Banks offer guidance to homeowners seeking to prepay property taxes

Americans have a new reason to take on debt during the holidays this year: early taxes.

Banks are seeing a wave of inquiries from customers in high-tax states rushing during the final days of the year to prepay 2018 property levies before a cap on deductions for state and local taxes comes into effect. One option: tapping home equity lines or securities-backed loans to lessen the pain of a lump-sum outlay.

Lenders including Bank of America and SunTrust Banks aren’t introducing specific products to solve the last-minute problem but are pointing clients to the credit they already have. Counties in several states are scrambling to produce 2018 bills for individuals after officials in New York and New Jersey ordered local governments to accept prepayment of property taxes.

“The discussions we’re having now are, ‘Call your municipality and try to establish what your liability is. Call your mortgage holder,’ ” Tim Speiss, vice president of EisnerAmper Wealth Planning LLC, said in a Bloomberg Radio interview.

SunTrust branch
SunTrust Banks Inc. signage hangs above an automated teller machine (ATM) at a branch in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2014. SunTrust Banks Inc. announced plans in Aug. to hire as many as 200 people for its investment bank to expand businesses including capital markets and stock research and add expertise targeting the energy and health-care industries. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg
Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

Bank of America is making the credit lines available mostly to wealth management customers at its Merrill Lynch or U.S. Trust units, according to a person briefed on the effort. While the firm’s consumer bank doesn’t offer personal loans, other clients can use products such as undrawn home equity lines of credit, said the person, who asked not to be identified speaking about customer inquiries.

SunTrust is also pointing clients to undrawn personal or home equity loans, according to a spokesman.

Many individuals pay their property taxes through an escrow account with their mortgage lender, leading banks to get calls on how they can facilitate prepayments. Banks are often pushing customers to speak with tax attorneys before making a change, since the move doesn’t make sense for everyone.

PNC Financial Services Group has seen an increase in customers asking to prepay those taxes and is helping clients make payments through escrow accounts where possible, according to a spokeswoman. She didn’t clarify whether the bank was extending credit as part of the service.

The Internal Revenue Service said Wednesday that property taxes can be deducted in filings for this year if they were assessed and paid in 2017. The GOP overhaul that President Donald Trump signed last week caps deductions for state and local taxes at $10,000. That’s pushed many taxpayers who itemize deductions to try to move 2018 expenses forward into this year.

“The rest of the week is going to be a state of flux, in first knowing that the liability has been posted and then getting it to the right recipient, whether that’s an escrow account, the mortgage company or the actual municipality,” Speiss said. “All that will be going on.”

In the Washington suburbs, radio station WTOP found a line of hundreds snaked through a local government building in Fairfax, Va., looking to prepay their 2018 bills. Fairfax County officials, strained by the crowds, are telling people to wire the money instead. The Montgomery County Council in Maryland broke into its winter recess to pass a bill allowing residents to prepay 2018 taxes, the Washington Post reported.

Bloomberg News
Tax reform Home equity loans HELOCs Consumer lending SunTrust Bank of America Bank of America Merrill Lynch PNC Financial Services Group
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