Retirement & Financial Planning Report

If you invest in real estate that’s rented to low-income

tenants, you can qualify for tax credits. Tax credits

reduce your tax bill dollar-for-dollar, so they’re better

than tax deductions. Many brokers and financial planners

offer low-income housing partnerships.

Most deals are structured to provide investors with tax

credits around 10 percent, each year for 10 years. Say

you invest $20,000 in a low-income-housing partnership.

Once the properties are all rented to qualified tenants,

you might get a $2,000 (10 percent) tax credit that year.

You’ll get these credits until you have received ten years’

worth, or approximately $20,000 in tax credits.

Therefore, you can expect to just about break even from

the tax savings alone, in a low-income-housing deal. Any

additional money you receive, from sale of the properties,

will be profits. Thus, these investments offer the potential

for real estate gains with limited risk of loss.

Before you invest, screen the sponsor carefully: look for

evidence that partners in prior deals have received

satisfactory returns.