Bonus depreciation eligibility computation rules.The Job Creation and Worker Assistance Act of 2002 (Act) provides an additional "bonus" depreciation allowance of 30% of the adjusted basis of qualified property, for the year in which the property is placed in service. This 30% is in addition to the usual annual depreciation allowance that applies to the remaining 70% of the property's adjusted basis (e.g., the first-year depreciation under Sec. 168, subject to the half-year convention half-year convention The assumption for tax purposes that a newly acquired asset is placed in service halfway through the year regardless of when the asset is actually acquired and placed in service. (see Notices 2001-70 and 2001-74 for electing out of the mid-quarter convention)). The new bonus depreciation provision is retroactive Having reference to things that happened in the past, prior to the occurrence of the act in question. A retroactive or retrospective law is one that takes away or impairs vested rights acquired under existing laws, creates new obligations, imposes new duties, or attaches a (i.e., it affects certain returns filed for tax years ending in 2001). Eligible Property Four categories of property are eligible for bonus depreciation: * Tangible personal property, subject under Sec. 168 to MACRS See Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System. MACRS See Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS). depreciation, with recovery periods of three, five, seven, 10, 15 or 20 years; * Software depreciable depreciable Of, relating to, or being a long-term tangible asset that is subject to depreciation. over 36 months under Sec. 167(f)(1)(A); * The Sec. 1250 property portion of certain leasehold improvements Leasehold Improvement Improvements on a leased asset that increase the value of the asset. Notes: A leasehold improvement is classified as an asset that must be depreciated over time. ; and * Water-utility property (as defined in Sec. 168(e)(5)). "Qualified leasehold improvement property" is any improvement to a building's interior that is nonresidential real property, provided certain requirements are met: 1. The improvement must be made under (or pursuant to) a lease, either by the lessee One who rents real property or Personal Property from another. A lessee of land is a tenant. Cross-references Landlord and Tenant. lessee n. the person renting property under a written lease from the owner (lessor). (or sublessee) or lessor One who rents real property or Personal Property to another. A lessor of land is a landlord. Cross-references Landlord and Tenant. lessor n. the owner of real property who rents it to a lessee pursuant to a written lease. of that portion of the building. 2. That portion of the building must be occupied exclusively by the lessee (or any sublessee). 3. The improvement must be placed in service more than three years after the date the building was first placed in service. Qualified leasehold improvement property does not include any improvement attributable to the enlargement enlargement, n an increase in size. enlargement, Dilantin, n.pr See hyperplasia, gingival, Dilantin. enlargement, idiopathic, n of the building, any elevator elevator, in machinery elevator, in machinery, device for transporting people or goods from one level to another. The term is applied to the enclosed structures as well as the open platforms used to provide vertical transportation in buildings, large ships, or escalator escalator Moving staircase used as transportation between floors or levels in stores, airports, subways, and other mass pedestrian areas. The name was first applied to a moving stairway shown at the Paris Exposition of 1900. , any structural component benefiting a common area or the building's internal structural framework. A binding commitment to enter into a lease is in fact a lease, and the parties are a lessor and a lessee. A lease between related persons is not a lease. New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of "Liberty Zone" qualified leasehold improvement property, which qualifies for special treatment under the New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. tax relief provisions of the Act, is not eligible for bonus depreciation. Property subject to the alternative depreciation system of Sec. 168(g) on a mandatory basis (as opposed to an elective elective non-urgent; at an elected time, e.g. of surgery. elective adjective Referring to that which is planned or undertaken by choice and without urgency, as in elective surgery, see there noun Graduate education noun basis) does not qualify for bonus depreciation. Only New Property Eligible The Act provides that the property's "original use" must commence with the taxpayer on or after Sept. 11, 2001. "Original use" is defined in Regs. Sec. 1.48-2; that term is generally interpreted to mean new (but not used) property. For example, if a company buys all the assets of another business in a transaction to which Sec. 1060 applies, bonus depreciation would not apply to any of the property acquired, because the property's original use does not commence with the buyer. However, capital expenditures (that relate to used property) may satisfy the original-use requirement, even though the cost of the used property itself would not. Example 1: On Feb. 1, 2002, taxpayer N buys from X for $20,000 a machine that X had used previously. Prior to Sept. 11, 2004, N makes a $5,000 property expenditure that must be capitalized. Regardless of whether N adds the $5,000 to the property's basis or capitalizes it as a separate asset, N treats that amount as qualified property, satisfying the original-use requirement (assuming all other conditions are met). No part of the $20,000 purchase price qualifies for bonus depreciation. Eligibility Dates eligibility date, n the date an individual and dependents become eligible for benefits under a dental benefits contract. Often referred to as effective date. Generally, the property must be acquired by the taxpayer during a three-year period, beginning on or after Sept. 11, 2001 and ending before Sept. 11, 2004. The property must be placed in service before Jan. 1, 2005 (Jan. 1, 2006 for certain property). The property must not have been subject to a written binding contract before Sept. 11, 2001, a term not defined in the Act. As a result, there will probably be questions about the definition. For example, if a written purchase order was submitted on Sept. 7, 2001, for property delivered on Sept. 14, 2001, would the property qualify for bonus depreciation? The purchase order may be a written binding contract depending on the facts. Relevant factors could include whether the purchase order was cancelable at any time before delivery without penalty. For property manufactured, constructed or produced by a taxpayer for the taxpayer's use, the taxpayer must begin the manufacture, construction or production of the property after Sept. 10, 2001 and before Sept. 11, 2004. AMT See vPro. Provisions The 30% bonus depreciation allowance applies for both regular and alternative minimum tax (AMT) purposes. There is no adjustment under Sec. 56 for bonus depreciation for AMT purposes. The Act also eliminates the AMT adjustment for the remaining 70% portion of the basis. Stated another way, in addition to the 30% bonus depreciation amount being the same for regular and AMT purposes, depreciation deductions for the remaining 70% of the basis are also the same for regular and AMT purposes. Computation Example 2: On March 1, 2002, calendar-year taxpayer L acquires and places in service qualified five-year property that costs $1 million. L takes an additional first-year depreciation deduction of $300,000, recovering the remaining $700,000 of adjusted basis in 2002 and subsequent years, pursuant to the usual depreciation rules for regular tax purposes. In contrast, for AMT purposes, the usual rules are modified, which eliminates any adjustment under Sec. 56. The usual first-year depreciation allowance for the property (for regular tax purposes) would be $140,000 (the first year of the double-declining-balance method for five-year property subject to a half-year convention). Thus, total depreciation for the property for L's 2002 return is $440,000, which is the allowance for both regular and AMT purposes. For tax years after 2002, the remaining $560,000 of basis is depreciated Depreciated may refer to:
Example 3: On March 1, 2002, calendar-year taxpayer J acquires and places in service $50,000 of qualified five-year property. In addition, the property qualifies for expensing under Sec. 179. Under the Act, J takes a $24,000 deduction under Sec. 179, then an additional first-year depreciation deduction of $7,800, which is 30% of $26,000 of adjusted basis ($50,000 original cost, less the $24,000 Sec. 179 deduction). Finally, J recovers the remaining $18,000 adjusted basis ($26,000 adjusted basis, less $7,800 additional first-year depreciation) in 2002 and subsequent years, pursuant to the usual depreciation rules for regular tax and the modified rules for AMT. The usual first-year depreciation allowance for the property would be $3,640 (the first year of the double-declining-balance method for five-year property, subject to a half-year convention). Thus, Sec. 179 expensing for the property for the 2002 return is $24,000, and total depreciation for the 2002 return is $11,440, which is the same for regular and AMT purposes. Luxury Automobiles Sec. 280F limits the annual depreciation deductions for passenger automobiles to specified dollar amounts, indexed for inflation. The Act increases the limit in the first year by $4,600 for automobiles that qualify (with no election out of bonus depreciation). The $4,600 increase is not indexed for inflation. Election Out The 30% bonus depreciation allowance is required unless a taxpayer elects out of the bonus-depreciation provision. The IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws. recently issued guidance on recouping missed bonus depreciation on 2001 returns, and electing out of bonus depreciation. Rev. Proc. 2002-33 provides "special rules" that address the procedural problems created by the Act's retroactive effective dates. Rev. Proc. 2002-33 also provides "general rules" that apply on a going-forward basis. Special Rules--Recoupment The special rules for recouping the missed bonus depreciation are generous. These rules address a situation in which a company filed its 2001 return, did not claim the 30% bonus-depreciation deduction, and did not elect out of the bonus-depreciation provision. This situation is problematic, as bonus depreciation is mandatory unless a company elects out. A company may either amend its 2001 return and take the bonus depreciation into account, or make an automatic accounting-method change for its 2002 return (equivalent to deducting the 2001 30% bonus-depreciation amount in the 2002 return). The amended return Amended Return A return filed in order to make corrections to a tax return from a previous year. It can be used to correct errors and claim a more advantageous filing. Notes: An amended return is filed using Form 1040X. must be filed by the extended due date of the return for the year following the year in which the bonus depreciation was not taken (e.g., for calendar-year companies, Sept. 15, 2003). If an amended return is not filed by such extended due date and an accounting-method change is not filed, the company will then be deemed to have made an election out of the bonus-depreciation provisions for the 2001 tax year. Observation: If a company elected out of the bonus-depreciation provision on its 2001 return with an affirmative statement in its return, but only did so because of insufficient time to compute To perform mathematical operations or general computer processing. For an explanation of "The 3 C's," or how the computer processes data, see computer. the bonus depreciation, it might want to revisit re·vis·it tr.v. re·vis·it·ed, re·vis·it·ing, re·vis·its To visit again. n. A second or repeated visit. re the election out, because the new guidance would allow it to recoup recoup To sell an asset at a price sufficient to recover the original outlay or to offset a previous loss. the 2001 bonus depreciation on its 2002 return. However, companies that want to pursue this route will have to file a ruling request under Rev. Proc. 2002-1, and receive IRS permission to revoke To annul or make void by recalling or taking back; to cancel, rescind, repeal, or reverse. revoke v. to annul or cancel an act, particularly a statement, document, or promise, as if it no longer existed. the election out. General Rules for Electing Out A taxpayer may elect not to deduct de·duct v. de·duct·ed, de·duct·ing, de·ducts v.tr. 1. To take away (a quantity) from another; subtract. 2. To derive by deduction; deduce. v.intr. the bonus depreciation for any class of property placed in service during the tax year. The election applies to all property in the same class and placed in service in the same year. If the taxpayer makes the election, the depreciation adjustments under Sec. 56 apply to that property for purposes of computing computing - computer alternative minimum taxable income Under the federal tax law, gross income reduced by adjustments and allowable deductions. It is the income against which tax rates are applied to compute an individual or entity's tax liability. The essence of taxable income is the accrual of some gain, profit, or benefit to a taxpayer. . Rev. Proc. 2002-33 provides that the election is made separately by each person owning such property (e.g., by each member of a consolidated group, or by a partnership or S corporation). Rev. Proc. 2002-33 defines "class of property" as: * Each class of property described in Sec. 168(e) (e.g., all property in a particular recovery period (such as all five-year property)); * Water-utility property (as defined in Sec. 168(e)(5)); * Computer software depreciated under Sec. 167(f)(1); and * Qualified leasehold-improvement property (as defined in Sec. 168(k)(3)). Special Rules for Electing Out Special rules for elections out of the bonus-depreciation provisions apply to 2001 returns filed before June 1, 2002. For returns filed on or after June 1, 2002, the election out must be made with a timely filed return, by following the instructions to Form 4562, Depreciation and Amortization (which require a statement attached to the return specifying the classes of property for which the election out is made). The general rules also provide that both automatic and nonautomatic Regs. Sec. 301.9100 relief is potentially available. FROM VICKI HOWE ZENNER, J.D., LL.M LL.M Legum Magister (Master of Laws) ., WASHINGTON, DC Editor: Annette B. Smith, CPA Partner Washington National Tax Service PricewaterhouseCoopers Washington, DC |
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