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ArticlesInvest in Your Home — the new Home Renovation Tax Credit - Page 1
First Posted: March 23, 2009 While your tax focus now may be in compiling the information your accountant needs for your 2008 returns, it's also a good time, as spring approaches, to consider ways to fix up your home and take advantage of the new Home Renovation Tax Credit, which is good only for this year. To get the most out of your renovation dollars you may want to consider combining the tax credit with some energy-efficient home improvements that qualify for as much as $5,000 in tax-free federal and provincial grants. You can save even more if the alterations to your home qualify for the medical expense tax credit. (See right-hand box for examples of how the renovation tax break works in combination with the ecoENERGY grants and medical expense credit.) The renovation credit is only available on work performed or goods purchased after Jan. 27 this year and before Feb. 1, 2010. Money spent under a contract signed before Jan. 28 isn't eligible for the credit. The renovations must be done on a house, cottage or condominium that is owned by and the principal residence of you or one or more of your family members. If you renovate both a home and a cottage, the maximum $10,000 is the total amount you can spend on both properties to still get the credit. You cannot spend the maximum on each property. Taxpayer eligibility for the credit is family based. In terms of the tax credit, a family is considered to be an individual or an individual and his or her spouse or common-law partner, and their children under the age of 18. A family is allowed one tax credit that may be shared among the related individuals. If two or more families share the ownership of an eligible dwelling, each family will be eligible for its own separate credit that will be calculated on their respective eligible expenditures. You may claim the credit only for projects that are integral to the dwelling, such as:
You may not claim the credit for routine repairs and maintenance, expenditures that are not integral to the dwelling, furniture, appliances, construction equipment, tools, carpet cleaning and financing costs. |
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