The Mortgage Interest Deduction: Your Guide For The 2024 Tax Year

There isn’t much about taxes that gets people excited – except maybe the topic of deductions. Tax deductions are qualifying expenses you can subtract from your taxable income, lowering the amount you owe in taxes.

For homeowners with a mortgage, the mortgage interest deduction is one of several homeowner tax deductions provided by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Learn more about this valuable deduction and how to claim it on your taxes this year.

What Is The Mortgage Interest Deduction?

The mortgage interest deduction is a tax incentive for homeowners. This itemized deduction allows homeowners to subtract mortgage interest from their taxable income, lowering the amount of taxes they owe. Homeowners can also claim the deduction on loans for second homes providing that they stay within IRS limits.

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Mortgage Interest Tax Deduction Limit: How Much Can I Deduct?

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of 2017 changed individual income tax by lowering the mortgage deduction limit and limiting how much you can deduct from your taxable income.

Before the TCJA, the mortgage interest deduction limit was on loans up to $1 million. Now, the loan limit is $750,000. For the 2024 tax year, married couples filing jointly, single filers and heads of households can deduct up to $750,000. Married taxpayers filing separately can deduct up to $375,000 each.

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How To Claim The Home Mortgage Interest Deduction On Your 2024 Tax Return

Tax forms can help walk you through your filing step by step. To make sure you’re filing the right form, follow these steps to deduct mortgage interest on your 2024 taxes.

1. Choose A Standard Deduction Or An Itemized Deduction

If you choose the standard deduction, you won’t need to complete more forms and provide proof for all your deductions. It’s more of a “no questions asked” deduction, with a flat dollar amount that’s the same for most taxpayers. For the 2023 tax year, which will be the relevant year for April 2024 tax payments, the standard deduction is:

If you choose an itemized deduction, you can pick and choose from various deductions, including student loan interest, charitable contributions, medical expenses and more. To itemize your deductions, you must fill out additional forms to list each deduction. Be prepared to submit records, receipts and other documents that validate them.

Both standard and itemized deductions reduce your taxable income.

2. Get Your 1098 From Your Lender Or Mortgage Servicer

To fill out the information about the mortgage interest you paid during the tax year, you’ll need a Form 1098 from your mortgage lender or mortgage servicer (the company you make your mortgage payments to). Form 1098 details how much you paid in mortgage interest and points during the past year. It’s the proof you’ll need for your mortgage interest deduction.

Your lender or mortgage servicer will send the form at the beginning of the year your taxes are due. If you don’t receive it by mid-February, have questions we don’t cover in our 1098 guide or need help understanding your form, contact your lender.

3. Choose The Correct Tax Forms

You’ll need to itemize your deductions to claim the mortgage interest deduction. Since mortgage interest is an itemized deduction, you’ll use Schedule A (Form 1040), an itemized tax form, and the standard 1040 form.

Schedule A lists other deductions, including medical and dental expenses, taxes you paid and donations to charity. Go to the mortgage interest deduction part on line 8 and fill in the mortgage interest information from your 1098.

If you make money from the home – whether as a rental property or you use it for your business – you’ll need to fill out a different form because the way interest is deducted from your taxes depends on how you use the loan, not the loan itself.

You may need to use the following forms depending on your situation:

You’ll list mortgage interest as an expense on either of these forms. Whatever mortgage interest you’re deducting or form you’re using, it’s important to know what qualifies as interest and what doesn’t. If you’re itemizing your deductions, read on.

Mortgage Interest Deduction Example

So, how should you decide between itemizing or taking the standard deduction? It all comes down to which one saves you more money. If taking the standard deduction saves you more money than itemized deductions, take the standard deduction. If itemizing saves more, itemize your deductions. But you can’t claim both. You must choose one or the other.

Let’s say you’re a single filer and itemize the following deductions: mortgage interest ($8,000), student loan interest ($1,400) and charitable donations ($2,000) for a total of $11,400. You should take the $14,600 standard deduction because an additional $3,200 would be deducted from your taxable income.

Now let’s say your mortgage interest is $12,000, your charitable donations were $2,000 and your student loan interest was $1,600. Your itemized deductions would total $15,600. In this case, taking the itemized deduction would make more sense because it would reduce your taxable income by $700 more than the standard deduction.

If you’re paying someone to prepare your taxes, itemizing your taxes may cost more because itemizing requires more work. You should factor in the cost of tax preparation when deciding which approach will save you the most money.