homestead taxes
We have almost made the decision to be snowbirds in TV. I will be spending much more time in TV than my husband. Does anyone have any experience with claiming a homestead in TV for 1 spouse and another homestead in our home state for the other? SuziQ
|
We are, one of you claims in each state
|
I'm assuming that you file jointly on federal and then you each file a separate for the state taxes. Is this true? Do you substantially save on your taxes that way? SuziQ
|
|
i would let my own tax guy answer that not an open question on TOTV
|
I understand---thank you very much SuziQ
|
Homestead taxes
Quote:
|
I believe you have to have your car registered and licensed in Florida in order to have the homestead exemption and live here at least 183 days a year. You would have to have a Florida driver license, too.
|
no 183 day rule
How many days out of the year does someone have to live in Florida to be eligible for homestead exemption?
You must reside on your homestead property as your primary residence. However, there is no particular amount of time you have to be physically present on the property to qualify for homestead exemption. To qualify for homestead exemption, you have to declare Florida as your permanent residence. For example, if you vote, you must vote in Florida. If you drive, you must have a Florida driver’s license. When you file your federal income tax, you would file from Florida . There is no specific amount of time you must spend in Florida . |
Quote:
|
Homestead taxes
Quote:
The 183 days of residency has to do with paying state income taxes in the state you are moving from. If you go back to whatever state that is and they have a state income tax you will be considered a resident of that state for income tax purposes if you are there for more than half the year. |
Are you absolutely sure about that? I thought you had to live in the state for a certain amount of days????
|
Suzie
As stated in some previous posts, the issue will not be Florida, it will come from your current home state. Check with tax counsel where you live now. The big issue is you will have to show "intent" that you are doing what you are doing not to circumvent the tax laws in your current state. ( Living in florida for 183 days shows intent..there is no magic number required by law...teh same applies to getting a drivers license, voter card, and filing your federal return from florida) If your husband remains on the deed in your home state, the burden of proof becomes more difficult.... you also need to look forward as to how you will be filing your state taxes in your current state...and make no slip ups such as filing a federal joint return with your current state address or claiming homested exemption in both Florida and your former state. High tax states (ie NY ) monitor state returns for these type of situations and its easy for them to flag and ask for more information. If you do it right , it can be well worth the time and trouble....you really wont know until about 9-12 months after you file your first state tax return from when you made the move. |
This linked article is on the same subject and is very interesting to read and think about.
Separate Homestead Exemptions for Married Couples « Property Tax in Florida |
Here is a link to a Florida county website that explains everything clearly and specifically states that there are no requirements for a number of days of physical presence to qualify.
Also note the caveat that you cannot continue to claim a homestead here if your spouse claims a homestead on a home in another state that you own jointly. And according to the opinion expressed in buggyone's previous link, even the legality of claiming separate homestead exemptions for homes owned individually is up in the air right now. |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:12 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Search Engine Optimisation provided by
DragonByte SEO v2.0.32 (Pro) -
vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.