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HR 3204 99th Congress House Taxation Accounting Capital gains tax Depreciation and amortization Home equity conversion Housing and Housing Finance Housing finance Housing for the aged Income tax Social Welfare Tax deductions Tax exclusion

Home Equity Conversions Act of 1985

Introduced: August 1, 1985 See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 2 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Aug 1, 1985
Referred to House Committee on Ways and Means.
Aug 1, 1985
Introduced in House
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

Home Equity Conversions Act of 1985 - Amends the Internal Revenue Code to permit the owner of a residence who has attained the age of 55 to enter into a sale-leaseback transaction with a prospective purchaser of the residence and retain occupancy rights to the residence under a lease requiring a fair rental. Requires the owner of the residence to have owned and used the residence as a principal residence for three of the five years immediately preceding the sale. Allows the purchaser of such residence an income tax deduction for depreciation of the residence.

Permits an owner of a residence who sells such residence under a sale-leaseback arrangement to claim the one-time exclusion from income of gain from the sale of a principal residence by an individual aged 55 or older. Excludes from the gross income of such owner the value of any occupancy rights or fair market price discount attributable to retained occupancy rights received in a sale-leaseback transaction.

Permits the use of the installment sales method of accounting in reporting gain from the sale of a residence under a sale-leaseback agreement. Provides a special rule for the treatment of an annuity purchased for the owner-occupant under a sale-leaseback transaction.

Establishes a legal presumption that a sale-leaseback transaction for the sale of a residence under this Act is an activity engaged in for profit for purposes of the deductibility of certain related business expenses. Exempts the purchaser of a residence under a sale-leaseback agreement from rules disallowing income tax deductions for personal use of a residence.

Permits the purchaser in a sale-leaseback transaction of a principal residence to use the accelerated cost recovery system of depreciation.

What's happening now August 1, 1985

Referred to House Committee on Ways and Means.

 Committees of jurisdiction 1