax deduction, each dollar of deduction saves an average taxpayer about 33 cents in taxes. However, tax credits are direct offsets to your taxes—each dollar of tax credit saves you a dollar in taxes. For the last several years, Congress has been offering tax credits for investments in affordable rental housing.
 
            As a result, investors have available a number of funds that invest in such properties (typically apartment complexes) and they can pass on all the benefits of property ownership, including the tax credits. There is, however, a limit to how many of these tax credits they can use. They can shelter up to $25,000 of income annually with credits. For most investors, an investment of approximately $64,000 will generate the maximum allowable amount of credits ($7,000 per year for an average taxpayer).
 
            Here’s how a typical investment pans out. The investor invests $64,000. Each year, for the next ten years, he received $7,000 in tax credits, a total saving of $70,000 on his $64,000 investment. Hopefully, the properties in the fund have done well and the investor may receive rental income and also appreciation on his investment. But even if the properties in the fund perform below expectation, this is one of the few investments where the tax credits alone will more than refund the investors total investment.
 
            Who are these investments suited for? They are generally suited for investors who want to pay less taxes and are currently paying $20,000 or more in annual taxes with a net worth of $250,000 (exclusive of residence). Additionally, the investor must be able to comfortably afford the illiquidity of a long-term investment and the risk of investing in real estate partnerships.

Author: Donald Conrad

Don started his career in the late 1970s at a nationally recognized mutual fund company and was recruited after three years by E.F. Hutton Company to work in the consumer retail division. During his thirteen-year tenure there, he spent two years specializing in and trading the 30-year treasury bond. For the last five years, he served as a senior vice president focusing his efforts in the Consulting Services division, maintaining offices in both Long Island and Manhattan.