If you own a home in the U.S., you are probably wondering which tax breaks still matter in 2026 and which are myths. If you feel unsure about what you can actually claim, you are not alone. This guide gives you a clear, step-by-step map of homeowner tax benefits and exactly how to use them.
Summary Most homeowners save taxes through mortgage interest, property taxes, and energy credits, but only if they itemize or meet specific rules. Use the HOME framework below to see what applies to you, then follow the checklist to claim it correctly.
Table of Contents
- Quick Answer: What Tax Benefits Do Homeowners Get?
- The HOME Framework: A Simple Model for 2026
- Step 1: Decide Whether to Itemize
- Mortgage Interest Deduction: The Biggest Lever
- Property Taxes and the SALT Cap
- Energy Credits: The Most Overlooked Savings
- Home Office, Medical, and Disaster Losses
- Selling Your Home: The Exclusion That Matters Most
- Step-by-Step: How to Claim Homeowner Tax Benefits
- Common Mistakes That Cost Homeowners Money
- FAQs
- Updated for 2026: What to Watch
- Power Checklist Summary
- Change Log
Quick Answer: What Tax Benefits Do Homeowners Get?
Short answer: Homeowners can reduce taxes in three main ways:
- Itemized deductions (mortgage interest and property taxes)
- Tax credits (energy efficiency improvements)
- Capital gains exclusion when selling a primary residence
Whether you can use these depends on your filing status, the loan you have, and whether you itemize instead of taking the standard deduction.
The HOME Framework: A Simple Model for 2026
To keep things clear, use this framework when evaluating any homeowner tax break:
H = Home-financing interest
O = Ownership taxes (property taxes)
M = Modern energy credits
E = Event-based deductions (home office, medical, disasters, sale exclusion)
Caption: Use HOME to decide which tax benefits apply to your situation in 2026.
This framework keeps you focused on benefits that actually survive in 2026 and avoids outdated or expired deductions.
Step 1: Decide Whether to Itemize
The most important gatekeeper is your choice between the standard deduction and itemized deductions. Many homeowners do not benefit from mortgage interest or property taxes because the standard deduction is larger.
Rule of thumb: If your total itemized deductions exceed the standard deduction, itemize. Otherwise, take the standard deduction.
Common itemized deductions for homeowners:
- Mortgage interest (Schedule A)
- Property taxes (Schedule A, subject to SALT cap)
- Charitable donations
- Medical expenses above the IRS threshold
Example comparison:
| Scenario | Itemized Total | Standard Deduction | Better Option | |---|---:|---:|---| | Single, $9,000 mortgage interest + $6,000 taxes | $15,000 | Higher standard deduction | Standard | | Married, $18,000 interest + $10,000 taxes + $3,000 charity | $31,000 | Standard deduction amount | Itemize |
If you are close, run both options in tax software or with a CPA.
Mortgage Interest Deduction: The Biggest Lever
Mortgage interest is the top tax benefit for many homeowners, but it only applies if you itemize and your loan qualifies.
Key rules to know:
- The mortgage must be secured by your primary or second home.
- Interest is deductible only up to the IRS loan balance limit (commonly $750,000 for newer loans, with older loans potentially grandfathered at a higher limit).
- Home equity loan interest is only deductible if the loan was used to buy, build, or substantially improve the home.
For full details, see the dedicated guide: Mortgage Interest Deduction in 2026.
What to keep: Form 1098 from your lender and any refinance documents.
Property Taxes and the SALT Cap
Property taxes are deductible as part of state and local taxes (SALT), but there is a cap on how much you can claim.
What is deductible:
- Real estate taxes based on assessed value (ad valorem taxes)
- Taxes paid by you, not by the seller
What is not deductible:
- HOA dues
- Transfer taxes or escrow fees
- Local assessments for improvements (sidewalks, water lines)
See the detailed breakdown here: Property Taxes and Deductions.
Energy Credits: The Most Overlooked Savings
Tax credits reduce your tax bill dollar-for-dollar, which makes them more powerful than deductions.
Two major federal credits in 2026:
- Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (Section 25C): For items like heat pumps, insulation, and energy-efficient windows, up to annual limits.
- Residential Clean Energy Credit (Section 25D): For solar, battery storage, geothermal, and similar systems, typically a percentage of costs.
These credits can be substantial, but you need receipts, product certifications, and installation dates.
Pro tip: If you plan upgrades, align them with your tax year and keep the manufacturer certification statement.
Home Office, Medical, and Disaster Losses
These benefits are real, but only apply in specific situations.
Home Office Deduction
Only available if you are self-employed and use a dedicated area exclusively for business. W-2 employees generally cannot claim a home office deduction.
Medical Home Improvements
If you make home changes for medical care (such as ramps or widened doorways), you may be able to deduct the portion that exceeds the value increase, subject to medical expense rules.
Casualty Losses
Casualty losses are generally deductible only if the loss is tied to a federally declared disaster. Documentation is required.
Selling Your Home: The Exclusion That Matters Most
If you sell your primary residence, you may exclude:
- Up to $250,000 in capital gains if single
- Up to $500,000 if married filing jointly
You typically need to meet the 2-year rule (living in the home for two of the last five years). This exclusion often saves more tax than annual deductions.
Step-by-Step: How to Claim Homeowner Tax Benefits
- Collect documents early. Form 1098, property tax bills, receipts for upgrades, and closing statements.
- Decide whether to itemize. If itemized deductions beat the standard deduction, itemize.
- Complete Schedule A. Add mortgage interest and property taxes, then apply the SALT cap.
- Claim energy credits. Use IRS Form 5695 for energy credits.
- Track home basis. Save receipts for improvements to reduce capital gains later.
- Store everything. Keep documents for at least three years (longer if you sell).
Mid-post CTA: Want a clean audit trail? Use a PDF organizer to merge tax documents into one file and label them by year.
Try the tool
Common Mistakes That Cost Homeowners Money
- Assuming everyone gets the mortgage interest deduction
- Claiming HOA fees as property taxes
- Forgetting to track home improvements for basis
- Double-counting taxes paid through escrow and at closing
- Missing the energy credit because of incomplete paperwork
FAQs
Is mortgage interest still deductible in 2026?
Yes, if you itemize and the loan meets IRS rules. The loan balance cap and use-of-funds rules still apply.
Can I deduct property taxes if I take the standard deduction?
No. Property taxes are part of itemized deductions on Schedule A.
Are PMI or mortgage insurance premiums deductible?
This deduction has expired in past years and is not currently available under federal law. Check for any new extensions before filing.
Can I deduct home repairs?
Not as an annual deduction. Repairs may be added to your home basis if they qualify as improvements, which can reduce capital gains when you sell.
How long should I keep records?
Keep tax documents for at least three years. Keep home improvement records until you sell the home.
Updated for 2026: What to Watch
Tax law around homeowner benefits can change, especially as temporary provisions expire. For 2026:
- Watch for updates to the SALT cap and mortgage interest limits.
- Check IRS inflation adjustments for energy credit limits.
- Track any congressional extensions to expiring deductions.
Power Checklist Summary
A Power Homeowner Tax Post should help you:
- Identify if you should itemize or take the standard deduction
- Use the HOME framework to filter real benefits from myths
- Claim deductions and credits with the correct forms
- Build a paper trail for audits and future home sales
- Take the next step with a clear checklist and CTAs
Soft CTA: Want a printable homeowner tax checklist? We can turn this guide into a PDF for your files.
Mid CTA: See Mortgage Interest Deduction in 2026 for deep rules and examples.
Hard CTA: Use iReadPDF to combine receipts, 1098s, and invoices into one labeled tax packet before filing.
Change Log
- 2026-02-05: Initial version updated for 2026 rules and IRS guidance links.
Sources: IRS Publication 936 (Home Mortgage Interest), IRS Publication 530 (Tax Information for Homeowners), IRS Schedule A instructions.