Now Servicing: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, Delaware and Rhode Island
Jersey State Window & Siding
 

Tax Rebates for Energy-Saving Home Improvements

Nationwide $1500 Tax Credit

Tax credits boost green incentive

WASHINGTON, Feb. 18 - Expanded tax credits for energy-efficient home improvements in the new economic stimulus package puts more money in consumers' pockets by providing financial incentive for home owners to go green on their renovation projects in 2009 and 2010. While more efficient homes save on water and energy bills, these tax credits will make such home upgrades even more affordable.

The Internal Revenue Code section 25C tax credit for existing homes, which had expired at the end of 2007, was reinstated as part of the economic rescue package passed by the Bush Administration last fall. Homeowners could be rewarded for installing energy-efficient windows, doors, roofing and insulation as well as furnaces, air conditioners and heat pumps.

But remodelers found that the terms of the 25C credit -- equal to only 10 percent of the cost of each product and with a lifetime cap of $500 -- weren't strong enough to push enough home owners off the fence and into action.

Now, the credit rate and lifetime cap have been tripled - to 30 percent and $1,500, respectively - the list of eligible improvements expanded, and the deadline for applying has been extended through the end of 2010. Congressional estimates indicate that the new rules for the tax incentive will increase aggregate remodeling activity by more than $6 billion.

"The new tax credit also aligns with industry research indicating that even the most aggressive efficiency goals for new homes won't make a dent in overall energy consumption. Instead, remodeling and retrofitting the nation's older homes is by far the more efficient solution," said NAHB Remodelers Chairman Greg Miedema, CGR, CGB, CAPS, a remodeler from Tucson, Ariz.

"These new tax credits are another way that home building industry can combat the potential effects of global climate change by encouraging home owners to make energy-efficient improvements to their homes," said Miedema.

A 2008 California study revealed that 70 percent of the greenhouse gas emissions related to single-family envelope energy consumption can be attributed to homes built before 1983.

The bottom line: Retrofitting existing homes with energy-efficient features is four to eight times more carbon- and cost-efficient than adding further energy-efficiency requirements to new housing, the study showed.

How to Redeem your Tax Credit

Details on qualifying improvements will soon be available at the IRS Web site. It is expected that homeowners will need to complete Form 5695 (Residential Energy Credits) and submit as part of their 2009 income tax returns to claim the credit. Further, homeowners should retain for their own records information that includes:

  • Name and address of the manufacturer
  • Identification of the component
  • Make, model or other appropriate identifiers
  • Statement that the component meets the 25C standards
  • Climate zones for which the criteria are satisfied
  • Additional information for storm windows, if applicable
  • A declaration that the certification statement is true

Learn more about remodeling from the National Association of Home Builders, or contact us today to learn more about our energy-saving home improvements .

  • NJHIC# 13VH04769100
  • NYC# 1277038
  • Rockland# H-10819-07-38-00
  • Westchester# WC-21547-H09
  • Yonkers# 4370
  • Delaware# 2009605698
  • MHIC# 101052

Nationwide Window Replacement and Vinyl Siding Servicing the following counties

New Jersey

  • Burlington County
  • Camden County
  • Cumberland County
  • Gloucester County
  • Mercer County
  • Salem County
  • Atlantic County
  • Bergen County
  • Cape May County
  • Essex County
  • Hudson County
  • Hunterdon County
  • Mercer County
  • Middlesex County
  • Monmouth County
  • Morris County
  • Ocean County
  • Passaic County
  • Somerset County
  • Sussex County
  • Union County
  • Warren County

Pennsylvania

  • Berks County
  • Bucks County
  • Cambria County
  • Carbon County
  • Chester County
  • Dauphin County
  • Delaware County
  • Lancaster County
  • Lehigh County
  • Luzerne County
  • Monroe County
  • Montgomery County
  • North Hampton
  • Philadelphia County
  • Schuylkill County
  • Snyder County
  • Susquehanna County
  • York County
  • Pike County
  • Lackawana County
  • Lebanon County

Delaware

  • New Castle County
  • Kent County

Maryland

  • Cecil County
  • Harford County
  • Montgomery County
  • Anne Arundel County
  • Baltimore County
  • Baltimore City
  • Carroll County
  • Frederick County
  • Howard County
  • Kent County
  • Montgomery County
  • Prince Georges County
  • Queen Annes County
  • Washington County
  • Saint Mary's County
  • Calvert County
  • Charles County
  • Howard County

New York

  • Rockland County
  • Dutchess County
  • Greene County
  • Orange County
  • Sullivan County
  • West Chester County
  • Ulster County

Virginia

  • Arlington County
  • Fairfax County
  • Faquier County
  • Frederick County
  • Culpeper County
  • Clarke County
  • Warren County
  • Prince William County
  • Stafford County