turbotax icon
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
Announcements
Close icon
Do you have a TurboTax Online account?

We'll help you get started or pick up where you left off.

Form 5695 Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit

Through several sources I learned that you can claim the Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit if your tax liability is less than $2,000, but the amount of the credit is limited to the amount of taxes you actually owe. 
The credit is nonrefundable, meaning it can reduce your tax bill to zero, but you cannot receive any excess amount back as a refund. Also, any unused credit for this program cannot be carried forward to future tax years, unlike the Residential Clean Energy Credit for things like solar panels. 
 
Key Points
  • Credit Limit: The credit has annual limits (e.g., up to $2,000 for heat pumps, or $1,200 for other improvements, with an overall annual maximum of $3,200).
  • Tax Liability: The amount you can claim is capped by your total tax liability for the year (the amount of taxes you owe before applying the credit, as shown on your Form 1040).
  • No Carry-Forward: If your potential credit amount (e.g., $2,000) is more than the taxes you owe (e.g., $1,500), you can only use $1,500 of the credit, and the remaining $500 is lost. 
Therefore, if you anticipate a low tax liability for the year you make the improvements, you might want to adjust your tax withholdings during the year to ensure you have enough tax liability to offset with the credit.
 
 I went into TT and tested it out and it actually allowed me to take the $2K credit even if I was getting a refund. Also, in the help section it states, "1) Eligible homeowners can claim both residential energy credits when they file their federal income tax return. Because these are credits, not deductions, they increase a taxpayer's refund or reduce the tax he or she owes; and 2) Note: Keep in mind, these are not refundable credits, which means you can take the credit up to the tax owed. There is no refund of any credit amount left over."   
These two sentences seem to contradict themselves.
 
Please clarify for me. 
x
Do you have an Intuit account?

Do you have an Intuit account?

You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.

1 Best answer

Accepted Solutions

Form 5695 Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit

You have to understand the difference between tax liability and tax owed.   Your tax liability is what the IRS keeps at the end of the year, not counting penalties and self-employment tax.  If you had $5000 of withholding and get a $1000 refund, your tax liability was $4000.  If you have $3000 withholding and owe $1000 more when you file, your liability is still $4000.  

 

A non-refundable credit can reduce your liability, which will either reduce the tax you owe or increase you refund.  But it can't be refunded if you have no liability.  In other words, if you had $5000 withholding and your liability without the credit is $4000, a credit can reduce your liability as low as zero, potentially resulting in a refund of up to the amount of your withholding.  But even if you had a $10,000 credit, your liability can't go below zero.  So $4000 of the credit would be applied against the $4000 liability, you would owe no tax, and get a full refund, but the other $6000 of the credit just vanishes. (Unless it is a credit that can carry over to the next year.) 

View solution in original post

9 Replies

Form 5695 Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit

You have to understand the difference between tax liability and tax owed.   Your tax liability is what the IRS keeps at the end of the year, not counting penalties and self-employment tax.  If you had $5000 of withholding and get a $1000 refund, your tax liability was $4000.  If you have $3000 withholding and owe $1000 more when you file, your liability is still $4000.  

 

A non-refundable credit can reduce your liability, which will either reduce the tax you owe or increase you refund.  But it can't be refunded if you have no liability.  In other words, if you had $5000 withholding and your liability without the credit is $4000, a credit can reduce your liability as low as zero, potentially resulting in a refund of up to the amount of your withholding.  But even if you had a $10,000 credit, your liability can't go below zero.  So $4000 of the credit would be applied against the $4000 liability, you would owe no tax, and get a full refund, but the other $6000 of the credit just vanishes. (Unless it is a credit that can carry over to the next year.) 

Form 5695 Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit

@gjgogol 

 

<<Therefore, if you anticipate a low tax liability for the year you make the improvements, you might want to adjust your tax withholdings during the year to ensure you have enough tax liability to offset with the credit.>>

 

Sorry, you are confusing things.  

 

The INCOME tax liability is the INCOME tax liability.  It is line 22 of form 1040.  Line 18 is the INCOME tax itself and lines 19-21 reduce the INCOME tax by any non-refundable credits. 

 

No matter how high or how low the tax withholdings are, the tax liability is not impacted.   Withholdings begin on line 25.  

 

Now read the Help section again with that understanding.  It is accurate.  😀

 

https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f1040.pdf

 

 

 

 

Form 5695 Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit

@NCperson  So, if the below formula is true.

tax liability - tax withheld = tax owed or tax overpaid

Then, do the TT "Help" and "Learn More" sections still hold true?

Help: Note: Keep in mind, these are not refundable credits, which means you can take the credit up to the tax owed. There is no refund of any credit amount left over.

Learn More: This credit is nonrefundable, which means the credit amount you receive will not exceed the amount of tax you owe. Therefore, there is no refund.

Example: If you owed $375 in taxes, but you received a nonrefundable credit of $500, the tax you owed was reduced to zero, and the remaining $125 was lost. You would not receive a refund for the remaining $125.

 

Form 5695 Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit

on your example, it is correct but I would state it a little differently so the word usage is clear: 

 

tax liability - tax withheld = tax owed or tax overpaid

 

Example: If your tax liability was $375 in taxes, but you received a nonrefundable credit of $500, the tax liability was reduced to zero, and the remaining $125 was lost. You would not receive a refund for the remaining $125.

 

Another example.  Let's say the tax liability is $375 and the withholdings were $500. 

 

Example: If your tax liability was $375 in taxes, but you received a nonrefundable credit of $500, the tax liability was reduced to zero, and the remaining $125 was lost. You would not receive a refund for the remaining $125; however you would refund of the $500 withholdings because the tax liability is $-0- and the withholdings is $500, so based on the formula you posted, that is a $500 refund

 

which makes the "help section" accurate. 

Form 5695 Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit


@gjgogol wrote:

Keep in mind, these are not refundable credits, which means you can take the credit up to the tax owed.


 

 

The other answers are correct; TurboTax phrases it poorly.  When it says "owed", it means the amount owed BEFORE withholding.

Form 5695 Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit

@AmeliesUncle@NCperson@Opus 17 

Thank you all for your responses (and patience).  Words really matter. There is a distinction between tax liability and tax owed.  TT stated owed but meant liability, correct?

 

Based on your feedback, tax owed means that I owe the govt money because my withholding was less than what my liability was (amount you owe, line 37). In this case, if my liability was $10K and the withholding amount was $9500, I would owe $500, then I still could take advantage of the $2K tax credit and I would get a refund of $1500, correct?

 

Additionally, I would still receive a refund for the tax credit if my liability was $10K and the withholding amount was $10.5K, I would be due $500 refund, but I still could take advantage of the $2K tax credit and I would get a refund of $2.5K, correct?. 

Form 5695 Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit

@gjgogol  "By George, I think he's got it!"

 

Great job! 

 

p.s. tax liability (line 22) and tax owed (line 37) hangs up a LOT of people! and you are right, "words matter"!  

Form 5695 Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit

@NCperson How do we get TT to change the words they use in those HELP and LEARN MORE links?

Form 5695 Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit


@gjgogol wrote:

 How do we get TT to change the words they use in those HELP and LEARN MORE links?


 

 A LARGE amount of the "Help" and "Learn More" information is outdated, misleading, or outright wrong.  Intuit (the owners of TurboTax) doesn't really seem to care or review that material.

Unlock tailored help options in your account.

message box icon

Get more help

Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.

Post your Question