I probably don't need to, but I'll make it explicit: let the buyer beware. Crothian is a friend and is awesome, but if anyone gets audited because they asked for tax advice on the internet I'm going to lauuuugh.
I'm finally going to pay a professional this year. Trying to figure out deductions and home office-y things drives me nuts.
I should hope that when you get tax or legal advice from anybody that you're not paying them for that advice, that its solely for the purpose of "when you talk to YOUR guy, ask him about this, because you SHOULD be able to do it".
Rather than "my friend said it was legal, so I did it", only to find out your friend was wrong.
Sp when Crothian says I still might be able to deduct my mortgage stuff while taking the standard deduction, I am not to just "do it", but instead I should investigate into the scenarios in which that is possible and see if it applies to me.
The value from Crothian being, I previously had no clue and assumed that since they mortgage (interest actually) and loans didn't add up, that was it. I still don't know how or if it will work, but now I know to look for it (or actually consider hiring a tax nerd to optimize my taxes).
Or if DannyAlcatraz said that legally I should be able to do X (and actually lawyers seem really careful about NOT saying that if they are not actually working for that person), I should only consider that as information I should verify, and not fully rely on it.
In the case of lawyers, there's a million "can I do X" questions that lawyers don't really want to answer because as lawyers, it apparently makes them liable for making the statement if it is wrong (or misapplied).
Taxes are kind of the same thing....