For release:
Thursday, March 25, 2010
C.A.R. applauds Gov. Schwarzenegger’s signing Homebuyer Tax Credit
legislation into law
LOS ANGELES (March 25) – The CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.)
today praised California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger for his leadership
in signing the Homebuyer Tax Credit legislation into law.
“We are pleased that Governor Schwarzenegger recognized the positive impact
the tax credit will have for families hoping to buy their first home,” said
C.A.R. President Steve Goddard. “Successful passage of this legislation was
the result of our efforts in Sacramento over the last several weeks as
REALTORS® and our team in the capital worked for the bill’s passage before
it landed on the governor’s desk earlier this week.”
California’s previous home buyer tax credit program was so successful that
it ran out of tax credits by the end of June 2009, eight months before it
was set to expire and just as housing markets appeared to be turning a
corner. Unlike last year’s legislation, the Homebuyer Tax Credit signed
into law today adds a tax credit for the purchase of an existing home by a
first-time home buyer.
“The positive impact of the home buyer tax credit at the federal level is
clear,” Goddard said. “Nearly 40 percent of first-time home buyers said
they would not have purchased a home if the federal tax credit for
first-time home buyers was not offered, according to C.A.R. research
conducted last year. We expect the state tax credit for home buyers to have
the same impact.”
AB 183 will provide $200 million for home buyer tax credits, allocating
$100 million for qualified first-time home buyers of existing homes and
$100 million for purchasers of new, or previously unoccupied, homes. The
eligible taxpayer who purchases a qualified personal residence on and after
May 1, 2010, and on or before Dec. 31, 2010, or who purchases a qualified
principal residence on and after Dec. 31, 2010, and before Aug. 1, 2011,
pursuant to an enforceable contract executed on or before Dec. 31, 2010,
will be able to take the allowed tax credit. The credit is equal to the
lesser of 5 percent of the purchase price or $10,000, in equal installments
over three consecutive years. Under AB 183, purchasers will be required to
live in the home for at least two years or forfeit the credit (i.e., repay
it to the state).
“AB 183 also will significantly contribute to efforts to stimulate jobs
creation within California's housing market by helping to incentivize
first-time home buyers to purchase homes that have been abandoned,
foreclosed upon, and returned to the lender; or have been sitting on the
market for extended periods of time,” Goddard said. “It is these homes that
will require substantial rehabilitation by the new owners, which will in
turn generate a tremendous increase in jobs and accessory purchases
connected to home improvement activities.”
Leading the way…® in California real estate for more than 100 years, the
CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (www.car.org) is one of the largest
state trade organizations in the United States, with nearly 150,000 members
dedicated to the advancement of professionalism in real estate. C.A.R. is
headquartered in Los Angeles.
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