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June 1, 2019
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How do I report a refund from Wells Fargo Home Mortgage for a mistake on rate lock extension fees I paid that I shouldn't have back in 2015?

  • June 1, 2019
  • 5 replies
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Best answer by rjs

From what you said in the comments it sounds like you did not claim an itemized deduction for the rate lock extension fee in the year that you paid it. That means that the refund of the fee is not taxable income, and you do not have to report the refund on your tax return.

5 replies

rjs
Employee
June 1, 2019
Did you claim a deduction for the fee on your 2015 tax return - perhaps by including it in your itemized deduction for mortgage interest on Schedule A? If you didn't deduct it in the year that you paid it, you don't have to report the refund.

How did they pay the refund? Did they send you a check, credit it to your 2018 mortgage payments, or something else?

Did they send you any kind of 1099-series form showing the refund? If so, what form, and which box of the form is the refund in?
mikenjeanAuthor
June 1, 2019
I looked at my 2015 taxes, specifically the itemized deduction for mortgage interest on Schedule A. It is a large amount, $1750 more than the amount listed on Form 1098 under mortgage interest in Box 1. I don't know how to figure out if I claimed the deduction for the fee, but I expect I did by the large amount. (I just followed the questions in Turbo Tax, and I have notes to show that I called the bank to see how much of the closing cost expenses were deductible.)

They paid the refund in a check sent to me.

They didn't send any 1099 form of any kind, just a letter with the check.
mikenjeanAuthor
June 1, 2019
Correction, on closer investigation, the amount listed on Schedule A under mortgage interest is exactly the amount of the old loan (before refinancing) and the new loan amounts listed on Form 1098 Mortgage Interest Statement. Does this mean I likely did not deduct the rate lock extension fee in 2015?
rjs
rjsAnswer
Employee
June 1, 2019

From what you said in the comments it sounds like you did not claim an itemized deduction for the rate lock extension fee in the year that you paid it. That means that the refund of the fee is not taxable income, and you do not have to report the refund on your tax return.

March 18, 2021

What about the interest and small compensation from the refund of the rate lock extension fees?

 

 

March 1, 2022

Is the interest and the compensation for time we did not have the money taxable ?

DaveF1006
March 1, 2022

To clarify, is the refund reported to you s taxable income? If so, on what form?

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March 22, 2022

I'm new to using this but I saw your question about what form it was on when I was trying to find the answer to this.  For my client, it is just on a form 1098 reporting the interest and then attached to that is just a document or letter from Wells Fargo giving the amount for refund of the rate lock extension fee and then a line for "compensate you for the time you did not have these funds".  The loan was back in 2004 but I found that he did deduct the interest and deducted "part" of the rate lock extension.  With that being said, should I net the current year mortgage interest with this amount of refund or show the whole amount of refund as income.  Then, would I show the "compensate you for the time you did not have these funds" amount as other income?

 

Any help is appreciated.