It may be to your advantage to consider her your tenant for 2007. You would record her payment to you as rental income, and then you could deduct half of the mortgage interest, half real estate taxes, half of the utilities, half the repairs and maintenance etc. on Schedule E. Plus, you can depreciate 1/2 of the house for the year 2007.
You would likely generate a loss that would reduce your taxes.
You would be able to get some deductions on Schedule E that you cannot get otherwise (such as 1/2 of the utilities, which cannot be deducted for your personal residence).
You would be able to get deductions on Schedule E even if you do not have enough personal deductions to itemize on Schedule A.If a roommate contributes toward my mortgage in my primary residence, is this taxable income for me?
Don't pick up her reimbursements as taxable income. If anything, report the amount of mortgage interest you actually paid (50%) as an itemized deduction on Schedule A...if that makes you feel better.
it depends. you can use it as tax but y would you want to?
keep cash better
Sharing of expenses as roommates has no tax consequences for either of you. You don't claim it as income.
Unless she actually made half of the mortgage payments herself directly to the lender, you are entitled to the full deduction for mortgage interest. Ditto for property taxes.
get some real advice, don't look here for it for goodness sakes!
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