A taxpayer does not qualify for the first-time homebuyer credit of up to $8,000 if the home is purchased from an ancestor or other related party, including a parent. In one case, a taxpayer who bought his home from his parents claimed the credit because he did not know about this specific eligibility rule. In all other respects, he qualified; he was a first-time homebuyer with income below the credit threshold.
He argued that he was entitled to the credit because the IRS did not make this specific rule clear:
The Tax Court rejected the taxpayer’s argument. The ban on purchases from related parties is a statutory rule that the Court cannot change or ignore. The fact that the taxpayer’s accountant failed to learn the details of the credit was unfortunate for the taxpayer. Neither the IRS’s omission of this information nor the accountant’s failure to learn it provides any legal basis for allowing the credit.
Source: Cary Allen Nievinski v. Commissioner; T.C. Summ. Op. 2011-10
A business method of accounting requiring income to be reported when earned and expenses to be deducted when incurred. However, deductions generally may not be claimed until economic performance has occurred.