MAKE YOUR MORTGAGE TAX DEDUCTIBLE

October 13th, 2009

TAX DEDUCTIBLE MORTGAGE

Today you are going to learn how to re-engineer the way you deal with your house mortgage. When you implement the strategy you are about to discover, it will cause the taxman to send you tax refund cheques, big ones, each year until you die at age 130.

Have you ever wondered why the Seatle homeowners can deduct their mortgage interest to reduce their tax bills, but the Canadian homeowner across the border in Vancouver cannot make his or her mortgage tax deductible?

Well, let me tell you that you can make all of your mortgage interest tax deductible in Canada!

The wealthy people in this country have been deducting their mortgage interest for years to reduce their tax bills and the reason why you haven’t been deducting your mortgage interest to save tax is simply because you either didn’t know about it or you thought it was not legal.

Well, let me repeat again…

You CAN make your mortgage interest tax deductible in Canada! It is perfectly legal and I can make that happen for you.

Take a look at these benefits:

• Reduce Taxes
• Get Huge Refund Checks
• Pay off Your Mortgage Faster
• Retire Wealthy

This creative, legal financial strategy will generate free annual tax refunds for many years into the future for any Canadian who has a mortgage.

If you have interest to pay anyway, why not at least convert it to interest that gives you generous, free, gratis, no charge, tax paid gifts each year?

Click here to complete my online application form to make your mortgage tax deductible!

The tax refund cheques come every year, they are free, there is no tax on them and it is perfectly legal.

These are not small tax refunds. Your mortgage payments for a year total a huge number. As much as 70% or 80% of that huge number is the interest you are paying the bank. 80% of a huge number is also a huge number.

Let’s say it’s $10,000 for our Mr. Joe Average. Joe likes tax deductions. Every year he buys a $10,000 RRSP. (He has to first earn an extra $20,000 for the year so he can give up half to all the governments who want their taxes, leaving him $10,000 to buy his RRSP).

So Joe buys his $10,000 RRSP and claims a $10,000 tax deduction when he submits his income tax return. A few weeks later, Joe gets a lovely cheque from the taxman for $4,000 being 40% of the tax deduction he claimed. That’s a 40% return on his “investment” which is excellent performance.

What Joe doesn’t know is that in his annual mortgage payment is another $10,000 tax deduction, which is free for arranging. And he doesn’t have to go and earn another $20,000 before tax to get it.

Learn how easy and inexpensive it is to convert an expense he is already paying, his mortgage interest, into a tax deduction that will yield equivalent benefits to what he would receive if he bought an RRSP.

If you have a mortgage you could have the same advantages as Joe Average. It’s totally up to you. You can ignore it and continue wasting your money on wrong mortgage or you can make it tax deductible and retire wealthy.

The choice is yours, do nothing or….

Click here to request more info

Today you are going to learn how to re-engineer the way you deal with your house mortgage. When you implement the strategy you are about to discover, it will cause the taxman to send you tax refund cheques, big ones, each year until you die at age 130.

Have you ever wondered why the Seatle homeowners can deduct their mortgage interest to reduce their tax bills, but the Canadian homeowner across the border in Vancouver cannot make his or her mortgage tax deductible?

Well, let me tell you that you can make all of your mortgage interest tax deductible in Canada!

The wealthy people in this country have been deducting their mortgage interest for years to reduce their tax bills and the reason why you haven’t been deducting your mortgage interest to save tax is simply because you either didn’t know about it or you thought it was not legal.

Well, let me repeat again…

You CAN make your mortgage interest tax deductible in Canada! It is perfectly legal and I can make that happen for you.

Take a look at these benefits:

• Reduce Taxes
• Get Huge Refund Checks
• Pay off Your Mortgage Faster
• Retire Wealthy

This creative, legal financial strategy will generate free annual tax refunds for many years into the future for any Canadian who has a mortgage.

If you have interest to pay anyway, why not at least convert it to interest that gives you generous, free, gratis, no charge, tax paid gifts each year?

Click here to complete my online application form to make your mortgage tax deductible!

The tax refund cheques come every year, they are free, there is no tax on them and it is perfectly legal.

These are not small tax refunds. Your mortgage payments for a year total a huge number. As much as 70% or 80% of that huge number is the interest you are paying the bank. 80% of a huge number is also a huge number.

Let’s say it’s $10,000 for our Mr. Joe Average. Joe likes tax deductions. Every year he buys a $10,000 RRSP. (He has to first earn an extra $20,000 for the year so he can give up half to all the governments who want their taxes, leaving him $10,000 to buy his RRSP).

So Joe buys his $10,000 RRSP and claims a $10,000 tax deduction when he submits his income tax return. A few weeks later, Joe gets a lovely cheque from the taxman for $4,000 being 40% of the tax deduction he claimed. That’s a 40% return on his “investment” which is excellent performance.

What Joe doesn’t know is that in his annual mortgage payment is another $10,000 tax deduction, which is free for arranging. And he doesn’t have to go and earn another $20,000 before tax to get it.

Learn how easy and inexpensive it is to convert an expense he is already paying, his mortgage interest, into a tax deduction that will yield equivalent benefits to what he would receive if he bought an RRSP.

If you have a mortgage you could have the same advantages as Joe Average. It’s totally up to you. You can ignore it and continue wasting your money on wrong mortgage or you can make it tax deductible and retire wealthy.

The choice is yours, do nothing or….

Click here to request more info

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