LEGISLATION/H.R. 4352

HOMES Act

119-HR-4352119th CongressIntroduced Jul 10, 2025Taxation
Market Probability
No market
Status
Introduced
Committee
Floor Vote
Other Chamber
Signed
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.

Sponsor

Rep. Sykes, Emilia Strong [D-OH-13](D-OH-13)
1 cosponsor

Summary

Houses Over Middle-Class Exploitation Schemes Act or the HOMES Act

This bill prohibits a taxpayer who owns (directly or indirectly) 50 or more single-family residential rental properties (disqualified single-family property owner) from claiming a federal tax deduction for interest paid (or accrued) in connection with such properties or a federal tax deduction for depreciation in connection with such properties.

The bill generally defines a single-family residential rental property as any residential rental property containing four or fewer dwelling units and improvements to real property related to such dwelling units.

However, under the bill, a disqualified single-family property owner may still claim a tax deduction for interest and depreciation on (1) single-family residential rental property for which the low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC) may be claimed and (2) certain newly constructed single-family residential rental properties. (The LIHTC program awards tax credits for newly-constructed or substantially rehabilitated low-income housing.)

The bill also allows a disqualified single-family property owner to claim a federal tax deduction for interest or depreciation in connection with a single-family residential rental property in the year such property is sold if it is sold to

  • an individual for use as a principal residence;
  • a non-profit organization that creates, develops, or preserves affordable housing;
  • certain community development organizations;
  • a land bank;
  • any resident-owned cooperative or community land trust; or
  • a public housing agency subsidiary.

Actions (3)

Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
Jul 10, 2025House floor actions
Introduced in House
Jul 10, 2025Library of Congress
Introduced in House
Jul 10, 2025Library of Congress