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Metro

De Blasio scores nearly $6G tax return thanks to Park Slope ‘money pit’

Mayor Bill de Blasio is claiming one of the two Brooklyn homes he owns is a real money pit.

Hizzoner and First Lady Chirlane McCray reported that they lost a whopping $13,656 last year on a nearly 120-year-old row house they own at 384 11th St. in upscale Park Slope, according to tax filings they made public Wednesday.

The losses on the two-family home, where de Blasio’s late mother once lived, played a role in de Blasio and McCray expecting to receive a $1,555 refund from the federal government and another $4,339 from the state.

De Blasio listed earnings of $50,300 on the home in rent payments but claimed the $13,656 loss by listing $63,956 in expenses — including $21,150 in “depreciation.”

The home is valued at $1.94 million, according to PropertyShark.com.

In 2018, the mayor only claimed a $242 loss on the property but did collect an extra $8,650 in rent.

De Blasio’s former primary residence, also on 11th Street, earned him and his wife another $54,000 in rent — for a net profit after expenses of $3,896.

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384 11th street in Park Slope, Brooklyn, one two family homes owned by NYC mayor Bill de Blasio and his wife Chirlane McCray.
384 11th street in Park Slope, BrooklynPaul Martinka
442 11th street in Park Slope, Brooklyn, one two family homes owned by NYC mayor Bill de Blasio and his wife Chirlane McCray.
442 11th street in Park SlopePaul Martinka
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Hizzoner reported earning $252,139 in 2019 while McCray doesn’t earn a salary despite being the face of the city’s embattled ThriveNYC billion-dollar mental health initiative.

Both received a $500 tax credit by claiming their son, Dante, 23, as a dependent also living at Gracie Mansion. They also claimed donating $1,260 to nine charities and $1,375 worth of clothes to the poor.

Meanwhile, Gov. Andrew Cuomo reported earning $280,677 in 2019, including a fat gubernatorial salary at $192,859 and $90,781 from a blind trust.

He paid $60,012 in federal taxes, and $15,372 in state taxes.

Cuomo also donated $12,750 to Help USA — the charity he founded in 1986 that addresses homelessness.

The governor resides in public housing â€” the Executive Mansion in Albany.