Business Expenses: Publication 535
Business Expenses: Publication 535
Business Expenses: Publication 535
Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Whats New for 2011 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Whats New for 2012 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reminders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1. Deducting Business Expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2. Employees Pay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3. Rent Expense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 2 2 2 2 6 8
Business Expenses
For use in preparing
2011 Returns
4. Interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 5. Taxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 6. Insurance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 7. Costs You Can Deduct or Capitalize . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 8. Amortization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 9. Depletion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 10. Business Bad Debts . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 11. Other Expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 12. How To Get Tax Help . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Introduction
This publication discusses common business expenses and explains what is and is not deductible. The general rules for deducting business expenses are discussed in the opening chapter. The chapters that follow cover specific expenses and list other publications and forms you may need. Comments and suggestions. We welcome your comments about this publication and your suggestions for future editions. You can write to us at the following address: Internal Revenue Service Business Forms and Publications Branch SE:W:CAR:MP:T:B 1111 Constitution Ave. NW, IR-6526 Washington, DC 20224 We respond to many letters by telephone. Therefore, it would be helpful if you would include your daytime phone number, including the area code, in your correspondence. You can email us at *taxforms@irs.gov. (The asterisk must be included in the address.) Please put Publications Comment on the subject line. You can also send us comments from www.irs.gov/formspubs/, select Comment on Tax Forms and Publications under Information about. Although we cannot respond individually to each comment received, we do appreciate your feedback and will consider your comments as we revise our tax products. Ordering forms and publications. Visit www.irs.gov/formspubs to download forms and publications, call 1-800-829-3676, or write to the
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Mar 13, 2012
address below and receive a response within 10 days after your request is received. Internal Revenue Service 1201 N. Mitsubishi Motorway Bloomington, IL 61705-6613 Tax questions. If you have a tax question, check the information available on IRS.gov or call 1-800-829-4933. We cannot answer tax questions sent to either of the above addresses.
Use an authorized IRS e-file provider. Use a personal computer. Visit a Volunteer Income Tax Assistance
(VITA) or Tax Counseling for the Elderly (TCE) site. For details on these fast filing methods, see your income tax package. Form 1099 MISC. File Form 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income, for each person to whom you have paid during the year in the course of your trade or business at least $600 in rents, services (including parts and materials), prizes and awards, other income payments, medical and health care payments, and crop insurance proceeds. See the Instructions for Form 1099-MISC for more information and additional reporting requirements. Photographs of missing children. The Internal Revenue Service is a proud partner with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Photographs of missing children selected by the Center may appear in this publication on pages that would otherwise be blank. You can help bring these children home by looking at the photographs and calling 1-800-THE-LOST (1-800-843-5678) if you recognize a child.
Miscellaneous Deductions Net Operating Losses (NOLs) for Individuals, Estates, and Trusts Accounting Periods and Methods Corporations Casualties, Disasters, and Thefts Business Use of Your Home (Including Use by Daycare Providers) Passive Activity and At-Risk Rules Home Mortgage Interest Deduction How To Depreciate Property
Form (and Instructions) t Sch A (Form 1040) Itemized Deductions t 5213 Election To Postpone Determination as To Whether the Presumption Applies That an Activity Is Engaged in for Profit See chapter 12 for information about getting publications and forms.
To be deductible, a business expense must be both ordinary and necessary. An ordinary expense is one that is common and accepted in your industry. A necessary expense is one that is helpful and appropriate for your trade or business. An expense does not have to be indispensable to be considered necessary. Even though an expense may be ordinary and necessary, you may not be allowed to deduct the expense in the year you paid or incurred it. In some cases you may not be allowed to deduct the expense at all. Therefore, it is important to distinguish usual business expenses from expenses that include the following.
Topics
This chapter discusses:
Reminders
The following reminders and other items may help you file your tax return.
What you can deduct How much you can deduct When you can deduct Not-for-profit activities
Useful Items
You may want to see: You can file your tax returns electronically using an IRS e-file option. The benefits of IRS e-file include faster refunds, increased accuracy, and acknowledgment of IRS receipt of your return. You can use one of the following IRS e-file options. Page 2 Chapter 1 Publication t 334 t 463 t 525 Tax Guide for Small Business Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses Taxable and Nontaxable Income
Storage.
Under the uniform capitalization rules, you must capitalize the direct costs and part of the indirect costs for certain production or resale activities. Indirect costs include rent, interest, taxes, storage, purchasing, processing, repackaging, handling, and administrative costs. This rule does not apply to personal property you acquire for resale if your average annual gross receipts (or those of your predecessor) for the preceding 3 tax years are not more than $10 million. For more information, see the following sources.
Usually you recover costs for a particular asset through depreciation. Generally, you cannot recover other costs until you sell the business or otherwise go out of business. However, you can choose to amortize certain costs for setting up your business. See Starting a Business in chapter 8 for more information on business start-up costs. If your attempt to go into business is unsuccessful. If you are an individual and your attempt to go into business is not successful, the expenses you had in trying to establish yourself in business fall into two categories. 1. The costs you had before making a decision to acquire or begin a specific business. These costs are personal and nondeductible. They include any costs incurred during a general search for, or preliminary investigation of, a business or investment possibility. 2. The costs you had in your attempt to acquire or begin a specific business. These costs are capital expenses and you can deduct them as a capital loss. If you are a corporation and your attempt to go into a new trade or business is not successful, you may be able to deduct all investigatory costs as a loss. The costs of any assets acquired during your unsuccessful attempt to go into business are a part of your basis in the assets. You cannot take a deduction for these costs. You will recover the costs of these assets when you dispose of them.
538 and section 263A of the Internal Revenue Code and the related regulations.
Capital Expenses
You must capitalize, rather than deduct, some costs. These costs are a part of your investment in your business and are called capital expenses. Capital expenses are considered assets in your business. In general, you capitalize three types of costs.
Business Assets
There are many different kinds of business assets; for example, land, buildings, machinery, furniture, trucks, patents, and franchise rights. You must fully capitalize the cost of these assets, including freight and installation charges. Certain property you produce for use in your trade or business must be capitalized under the uniform capitalization rules. See Regulations section 1.263A-2 for information on these rules.
Cost recovery. Although you generally cannot take a current deduction for a capital expense, you may be able to recover the amount you spend through depreciation, amortization, or depletion. These recovery methods allow you to deduct part of your cost each year. In this way, you are able to recover your capital expense. See Amortization (chapter 8) and Depletion (chapter 9) in this publication. A taxpayer can elect to deduct a portion of the costs of certain depreciable property as a section 179 deduction. A greater portion of these costs can be deducted if the property is qualified disaster assistance property. See Publication 946 for details.
Improvements
The costs of making improvements to a business asset are capital expenses if the improvements add to the value of the asset, appreciably lengthen the time you can use it, or adapt it to a different use. Improvements are generally major expenditures. Some examples are: new electric wiring, a new roof, a new floor, new plumbing, bricking up windows to strengthen a wall, and lighting improvements. However, you can currently deduct repairs that keep your property in a normal efficient operating condition as a business expense. Treat as repairs amounts paid to replace parts of a machine that only keep it in a normal operating condition. Restoration plan. Capitalize the cost of reconditioning, improving, or altering your property as part of a general restoration plan to make it suitable for your business. This applies even if some of the work would by itself be classified as repairs.
Chapter 1
a. Your principal place of business, or b. A place where you meet or deal with patients, clients, or customers in the normal course of your trade or business, or c. A separate structure (not attached to your home) used in connection with your trade or business. You generally do not have to meet the exclusive use test for the part of your home that you regularly use either for the storage of inventory or product samples, or as a daycare facility. Your home office qualifies as your principal place of business if you meet the following requirements.
Net operating loss. If your deductions are more than your income for the year, you may have a net operating loss. You can use a net operating loss to lower your taxes in other years. See Publication 536 for more information. See Publication 542 for information about net operating losses of corporations.
You use the office exclusively and regu You have no other fixed location where
larly for administrative or management activities of your trade or business. you conduct substantial administrative or management activities of your trade or business.
If you have more than one business location, determine your principal place of business based on the following factors.
determine your principal place of business, consider the time spent at each location.
If you were entitled to deduct depreciation on the part of your home used for CAUTION business, you cannot exclude the part of the gain from the sale of your home that equals any depreciation you deducted (or could have deducted) for periods after May 6, 1997. For more information, see Publication 587.
Business use of your car. If you use your car exclusively in your business, you can deduct car expenses. If you use your car for both business and personal purposes, you must divide your expenses based on actual mileage. Generally, commuting expenses between your home and your business location, within the area of your tax home, are not deductible. You can deduct actual car expenses, which include depreciation (or lease payments), gas and oil, tires, repairs, tune-ups, insurance, and registration fees. Or, instead of figuring the business part of these actual expenses, you may be able to use the standard mileage rate to figure your deduction. For 2011, the standard mileage rate is 51 cents before July 1, 2011. The rate is 55.5 cents a mile for business miles driven after June 30, 2011, and before January 1, 2012. If you are self-employed, you can also deduct the business part of interest on your car loan, state and local personal property tax on the car, parking fees, and tolls, whether or not you claim the standard mileage rate. For more information on car expenses and the rules for using the standard mileage rate, see Publication 463. Page 4 Chapter 1
Example. In 2011, you sign a 10-year lease and immediately pay your rent for the first 3 years. Even though you paid the rent for 2011, 2012, and 2013, you can only deduct the rent for 2011 on your 2011 tax return. You can deduct the rent for 2012 and 2013 on your tax returns for those years. Contested liability. Under the cash method, you can deduct a contested liability only in the year you pay the liability. Under the accrual method, you can deduct contested liabilities such as taxes (except foreign or U.S. possession income, war profits, and excess profits taxes) either in the tax year you pay the liability (or transfer money or other property to satisfy the obligation) or in the tax year you settle the contest. However, to take the deduction in the year of payment or transfer, you must meet certain conditions. See Regulations section 1.461-2. Related person. Under an accrual method of accounting, you generally deduct expenses when you incur them, even if you have not yet paid them. However, if you and the person you owe are related and that person uses the cash method of accounting, you must pay the expense before you can deduct it. Your deduction is allowed when the amount is includible in income by the related cash method payee. See Related Persons in Publication 538.
Presumption of profit. An activity is presumed carried on for profit if it produced a profit in at least 3 of the last 5 tax years, including the current year. Activities that consist primarily of breeding, training, showing, or racing horses are presumed carried on for profit if they produced a profit in at least 2 of the last 7 tax years, including the current year. The activity must be substantially the same for each year within this period. You have a profit when the gross income from an activity exceeds the deductions. If a taxpayer dies before the end of the 5-year (or 7-year) period, the test period ends on the date of the taxpayers death. If your business or investment activity passes this 3- (or 2-) years-of-profit test, the IRS will presume it is carried on for profit. This means the limits discussed here will not apply. You can take all your business deductions from the activity, even for the years that you have a loss. You can rely on this presumption unless the IRS later shows it to be invalid. Using the presumption later. If you are starting an activity and do not have 3 (or 2) years showing a profit, you can elect to have the presumption made after you have the 5 (or 7) years of experience allowed by the test. You can elect to do this by filing Form 5213. Filing this form postpones any determination that your activity is not carried on for profit until 5 (or 7) years have passed since you started the activity. The benefit gained by making this election is that the IRS will not immediately question whether your activity is engaged in for profit. Accordingly, it will not restrict your deductions. Rather, you will gain time to earn a profit in the required number of years. If you show 3 (or 2) years of profit at the end of this period, your deductions are not limited under these rules. If you do not have 3 (or 2) years of profit, the limit can be applied retroactively to any year with a loss in the 5-year (or 7-year) period. Filing Form 5213 automatically extends the period of limitations on any year in the 5-year (or 7-year) period to 2 years after the due date of the return for the last year of the period. The period is extended only for deductions of the activity and any related deductions that might be affected. You must file Form 5213 within 3 years after the due date of your return (determined without extensions) for the year in which you first carried on the activity, or, if earlier, within 60 days after receiving written notice from the Internal Revenue Service proposing to disallow deductions attributable to the activity.
this category. Deduct them on the appropriate lines of Schedule A (Form 1040). For taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2008, you can deduct a casualty loss on property you own for personal use only to the extent it is more than $500 and exceeds 10% of your adjusted gross income. The 10% AGI limitation does not apply to net disaster losses resulting from federally declared disasters in 2008 and 2009 and individuals are allowed to claim the net disaster losses even if they do not itemize their deductions. The reduction amount returns to $100 for taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2009. See Publication 547 for more information on casualty losses. For the limits that apply to home mortgage interest, see Publication 936. Category 2. Deductions that do not result in an adjustment to the basis of property are allowed next, but only to the extent your gross income from the activity is more than your deductions under the first category. Most business deductions, such as those for advertising, insurance premiums, interest, utilities, and wages, belong in this category. Category 3. Business deductions that decrease the basis of property are allowed last, but only to the extent the gross income from the activity exceeds the deductions you take under the first two categories. Deductions for depreciation, amortization, and the part of a casualty loss an individual could not deduct in category (1) belong in this category. Where more than one asset is involved, allocate depreciation and these other deductions proportionally. Individuals must claim the amounts in categories (2) and (3) as miscellaneous deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040). They are subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit. See Publication 529 for information on this limit.
Not-for-Profit Activities
If you do not carry on your business or investment activity to make a profit, you cannot use a loss from the activity to offset other income. Activities you do as a hobby, or mainly for sport or recreation, are often not entered into for profit. The limit on not-for-profit losses applies to individuals, partnerships, estates, trusts, and S corporations. It does not apply to corporations other than S corporations. In determining whether you are carrying on an activity for profit, several factors are taken into account. No one factor alone is decisive. Among the factors to consider are whether:
TIP
Example. Ida is engaged in a not-for-profit activity. The income and expenses of the activity are as follows. Gross income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,200 Subtract: Real estate taxes . . . . . . . . $700 Home mortgage interest . . . . 900 Insurance . . . . . . . . . . . . . 400 Utilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 700 Maintenance . . . . . . . . . . . 200 Depreciation on an automobile 600 Depreciation on a machine . . 200 3,700 Loss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $(500) Ida must limit her deductions to $3,200, the gross income she earned from the activity. The limit is reached in category (3), as follows. Limit on deduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . Category 1: Taxes and interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1,600 Category 2: Insurance, utilities, and maintenance . . . 1,300 Available for Category 3 . . . . . . . . $3,200
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You depend on the income for your liveli Your losses are due to circumstances beyond your control (or are normal in the start-up phase of your type of business), an attempt to improve profitability,
You change your methods of operation in You (or your advisors) have the knowledge needed to carry on the activity as a successful business, similar activities in the past, and
Limit on Deductions
If your activity is not carried on for profit, take deductions in the following order and only to the extent stated in the three categories. If you are an individual, these deductions may be taken only if you itemize. These deductions may be taken on Schedule A (Form 1040). Category 1. Deductions you can take for personal as well as for business activities are allowed in full. For individuals, all nonbusiness deductions, such as those for home mortgage interest, taxes, and casualty losses, belong in
You were successful in making a profit in The activity makes a profit in some years, You can expect to make a future profit
from the appreciation of the assets used in the activity.
2,900 $ 300
The $800 of depreciation is allocated between the automobile and machine as follows. Deducting Business Expenses Page 5
Chapter 1
= $225
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You can claim employment credits such as the following if you hire individuals who meet certain requirements.
like enterprises pay for the same or similar services. To determine if pay is reasonable, also consider the following items and any other pertinent facts.
The basis of each asset is reduced accordingly. Ida includes the $3,200 of gross income on line 21 (other income) of Form 1040. The $1,600 for category (1) is deductible in full on the appropriate lines for taxes and interest on Schedule A (Form 1040). Ida deducts the remaining $1,600 ($1,300 for category (2) and $300 for category (3)) as other miscellaneous deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040) subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit. Partnerships and S corporations. If a partnership or S corporation carries on a not-for-profit activity, these limits apply at the partnership or S corporation level. They are reflected in the individual shareholders or partners distributive shares. More than one activity. If you have several undertakings, each may be a separate activity or several undertakings may be combined. The following are the most significant facts and circumstances in making this determination.
Indian employment credit (Form 8845). Work opportunity credit (Form 5884). Credit for employer differential wage payments (Form 8932). Reduce your deduction for employee wages by the amount of any employment credits you claim. For more information about these credits, see the form on which the credit is claimed.
The duties performed by the employee. The volume of business handled. The character and amount of responsibility.
The complexities of your business. The amount of time required. The cost of living in the locality. The ability and achievements of the individual employee performing the service. income of the business, as well as with distributions to shareholders if the business is a corporation. ployees.
Topics
This chapter discusses:
Your policy regarding pay for all your em The history of pay for each employee.
Useful Items
You may want to see: Publication t 15 (Circular E), Employers Tax Guide
nomic interrelationship of various undertakings. served by carrying on the various undertakings separately or together in a business or investment setting.
t 15-A Employers Supplemental Tax Guide t 15-B Employers Tax Guide to Fringe Benefits See chapter 12 for information about getting publications and forms.
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Kinds of Pay
Some of the ways you may provide pay to your employees in addition to regular wages or salaries are discussed next. For specialized and detailed information on employees pay and the employment tax treatment of employees pay, see Publications 15, 15-A, and 15-B.
2. Employees Pay
Introduction
You can generally deduct the pay you give your employees for the services they perform. The pay may be in cash, property, or services. It may include wages, salaries, or other compensation such as vacation allowances, bonuses, commissions, and fringe benefits. For information about deducting employment taxes see chapter 5. Page 6 Chapter 2 Employees Pay
The form or method of figuring the pay does not affect its deductibility. For example, bonuses and commissions based on sales or earnings, and paid under an agreement made before the services were performed, are both deductible.
Awards
You can generally deduct amounts you pay to your employees as awards, whether paid in cash or property. If you give property to an employee as an employee achievement award, your deduction may be limited. Achievement awards. An achievement award is an item of tangible personal property that meets all the following requirements.
Test 1Reasonableness
You must be able to prove that the pay is reasonable. Base this determination on the circumstances that exist when you contract for the services, not those that exist when the reasonableness is questioned. If the pay is excessive, the excess is disallowed for deduction. Factors to consider. Determine the reasonableness of pay by the facts and circumstances. Generally, reasonable pay is the amount that
It is awarded as part of a meaningful pres It is awarded under conditions and circumstances that do not create a significant likelihood of disguised pay.
Length-of-service award. An award will qualify as a length-of-service award only if either of the following applies.
length-of-service award (other than one of very small value) during the same year or in any of the prior 4 years.
Gifts of nominal value. If, to promote employee goodwill, you distribute food or merchandise of nominal value to your employees at holidays, you can deduct the cost of these items as a nonwage business expense. Your deduction for de minimis gifts of food or drink are not subject to the 50% deduction limit that generally applies to meals. For more information on this deduction limit, see Meals and lodging, later.
part of the expense of providing recreational or social activities, such as a company picnic. furnish to crew members of certain commercial vessels (or would be required to furnish if the vessels were operated at sea). This does not include meals you furnish on vessels primarily providing luxury water transportation. or drilling rig located offshore or in Alaska. This includes meals you furnish at a support camp that is near and integral to an oil or gas drilling rig located in Alaska.
Safety achievement award. An award for safety achievement will qualify as an achievement award unless one of the following applies. 1. It is given to a manager, administrator, clerical employee, or other professional employee. 2. During the tax year, more than 10% of your employees, excluding those listed in (1), have already received a safety achievement award (other than one of very small value). Deduction limit. Your deduction for the cost of employee achievement awards given to any one employee during the tax year is limited to the following.
Education Expenses
If you pay or reimburse education expenses for an employee, you can deduct the payments if they are part of a qualified educational assistance program. Deduct them on the Employee benefit programs or other appropriate line of your tax return. For information on educational assistance programs, see Educational Assistance in section 2 of Publication 15-B.
Fringe Benefits
A fringe benefit is a form of pay for the performance of services. You can generally deduct the cost of fringe benefits. You may be able to exclude all or part of the value of some fringe benefits from your employees pay. You also may not owe employment taxes on the value of the fringe benefits. See Table 2-1, Special Rules for Various Types of Fringe Benefits, in Publication 15-B for details. Your deduction for the cost of fringe benefits for activities generally considered entertainment, amusement, or recreation, or for a facility used in connection with such an activity (for example, a company aircraft) for certain officers, directors, and more-than-10% shareholders is limited. Certain fringe benefits are discussed next. See Publication 15-B for more details on these and other fringe benefits. Meals and lodging. You can usually deduct the cost of furnishing meals and lodging to your employees. Deduct the cost in whatever category the expense falls. For example, if you operate a restaurant, deduct the cost of the meals you furnish to employees as part of the cost of goods sold. If you operate a nursing home, motel, or rental property, deduct the cost of furnishing lodging to an employee as expenses for utilities, linen service, salaries, depreciation, etc. Deduction limit on meals. You can generally deduct only 50% of the cost of furnishing meals to your employees. However, you can deduct the full cost of the following meals.
$1,600 for all awards, whether or not qualified plan awards. A qualified plan award is an achievement award given as part of an established written plan or program that does not favor highly compensated employees as to eligibility or benefits. A highly compensated employee is an employee who meets either of the following tests. 1. The employee was a 5% owner at any time during the year or the preceding year. 2. The employee received more than $110,000 in pay for the preceding year. You can choose to ignore test (2) if the employee was not also in the top 20% of employees ranked by pay for the preceding year. An award is not a qualified plan award if the average cost of all the employee achievement awards given during the tax year (that would be qualified plan awards except for this limit) is more than $400. To figure this average cost, ignore awards of nominal value. Deduct achievement awards as a nonwage business expense on your return or business schedule. You may not owe employment taxes on the value of some achievement awards you provide to an employee. See Publication 15-B.
Accident and health plans. Adoption assistance. Cafeteria plans. Dependent care assistance. Educational assistance. Life insurance coverage. Welfare benefit funds.
You can generally deduct amounts you spend on employee benefit programs on the applicable line of your tax return. For example, if you provide dependent care by operating a dependent care facility for your employees, deduct your costs in whatever categories they fall (utilities, salaries, etc.). Life insurance coverage. You cannot deduct the cost of life insurance coverage for you, an employee, or any person with a financial interest in your business, if you are directly or indirectly the beneficiary of the policy. See Regulations section 1.264-1 for more information. Welfare benefit funds. A welfare benefit fund is a funded plan (or a funded arrangement having the effect of a plan) that provides welfare benefits to your employees, independent contractors, or their beneficiaries. Welfare benefits are any benefits other than deferred compensation or transfers of restricted property. Your deduction for contributions to a welfare benefit fund is limited to the funds qualified cost for the tax year. If your contributions to the fund are more than its qualified cost, carry the excess over to the next tax year. Generally, the funds qualified cost is the total of the following amounts, reduced by the after-tax income of the fund.
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Bonuses
You can generally deduct a bonus paid to an employee if you intended the bonus as additional pay for services, not as a gift, and the services were performed. However, the total bonuses, salaries, and other pay must be reasonable for the services performed. If the bonus is paid in property, see Property, later.
benefit as discussed in section 2 of Publication 15-B. This generally includes meals you furnish to employees at your place of business if more than half of these employees are provided the meals for your convenience. the work site when you operate a restaurant or catering service.
deduct using the cash method of accounting if you had paid for the benefits directly. count that are needed to fund claims incurred but not paid as of the end of the year. These claims can be for supplemental unemployment benefits, severance pay, or disability, medical, or life insurance benefits.
Chapter 2
Employees Pay
Page 7
For more information, see sections 419(c) and 419A of the Internal Revenue Code and the related regulations.
Loans or Advances
You generally can deduct as wages an advance you make to an employee for services performed if you do not expect the employee to repay the advance. However, if the employee performs no services, treat the amount you advanced as a loan. If the employee does not repay the loan, treat it as income to the employee. Below-market interest rate loans. On certain loans you make to an employee or shareholder, you are treated as having received interest income and as having paid compensation or dividends equal to that interest. See Below-Market Loans in chapter 4.
the payment under a nonaccountable plan, deduct it as wages and include it in the employees W-2. See Reimbursement of Travel, Meals, and Entertainment in chapter 11 for more information about deducting reimbursements and an explanation of accountable and nonaccountable plans.
it is figured as a percentage of gross sales. For examples of related persons, see Related persons in chapter 2, Publication 544. Rent on your home. If you rent your home and use part of it as your place of business, you may be able to deduct the rent you pay for that part. You must meet the requirements for business use of your home. For more information, see Business use of your home in chapter 1. Rent paid in advance. Generally, rent paid in your trade or business is deductible in the year paid or accrued. If you pay rent in advance, you can deduct only the amount that applies to your use of the rented property during the tax year. You can deduct the rest of your payment only over the period to which it applies. Example 1. You are a calendar year taxpayer and you leased a building for 5 years beginning July 1. Your rent is $12,000 per year. You paid the first years rent ($12,000) on June 30. You can deduct only $6,000 (6/12 $12,000) for the rent that applies to the first year. Example 2. You are a calendar year taxpayer. Last January you leased property for 3 years for $6,000 a year. You paid the full $18,000 (3 $6,000) during the first year of the lease. Each year you can deduct only $6,000, the part of the lease that applies to that year. Canceling a lease. You generally can deduct as rent an amount you pay to cancel a business lease. Lease or purchase. There may be instances in which you must determine whether your payments are for rent or for the purchase of the property. You must first determine whether your agreement is a lease or a conditional sales contract. Payments made under a conditional sales contract are not deductible as rent expense. Conditional sales contract. Whether an agreement is a conditional sales contract depends on the intent of the parties. Determine intent based on the provisions of the agreement and the facts and circumstances that exist when you make the agreement. No single test, or special combination of tests, always applies. However, in general, an agreement may be considered a conditional sales contract rather than a lease if any of the following is true.
Property
If you transfer property (including your companys stock) to an employee as payment for services, you can generally deduct it as wages. The amount you can deduct is the propertys fair market value on the date of the transfer less any amount the employee paid for the property. You can claim the deduction only for the tax year in which your employee includes the propertys value in income. Your employee is deemed to have included the value in income if you report it on Form W-2 in a timely manner. You treat the deductible amount as received in exchange for the property, and you must recognize any gain or loss realized on the transfer, unless it is the companys stock transferred as payment for services. Your gain or loss is the difference between the fair market value of the property and its adjusted basis on the date of transfer. These rules also apply to property transferred to an independent contractor for services, generally reported on Form 1099-MISC. Restricted property. If the property you transfer for services is subject to restrictions that affect its value, you generally cannot deduct it and do not report gain or loss until it is substantially vested in the recipient. However, if the recipient pays for the property, you must report any gain at the time of the transfer up to the amount paid. Substantially vested means the property is not subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture. This means that the recipient is not likely to have to give up his or her rights in the property in the future.
3. Rent Expense
Introduction
This chapter discusses the tax treatment of rent or lease payments you make for property you use in your business but do not own. It also discusses how to treat other kinds of payments you make that are related to your use of this property. These include payments you make for taxes on the property.
Topics
This chapter discusses: The definition of rent Taxes on leased property The cost of getting a lease Improvements by the lessee Capitalizing rent expenses
ment toward an equity interest you will receive. a stated amount of required payments.
Rent
Rent is any amount you pay for the use of property you do not own. In general, you can deduct rent as an expense only if the rent is for property you use in your trade or business. If you have or will receive equity in or title to the property, the rent is not deductible. Unreasonable rent. You cannot take a rental deduction for unreasonable rent. Ordinarily, the issue of reasonableness arises only if you and the lessor are related. Rent paid to a related person is reasonable if it is the same amount you would pay to a stranger for use of the same property. Rent is not unreasonable just because
You get title to the property after you make The amount you must pay to use the property for a short time is a large part of the amount you would pay to get title to the property. rental value of the property.
You pay much more than the current fair You have an option to buy the property at
a nominal price compared to the value of the property when you may exercise the option. Determine this value when you make the agreement. a nominal price compared to the total
The agreement designates part of the payments as interest, or that part is easy to recognize as interest.
Leveraged leases. Leveraged lease transactions may not be considered leases. Leveraged leases generally involve three parties: a lessor, a lessee, and a lender to the lessor. Usually the lease term covers a large part of the useful life of the leased property, and the lessees payments to the lessor are enough to cover the lessors payments to the lender. If you plan to take part in what appears to be a leveraged lease, you may want to get an advance ruling. Revenue Procedure 2001-28 on page 1156 of Internal Revenue Bulletin 2001-19 contains the guidelines the IRS will use to determine if a leveraged lease is a lease for federal income tax purposes. Revenue Procedure 2001-29 on page 1160 of the same Internal Revenue Bulletin provides the information required to be furnished in a request for an advance ruling on a leveraged lease transaction. Internal Revenue Bulletin 2001-19 is available at www.irs.gov/pub/irs-irbs/irb01-19.pdf. In general, Revenue Procedure 2001-28 provides that, for advance ruling purposes only, the IRS will consider the lessor in a leveraged lease transaction to be the owner of the property and the transaction to be a valid lease if all the factors in the revenue procedure are met, including the following.
Rents increase during the lease. Rents decrease during the lease. Rents are deferred (rent is payable after
the end of the calendar year following the calendar year in which the use occurs and the rent is allocated). the end of the calendar year preceding the calendar year in which the use occurs and the rent is allocated).
the real estate taxes in the later year when the tax bills are issued. If the lease ends before the tax bill for a year is issued, Oak is not liable for the taxes for that year. Oak cannot deduct the real estate taxes as rent until the tax bill is issued. This is when Oaks liability under the lease becomes fixed. Example 2. The facts are the same as in Example 1 except that, according to the terms of the lease, Oak becomes liable for the real estate taxes when the owner of the property becomes liable for them. As a result, Oak will deduct the real estate taxes as rent on its tax return for the earlier year. This is the year in which Oaks liability under the lease becomes fixed.
These rules do not apply if your lease specifies equal amounts of rent for each month in the lease term and all rent payments are due in the calendar year to which the rent relates (or in the preceding or following calendar year). Generally, if the special rules apply, you must use an accrual method of accounting (and time value of money principles) for your rental expenses, regardless of your overall method of accounting. In addition, in certain cases in which the IRS has determined that a lease was designed to achieve tax avoidance, you must take rent and stated or imputed interest into account under a constant rental accrual method in which the rent is treated as accruing ratably over the entire lease term. For details, see section 467 of the Internal Revenue Code.
conditional at risk equity investment in the property (at least 20% of the cost of the property) during the entire lease term. right to buy the property from the lessor at less than fair market value when the right is exercised. except as provided by Revenue Procedure 2001-28. lessor to buy the property or guarantee the loan used by the lessor to buy the property. receive a profit apart from the tax deductions, allowances, credits, and other tax attributes.
The IRS may charge you a user fee for issuing a tax ruling. For more information, see Revenue Procedure 2012-1 available at www.irs.gov/irb/2012-01_IRB/ar06.html. Leveraged leases of limited-use property. The IRS will not issue advance rulings on leveraged leases of so-called limited-use property. Limited-use property is property not expected to be either useful to or usable by a lessor at the end of the lease term except for continued leasing or transfer to a lessee. See Revenue Procedure 2001-28 for examples of limited-use property and property that is not limited-use property. Leases over $250,000. Special rules are provided for certain leases of tangible property. The rules apply if the lease calls for total payments of
Cost of a modification agreement. You may have to pay an additional rent amount over part of the lease period to change certain provisions in your lease. You must capitalize these payments and amortize them over the remaining period of the lease. You cannot deduct the payments as additional rent, even if they are described as rent in the agreement. Example. You are a calendar year taxpayer and sign a 20-year lease to rent part of a building starting on January 1. However, before you occupy it, you decide that you really need less space. The lessor agrees to reduce your rent from $7,000 to $6,000 per year and to release the excess space from the original lease. In exchange, you agree to pay an additional rent amount of $3,000, payable in 60 monthly installments of $50 each. You must capitalize the $3,000 and amortize it over the 20-year term of the lease. Your amortization deduction each year will be $150 ($3,000 20). You cannot deduct the $600 (12 $50) that you will pay during each of the first 5 years as rent. Commissions, bonuses, and fees. Commissions, bonuses, fees, and other amounts you pay to get a lease on property you use in your business are capital costs. You must amortize these costs over the term of the lease. Loss on merchandise and fixtures. If you sell at a loss merchandise and fixtures that you bought solely to get a lease, the loss is a cost of getting the lease. You must capitalize the loss and amortize it over the remaining term of the lease.
investment in the improvements over the recovery period of the property as discussed earlier, without regard to the lease term.
4. Interest
Introduction
This chapter discusses the tax treatment of business interest expense. Business interest expense is an amount charged for the use of money you borrowed for business activities.
Topics
This chapter discusses:
Allocation of interest Interest you can deduct Interest you cannot deduct Capitalization of interest When to deduct interest Below-market loans
Useful Items
You may want to see: Publication t 537 t 550 t 936 Installment Sales Investment Income and Expenses Home Mortgage Interest Deduction
Form (and Instructions) t Sch A (Form 1040) Itemized Deductions t Sch E (Form 1040) Supplemental Income and Loss t Sch K-1 (Form 1065) Partners Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc. t Sch K-1 (Form 1120S) Shareholders Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc. t 1098 Mortgage Interest Statement t 3115 Application for Change in Accounting Method t 4952 Investment Interest Expense Deduction t 8582 Passive Activity Loss Limitations See chapter 12 for information about getting publications and forms.
Improvements by Lessee
If you add buildings or make other permanent improvements to leased property, depreciate the cost of the improvements using the modified accelerated cost recovery system (MACRS). Depreciate the property over its appropriate recovery period. You cannot amortize the cost over the remaining term of the lease. If you do not keep the improvements when you end the lease, figure your gain or loss based on your adjusted basis in the improvements at that time. For more information, see the discussion of MACRS in Publication 946, How To Depreciate Property. Assignment of a lease. If a long-term lessee who makes permanent improvements to land later assigns all lease rights to you for money and you pay the rent required by the lease, the amount you pay for the assignment is a capital investment. If the rental value of the leased land increased since the lease began, part of your capital investment is for that increase in the rental value. The rest is for your investment in the permanent improvements. The part that is for the increased rental value of the land is a cost of getting a lease, and you amortize it over the remaining term of the lease. You can depreciate the part that is for your Page 10 Chapter 4 Interest
Allocation of Interest
The rules for deducting interest vary, depending on whether the loan proceeds are used for business, personal, or investment activities. If you use the proceeds of a loan for more than one type of expense, you must allocate the interest based on the use of the loans proceeds. Allocate your interest expense to the following categories.
Passive trade or business activity interest Investment interest Portfolio interest Personal interest
In general, you allocate interest on a loan the same way you allocate the loan proceeds. You allocate loan proceeds by tracing disbursements to specific uses. The easiest way to trace disbursements to specific uses is to keep the proceeds of a particular loan separate from any other funds. Secured loan. The allocation of loan proceeds and the related interest is not generally affected by the use of property that secures the loan.
Under the interest allocation rules, the entire $100,000 loan is treated as property held for investment for the period from January 4 through April 1. From April 2 through September 3, Connie must treat $20,000 of the loan as used in the passive activity and $80,000 of the loan as property held for investment. From September 4 through December 31, she must treat $40,000 of the loan as used for personal purposes, $20,000 as used in the passive activity, and $40,000 as property held for investment. Order of funds spent. Generally, you treat loan proceeds deposited in an account as used (spent) before either of the following amounts.
TIP
after the proceeds are received in cash or deposited in your account. If the loan proceeds are deposited in an account, you can apply this rule even if the rules stated earlier under Order of funds spent would otherwise require you to treat the proceeds as used for other purposes. If you apply this rule to any payments, disregard those payments (and the proceeds from which they are made) when applying the rules stated under Order of funds spent. If you received the loan proceeds in cash, you can treat the payment as made on the date you received the cash instead of the date you actually made the payment. Example. Frank gets a loan of $1,000 on August 4 and receives the proceeds in cash. Frank deposits $1,500 in an account on August 18 and on August 28 writes a check on the account for a passive activity expense. Also, Frank deposits his paycheck, deposits other loan proceeds, and pays his bills during the same period. Regardless of these other transactions, Frank can treat $1,000 of the deposit he made on August 18 as being paid on August 4 from the loan proceeds. In addition, Frank can treat the passive activity expense he paid on August 28 as made from the $1,000 loan proceeds treated as deposited in the account. Optional method for determining date of reallocation. You can use the following method to determine the date loan proceeds are reallocated to another use. You can treat all payments from loan proceeds in the account during any month as taking place on the later of the following dates.
Example. You secure a loan with property used in your business. You use the loan proceeds to buy an automobile for personal use. You must allocate interest expense on the loan to personal use (purchase of the automobile) even though the loan is secured by business property. If the property that secures the loan is your home, you generally do not allocate the loan proceeds or the related interest. The interest is usually deductible as qualified home mortgage interest, regardless of how the loan proceeds are used. For more information, see Publication 936.
TIP
Allocation period. The period for which a loan is allocated to a particular use begins on the date the proceeds are used and ends on the earlier of the following dates.
The first day of that month. The date the loan proceeds are deposited
in the account. However, you can use this optional method only if you treat all payments from the account during the same calendar month in the same way. Interest on a segregated account. If you have an account that contains only loan proceeds and interest earned on the account, you can treat any payment from that account as being made first from the interest. When the interest earned is used up, any remaining payments are from loan proceeds. Example. You borrowed $20,000 and used the proceeds of this loan to open a new savings account. When the account had earned interest of $867, you withdrew $20,000 for personal purposes. You can treat the withdrawal as coming first from the interest earned on the account, $867, and then from the loan proceeds, $19,133 ($20,000 $867). All the interest charged on the loan from the time it was deposited in the account until the time of the withdrawal is investment interest expense. The interest charged on the part of the proceeds used for personal purposes ($19,133) from the time you withdrew it until you either repay it or reallocate it to another use is personal interest expense. The interest charged on the loan proceeds you left in the account ($867) continues to be investment interest expense until you either repay it or reallocate it to another use. Chapter 4 Interest Page 11
The date the loan is repaid. The date the loan is reallocated to another
use. Proceeds not disbursed to borrower. Even if the lender disburses the loan proceeds to a third party, the allocation of the loan is still based on your use of the funds. This applies whether you pay for property, services, or anything else by incurring a loan, or you take property subject to a debt. Proceeds deposited in borrowers account. Treat loan proceeds deposited in an account as property held for investment. It does not matter whether the account pays interest. Any interest you pay on the loan is investment interest expense. If you withdraw the proceeds of the loan, you must reallocate the loan based on the use of the funds. Example. Connie, a calendar-year taxpayer, borrows $100,000 on January 4 and immediately uses the proceeds to open a checking account. No other amounts are deposited in the account during the year and no part of the loan principal is repaid during the year. On April 2, Connie uses $20,000 from the checking account for a passive activity expenditure. On September 4, Connie uses an additional $40,000 from the account for personal purposes.
Edith treats the $800 used for personal purposes as made from the $500 proceeds of Loan A and $300 of the proceeds of Loan B. She treats the $700 used for a passive activity as made from the remaining $200 proceeds of Loan B and $500 of unborrowed funds. She treats the $800 used for an investment as made entirely from the proceeds of Loan C. She treats the $600 used for personal purposes as made from the remaining $200 proceeds of Loan C and $400 of unborrowed funds. For the periods during which loan proceeds are held in the account, Edith treats them as property held for investment. Payments from checking accounts. Generally, you treat a payment from a checking or similar account as made at the time the check is written if you mail or deliver it to the payee within a reasonable period after you write it. You can treat checks written on the same day as written in any order. Amounts paid within 30 days. If you receive loan proceeds in cash or if the loan proceeds are deposited in an account, you can treat any payment (up to the amount of the proceeds) made from any account you own, or from cash, as made from those proceeds. This applies to any payment made within 30 days before or
Loan repayment. When you repay any part of a loan allocated to more than one use, treat it as being repaid in the following order. 1. Personal use. 2. Investments and passive activities (other than those included in (3)). 3. Passive activities in connection with a rental real estate activity in which you actively participate. 4. Former passive activities. 5. Trade or business use and expenses for certain low-income housing projects. Line of credit (continuous borrowings). The following rules apply if you have a line of credit or similar arrangement. 1. Treat all borrowed funds on which interest accrues at the same fixed or variable rate as a single loan. 2. Treat borrowed funds or parts of borrowed funds on which interest accrues at different fixed or variable rates as different loans. Treat these loans as repaid in the order shown on the loan agreement. Loan refinancing. Allocate the replacement loan to the same uses to which the repaid loan was allocated. Make the allocation only to the extent you use the proceeds of the new loan to repay any part of the original loan. Debt-financed distribution. A debt-financed distribution occurs when a partnership or S corporation borrows funds and allocates those funds to distributions made to partners or shareholders. The manner in which you report the interest expense associated with the distributed debt proceeds depends on your use of those proceeds. How to report. If the proceeds were used in a nonpassive trade or business activity, report the interest on Schedule E (Form 1040), line 28; enter interest expense and the name of the partnership or S corporation in column (a) and the amount in column (h). If the proceeds were used in a passive activity, follow the Instructions for Form 8582, Passive Activity Loss Limitations, to determine the amount of interest expense that can be reported on Schedule E (Form 1040), line 28; enter interest expense and the name of the partnership in column (a) and the amount in column (f). If the proceeds were used in an investment activity, enter the interest on Form 4952. If the proceeds are used for personal purposes, the interest is generally not deductible.
You are legally liable for that debt. Both you and the lender intend that the
debt be repaid.
You generally deduct OID over the term of the loan. Figure the amount to deduct each year using the constant-yield method, unless the OID on the loan is de minimis. De minimis OID. The OID is de minimis if it is less than one-fourth of 1% (.0025) of the stated redemption price of the loan at maturity multiplied by the number of full years from the date of original issue to maturity (the term of the loan). If the OID is de minimis, you can choose one of the following ways to figure the amount you can deduct each year.
On a straight-line basis over the term of In proportion to stated interest payments. In its entirety at maturity of the loan.
You make this choice by deducting the OID in a manner consistent with the method chosen on your timely filed tax return for the tax year in which the loan is issued. Example. On January 1, 2011, you took out a $100,000 discounted loan and received $98,500 in proceeds. The loan will mature on January 1, 2021 (a 10-year term), and the $100,000 principal is payable on that date. Interest of $10,000 is payable on January 1 of each year, beginning January 1, 2012. The $1,500 OID on the loan is de minimis because it is less than $2,500 ($100,000 .0025 10). You choose to deduct the OID on a straight-line basis over the term of the loan. Beginning in 2011, you can deduct $150 each year for 10 years. Constant-yield method. If the OID is not de minimis, you must use the constant-yield method to figure how much you can deduct each year. You figure your deduction for the first year using the following steps. 1. Determine the issue price of the loan. Generally, this equals the proceeds of the loan. If you paid points on the loan (as discussed later), the issue price generally is the difference between the proceeds and the points. 2. Multiply the result in (1) by the yield to maturity. 3. Subtract any qualified stated interest payments from the result in (2). This is the OID you can deduct in the first year. To figure your deduction in any subsequent year, follow the above steps, except determine the adjusted issue price in step (1). To get the adjusted issue price, add to the issue price any OID previously deducted. Then follow steps (2) and (3) above. The yield to maturity is generally shown in the literature you receive from your lender. If you do not have this information, consult your lender or tax advisor. In general, the yield to maturity is the discount rate that, when used in computing the present value of all principal and interest payments, produces an amount equal to the principal amount of the loan. Example. The facts are the same as in the previous example, except that you deduct the
OID on a constant yield basis over the term of the loan. The yield to maturity on your loan is 10.2467%, compounded annually. For 2011, you can deduct $93 [($98,500 .102467) $10,000]. For 2012, you can deduct $103 [($98,593 .102467) $10,000]. Loan or mortgage ends. If your loan or mortgage ends, you may be able to deduct any remaining OID in the tax year in which the loan or mortgage ends. A loan or mortgage may end due to a refinancing, prepayment, foreclosure, or similar event. If you refinance with the original lender, you generally cannot deduct the reCAUTION maining OID in the year in which the refinancing occurs, but you may be able to deduct it over the term of the new mortgage or loan. See Interest paid with funds borrowed from original lender under Interest You Cannot Deduct, later. Points. The term points is used to describe certain charges paid, or treated as paid, by a borrower to obtain a loan or a mortgage. These charges are also called loan origination fees, maximum loan charges, discount points, or premium charges. If any of these charges (points) are solely for the use of money, they are interest. Because points are prepaid interest, you generally cannot deduct the full amount in the year paid. However, you can choose to fully deduct points in the year paid if you meet certain tests. For exceptions to the general rule, see Publication 936. The points reduce the issue price of the loan and result in original issue discount (OID), deductible as explained in the preceding discussion.
Interest paid with funds borrowed from original lender. If you use the cash method of accounting, you cannot deduct interest you pay with funds borrowed from the original lender through a second loan, an advance, or any other arrangement similar to a loan. You can deduct the interest expense once you start making payments on the new loan. When you make a payment on the new loan, you first apply the payment to interest and then to the principal. All amounts you apply to the interest on the first loan are deductible, along with any interest you pay on the second loan, subject to any limits that apply. Capitalized interest. You cannot currently deduct interest you are required to capitalize under the uniform capitalization rules. See Capitalization of Interest, later. In addition, if you buy property and pay interest owed by the seller (for example, by assuming the debt and any interest accrued on the property), you cannot deduct the interest. Add this interest to the basis of the property. Commitment fees or standby charges. Fees you incur to have business funds available on a standby basis, but not for the actual use of the funds, are not deductible as interest payments. You may be able to deduct them as business expenses. If the funds are for inventory or certain property used in your business, the fees are indirect costs and you generally must capitalize them under the uniform capitalization rules. See Capitalization of Interest, later. Interest on income tax. Interest charged on income tax assessed on your individual income tax return is not a business deduction even though the tax due is related to income from your trade or business. Treat this interest as a business deduction only in figuring a net operating loss deduction. Penalties. Penalties on underpaid deficiencies and underpaid estimated tax are not interest. You cannot deduct them. Generally, you cannot deduct any fines or penalties. Interest on loans with respect to life insurance policies. You generally cannot deduct interest on a debt incurred with respect to any life insurance, annuity, or endowment contract that covers any individual unless that individual is a key person. If the policy or contract covers a key person, you can deduct the interest on up to $50,000 of debt for that person. However, the deduction for any month cannot be more than the interest figured using Moodys Composite Yield on Seasoned Corporate Bonds (formerly known as Moodys Corporate Bond Yield Average-Monthly Average Corporates) (Moodys rate) for that month. Who is a key person? A key person is an officer or 20% owner. However, the number of individuals you can treat as key persons is limited to the greater of the following.
Exceptions for pre-June 1997 contracts. You can generally deduct the interest if the contract was issued before June 9, 1997, and the covered individual is someone other than an employee, officer, or someone financially interested in your business. If the contract was purchased before June 21, 1986, you can generally deduct the interest no matter who is covered by the contract. Interest allocated to unborrowed policy cash value. Corporations and partnerships generally cannot deduct any interest expense allocable to unborrowed cash values of life insurance, annuity, or endowment contracts. This rule applies to contracts issued after June 8, 1997, that cover someone other than an officer, director, employee, or 20% owner. For more information, see section 264(f) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Capitalization of Interest
Under the uniform capitalization rules, you generally must capitalize interest on debt equal to your expenditures to produce real property or certain tangible personal property. The property must be produced by you for use in your trade or business or for sale to customers. You cannot capitalize interest related to property that you acquire in any other manner. Interest you paid or incurred during the production period must be capitalized if the property produced is designated property. Designated property is any of the following.
Partial payments on a nontax debt. If you make partial payments on a debt (other than a debt owed the IRS), the payments are applied, in general, first to interest and any remainder to principal. You can deduct only the interest. This rule does not apply when it can be inferred that the borrower and lender understood that a different allocation of the payments would be made. Installment purchase. If you make an installment purchase of business property, the contract between you and the seller generally provides for the payment of interest. If no interest or a low rate of interest is charged under the contract, a portion of the stated principal amount payable under the contract may be recharacterized as interest (unstated interest). The amount recharacterized as interest reduces your basis in the property and increases your interest expense. For more information on installment sales and unstated interest, see Publication 537.
Tangible personal property with an esti Tangible personal property with an esti-
mated production period of more than 2 years. mated production period of more than 1 year if the estimated cost of production is more than $1 million.
Property you produce. You produce property if you construct, build, install, manufacture, develop, improve, create, raise, or grow it. Treat property produced for you under a contract as produced by you up to the amount you pay or incur for the property. Carrying charges. Carrying charges include taxes you pay to carry or develop real estate or to carry, transport, or install personal property. You can choose to capitalize carrying charges not subject to the uniform capitalization rules if they are otherwise deductible. For more information, see chapter 7. Capitalized interest. Treat capitalized interest as a cost of the property produced. You recover your interest when you sell or use the property. If the property is inventory, recover capitalized interest through cost of goods sold. If the property is used in your trade or business, recover capitalized interest through an adjustment to basis, depreciation, amortization, or other method. Chapter 4 Interest Page 13
Partnerships and S corporations. The interest capitalization rules are applied first at the partnership or S corporation level. The rules are then applied at the partners or shareholders level to the extent the partnership or S corporation has insufficient debt to support the production or construction costs. If you are a partner or a shareholder, you may have to capitalize interest you incur during the tax year for the production costs of the partnership or S corporation. You may also have to capitalize interest incurred by the partnership or S corporation for your own production costs. To properly capitalize interest under these rules, you must be given the required information in an attachment to the Schedule K-1 you receive from the partnership or S corporation. Additional information. The procedures for applying the uniform capitalization rules are beyond the scope of this publication. For more information, see sections 1.263A-8 through 1.263A-15 of the regulations and Notice 88-99. Notice 88-99 is in Cumulative Bulletin 1988-2.
However, if you contest but pay the proposed tax deficiency and interest, and you do not designate the payment as a cash bond, then the interest is deductible in the year paid. Related person. If you use an accrual method, you cannot deduct interest owed to a related person who uses the cash method until payment is made and the interest is includible in the gross income of that person. The relationship is determined as of the end of the tax year for which the interest would otherwise be deductible. See section 267 of the Internal Revenue Code for more information.
of the main purposes of the interest arrangement). 5. Loans to qualified continuing care facilities under a continuing care contract (made after October 11, 1985). Except as noted in (5) above, these rules apply to demand loans (loans payable in full at any time upon the lenders demand) outstanding after June 6, 1984, and to term loans (loans that are not demand loans) made after that date. Treatment of gift and demand loans. If you receive a below-market gift loan or demand loan, you are treated as receiving an additional payment (as a gift, dividend, etc.) equal to the forgone interest on the loan. You are then treated as transferring this amount back to the lender as interest. These transfers are considered to occur annually, generally on December 31. If you use the loan proceeds in your trade or business, you can deduct the forgone interest each year as a business interest expense. The lender must report it as interest income. Limit on forgone interest for gift loans of $100,000 or less. For gift loans between individuals, forgone interest treated as transferred back to the lender is limited to the borrowers net investment income for the year. This limit applies if the outstanding loans between the lender and borrower total $100,000 or less. If the borrowers net investment income is $1,000 or less, it is treated as zero. This limit does not apply to a loan if the avoidance of any federal tax is one of the main purposes of the interest arrangement. Treatment of term loans. If you receive a below-market term loan other than a gift or demand loan, you are treated as receiving an additional cash payment (as a dividend, etc.) on the date the loan is made. This payment is equal to the loan amount minus the present value, at the applicable federal rate, of all payments due under the loan. The same amount is treated as original issue discount on the loan. See Original issue discount (OID) under Interest You Can Deduct, earlier. Exceptions for loans of $10,000 or less. The rules for below-market loans do not apply to any day on which the total outstanding loans between the borrower and lender is $10,000 or less. This exception applies only to the following. 1. Gift loans between individuals if the loan is not directly used to buy or carry income-producing assets. 2. Compensation-related loans or corporation-shareholder loans if the avoidance of any federal tax is not a principal purpose of the interest arrangement. This exception does not apply to a term loan described in (2) above that was previously subject to the below-market loan rules. Those rules will continue to apply even if the outstanding balance is reduced to $10,000 or less. Exceptions for loans without significant tax effect. The following loans are specifically exempted from the rules for below-market loans because their interest arrangements do not have a significant effect on the federal tax liability of the borrower or the lender.
Below-Market Loans
If you receive a below-market gift or demand loan and use the proceeds in your trade or business, you may be able to deduct the forgone interest. See Treatment of gift and demand loans later in this discussion. A below-market loan is a loan on which no interest is charged or on which interest is charged at a rate below the applicable federal rate. A gift or demand loan that is a below-market loan generally is considered an arms-length transaction in which you, the borrower, are considered as having received both the following.
TIP
1. Gift loans (below-market loans where the forgone interest is in the nature of a gift). 2. Compensation-related loans (below-market loans between an employer and an employee or between an independent contractor and a person for whom the contractor provides services). 3. Corporation-shareholder loans. 4. Tax avoidance loans (below-market loans where the avoidance of federal tax is one
Tax deficiency. If you contest a federal income tax deficiency, interest does not accrue until the tax year the final determination of liability is made. If you do not contest the deficiency, then the interest accrues in the year the tax was asserted and agreed to by you. Page 14 Chapter 4 Interest
1. Loans made available by lenders to the general public on the same terms and conditions that are consistent with the lenders customary business practices. 2. Loans subsidized by a federal, state, or municipal government that are made available under a program of general application to the public. 3. Certain employee-relocation loans. 4. Certain loans to or from a foreign person, unless the interest income would be effectively connected with the conduct of a U.S. trade or business and not exempt from U.S. tax under an income tax treaty. 5. Any other loan if the taxpayer can show that the interest arrangement has no significant effect on the federal tax liability of the lender or the borrower. Whether an interest arrangement has a significant effect on the federal tax liability of the lender or the borrower will be determined by all the facts and circumstances. Consider all the following factors. a. Whether items of income and deduction generated by the loan offset each other. b. The amount of the items. c. The cost of complying with the below-market loan provisions if they were to apply. d. Any reasons, other than taxes, for structuring the transaction as a below-market loan.
b. assisted living or nursing facility available in the continuing care facility. 3. The individual or individuals spouse will be provided with assisted living or nursing care available in the continuing care facility, as required for the health of the individual or the individuals spouse. For more information, see section 7872(h) of the Internal Revenue Code. Sale or exchange of property. Different rules generally apply to a loan connected with the sale or exchange of property. If the loan does not provide adequate stated interest, part of the principal payment may be considered interest. However, there are exceptions that may require you to apply the below-market interest rate rules to these loans. See Unstated Interest and Original Issue Discount (OID) in Publication 537. More information. For more information on below-market loans, see section 7872 of the Internal Revenue Code and section 1.7872-5 of the regulations.
Form (and Instructions) t Sch A (Form 1040) Itemized Deductions t Sch SE (Form 1040) Self-Employment Tax t 3115 Application for Change in Accounting Method See chapter 12 for information about getting publications and forms.
5. Taxes
Introduction
You can deduct various federal, state, local, and foreign taxes directly attributable to your trade or business as business expenses. You cannot deduct federal income taxes, estate and gift taxes, or state inheritance, legacy, and succession
Exception for loans to qualified continuing care facilities. The below-market interest rules do not apply to a loan owed by a qualified continuing care facility under a continuing care contract if the lender or lenders spouse is age 62 or older by the end of the calendar year. A qualified continuing care facility is one or more facilities (excluding nursing homes) meeting the requirements listed below. 1. Designed to provide services under continuing care contracts (defined below). 2. Includes an independent living unit, and either an assisted living or nursing facility, or both. 3. Substantially all of the independent living unit residents are covered by continuing care contracts. A continuing care contract is a written contract between an individual and a qualified continuing care facility that includes all of the following conditions. 1. The individual or individuals spouse must be entitled to use the facility for the rest of their life or lives. 2. The individual or individuals spouse will be provided with housing, as appropriate for the health of the individual or individuals spouse in an: a. independent living unit (which has additional available facilities outside the unit for the provision of meals and other personal care), and
CAUTION
taxes.
Topics
This chapter discusses:
When to deduct taxes Real estate taxes Income taxes Employment taxes Other taxes
Useful Items
You may want to see: Publication t 15 t 334 t 510 t 538 t 551 (Circular E), Employers Tax Guide Tax Guide for Small Business Excise Taxes Accounting Periods and Methods Basis of Assets
TIP
You must include in income any interest you receive on tax refunds.
taxes, you are considered to have accrued your part of the tax on the date you sell the property. Example. Al Green, a calendar year accrual method taxpayer, owns real estate in Elm County. He has not elected to ratably accrue property taxes. November 30 of each year is the assessment and lien date for the current real property tax year, which is the calendar year. He sold the property on June 30, 2011. Under his accounting method he would not be able to claim a deduction for the taxes because the sale occurred before November 30. He is treated as having accrued his part of the tax, 180/365 (January 1 June 29), on June 30, and he can deduct it for 2011. Electing to ratably accrue. If you use an accrual method, you can elect to accrue real estate tax related to a definite period ratably over that period. Example. John Smith is a calendar year taxpayer who uses an accrual method. His real estate taxes for the real property tax year, July 1, 2011, to June 30, 2012, are $1,200. July 1 is the assessment and lien date. If John elects to ratably accrue the taxes, $600 will accrue in 2011 ($1,200 6/12, July 1 December 31) and the balance will accrue in 2012. Separate elections. You can elect to ratably accrue the taxes for each separate trade or business and for nonbusiness activities if you account for them separately. Once you elect to ratably accrue real estate taxes, you must use that method unless you get permission from the IRS to change. See Form 3115, later. Making the election. If you elect to ratably accrue the taxes for the first year in which you incur real estate taxes, attach a statement to your income tax return for that year. The statement should show all the following items.
29, 2010, see Revenue Procedure 2011-14, 2011-4 I.R.B. 330, available at www.irs.gov/irb/2011-04IRB/ar08.html.
Income Taxes
This section discusses federal, state, local, and foreign income taxes. Federal income taxes. You cannot deduct federal income taxes. State and local income taxes. A corporation or partnership can deduct state and local income taxes imposed on the corporation or partnership as business expenses. An individual can deduct state and local income taxes only as an itemized deduction on Schedule A (Form 1040). However, an individual can deduct a state tax on gross income (as distinguished from net income) directly attributable to a trade or business as a business expense. Accrual of contested income taxes. If you use an accrual method, and you contest a state or local income tax liability, you must accrue and deduct any contested amount in the tax year in which the liability is finally determined. If additional state or local income taxes for a prior year are assessed in a later year, you can deduct the taxes in the year in which they were originally imposed (the prior year) if the tax liability is not contested. You cannot deduct them in the year in which the liability is finally determined. The filing of an income tax return is not considered a contest and, in the absence of an overt act of protest, you can deduct the tax in the prior year. Also, you can deduct any additional taxes in the prior year if you do not show some affirmative evidence of denial of the liability. However, if you consistently deduct additional assessments in the year they are paid or finally determined (including those for which there was no contest), you must continue to do so. You cannot take a deduction in the earlier year unless you receive permission to change your method of accounting. For more information on accounting methods, see When Can I Deduct an Expense in chapter 1.
TIP
The period to which the taxes relate. The computation of the real estate tax deduction for that first year. Generally, you must file your return by the due date (including extensions). However, if you timely filed your return for the year without electing to ratably accrue, you can still make the election by filing an amended return within 6 months after the due date of the return (excluding extensions). Attach the statement to the amended return and write Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2 on the statement. File the amended return at the same address where you filed the original return. Form 3115. If you elect to ratably accrue real estate taxes for a year after the first year in which you incur real estate taxes, or if you want to revoke your election to ratably accrue real estate taxes, file Form 3115. For more information, including applicable time frames for filing, see the Instructions for Form 3115. Note. If you are filing an application for a change in accounting method filed after January 9, 2011, for a year of change ending after April
Foreign income taxes. Generally, you can take either a deduction or a credit for income taxes imposed on you by a foreign country or a U.S. possession. However, an individual cannot take a deduction or credit for foreign income taxes paid on income that is exempt from U.S. tax under the foreign earned income exclusion or the foreign housing exclusion. For information on these exclusions, see Publication 54, Tax Guide for U.S. Citizens and Resident Aliens Abroad. For information on the foreign tax credit, see Publication 514, Foreign Tax Credit for Individuals.
Employment Taxes
If you have employees, you must withhold various taxes from your employees pay. Most employers must withhold their employees share of
social security and Medicare taxes along with state and federal income taxes. You may also need to pay certain employment taxes from your own funds. These include your share of social security and Medicare taxes as an employer, along with unemployment taxes. Your deduction for wages paid is not reduced by the social security, medicare, and income taxes you withhold from your employees. You can deduct the employment taxes you must pay from your own funds as taxes. Example. You pay your employee $18,000 a year. However, after you withhold various taxes, your employee receives $14,500. You also pay an additional $1,500 in employment taxes. You should deduct the full $18,000 as wages. You can deduct the $1,500 you pay from your own funds as taxes. For more information on employment taxes, see Publication 15 (Circular E). Unemployment fund taxes. As an employer, you may have to make payments to a state unemployment compensation fund or to a state disability benefit fund. Deduct these payments as taxes.
Do not deduct state and local sales taxes imposed on the buyer that you CAUTION must collect and pay over to the state or local government. Also, do not include these taxes in gross receipts or sales.
Form (and Instructions) t 1040 U.S. Individual Income Tax Return See chapter 12 for information about getting publications and forms.
Self-employment tax. You can deduct part of your self-employment tax as a business expense in figuring your adjusted gross income. This deduction only affects your income tax. It does not affect your net earnings from self-employment or your self-employment tax. To deduct the tax, enter on Form 1040, line 27, the amount shown on the Deduction for employer-equivalent portion of self-employment tax line of Schedule SE (Form 1040). For more information on self-employment tax, see Publication 334.
Deductible Premiums
You generally can deduct premiums you pay for the following kinds of insurance related to your trade or business. 1. Insurance that covers fire, storm, theft, accident, or similar losses. 2. Credit insurance that covers losses from business bad debts. 3. Group hospitalization and medical insurance for employees, including long-term care insurance.
6. Insurance
Whats New
Self-employed health insurance deduction. For tax years beginning after 2010, you cannot deduct any self-employed health insurance deduction you report on Form 1040, line 29, from self-employment earnings.
a. If a partnership pays accident and health insurance premiums for its partners, it generally can deduct them as guaranteed payments to partners. b. If an S corporation pays accident and health insurance premiums for its more-than-2% shareholder-employees, it generally can deduct them, but must also include them in the shareholders wages subject to federal income tax withholding. See Publication 15-B. 4. Liability insurance. 5. Malpractice insurance that covers your personal liability for professional negligence resulting in injury or damage to patients or clients. 6. Workers compensation insurance set by state law that covers any claims for bodily injuries or job-related diseases suffered by employees in your business, regardless of fault. a. If a partnership pays workers compensation premiums for its partners, it generally can deduct them as guaranteed payments to partners. b. If an S corporation pays workers compensation premiums for its more-than-2% shareholder-employees, it generally can deduct them, but must also include them in the shareholders wages. 7. Contributions to a state unemployment insurance fund are deductible as taxes if they are considered taxes under state law. 8. Overhead insurance that pays for business overhead expenses you have during long periods of disability caused by your injury or sickness. 9. Car and other vehicle insurance that covers vehicles used in your business for liability, damages, and other losses. If you operate a vehicle partly for personal use, deduct only the part of the insurance premium that applies to the business use of the vehicle. If you use the standard mileage rate to figure your car expenses, you Chapter 6 Insurance Page 17
Other Taxes
The following are other taxes you can deduct if you incur them in the ordinary course of your trade or business. Excise taxes. You can deduct as a business expense all excise taxes that are ordinary and necessary expenses of carrying on your trade or business. However, see Fuel taxes, later. Franchise taxes. You can deduct corporate franchise taxes as a business expense. Fuel taxes. Generally, taxes on gasoline, diesel fuel, and other motor fuels that you use in your business are included as part of the cost of the fuel. Do not deduct these taxes as a separate item. You may be entitled to a credit or refund for federal excise tax you paid on fuels used for certain purposes. For more information, see Publication 510. Occupational taxes. You can deduct as a business expense an occupational tax charged at a flat rate by a locality for the privilege of working or conducting a business in the locality. Personal property tax. You can deduct any tax imposed by a state or local government on personal property used in your trade or business. Sales tax. Treat any sales tax you pay on a service or on the purchase or use of property as part of the cost of the service or property. If the service or the cost or use of the property is a deductible business expense, you can deduct the tax as part of that service or cost. If the property is merchandise bought for resale, the sales tax is part of the cost of the merchandise. If the property is depreciable, add the sales tax to the basis for depreciation. For more information on basis, see Publication 551.
Introduction
You generally can deduct the ordinary and necessary cost of insurance as a business expense if it is for your trade, business, or profession. However, you may have to capitalize certain insurance costs under the uniform capitalization rules. For more information, see Capitalized Premiums, later.
Topics
This chapter discusses:
Useful Items
You may want to see: Publication t 15-B Employers Tax Guide to Fringe Benefits t 525 t 538 t 547 Taxable and Nontaxable Income Accounting Periods and Methods Casualties, Disasters, and Thefts
cannot deduct any car insurance premiums. 10. Life insurance covering your officers and employees if you are not directly or indirectly a beneficiary under the contract. 11. Business interruption insurance that pays for lost profits if your business is shut down due to a fire or other cause.
can be either in the name of the S corporation or in the name of the shareholder. You can either pay the premiums yourself or your S corporation can pay them and report the premium amounts on Form W-2 as wages to be included in your gross income. However, if the policy is in your name and you pay the premiums yourself, the S corporation must reimburse you and report the premium amounts on Form W-2 as wages to be included in your gross income. Otherwise, the insurance plan will not be considered to be established under your business.
The services must be required by a chronically ill individual and prescribed by a licensed health care practitioner. Chronically ill individual. A chronically ill individual is a person who has been certified as one of the following.
profit for the year reported on Schedule C (Form 1040), Profit or Loss From Business; Schedule C-EZ (Form 1040), Net Profit From Business; or Schedule F (Form 1040), Profit or Loss From Farming. self-employment for the year reported on Schedule K-1 (Form 1065), Partners Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc., box 14, code A. figure your net earnings from self-employment on Schedule SE.
Medicare premiums you voluntarily pay to obtain insurance in your name that is similar to qualifying private health insurance can be used to figure the deduction. If you previously filed returns without using Medicare premiums to figure the deduction, you can file timely amended returns to refigure the deduction. For more information, see Form 1040X, Amended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return. Amounts paid for health insurance coverage from retirement plan distributions that were nontaxable because you are a retired public safety officer cannot be used to figure the deduction. Take the deduction on Form 1040, line 29. Qualified long-term care insurance. You can include premiums paid on a qualified long-term care insurance contract when figuring your deduction. But, for each person covered, you can include only the smaller of the following amounts. 1. The amount paid for that person. 2. The amount shown below. Use the persons age at the end of the tax year. a. Age 40 or younger $340 b. Age 41 to 50 $640 c. Age 51 to 60 $1,270 d. Age 61 to 70 $3,390 e. Age 71 or older $4,240 Qualified long-term care insurance contract. A qualified long-term care insurance contract is an insurance contract that only provides coverage of qualified long-term care services. The contract must meet all the following requirements.
An individual who requires substantial supervision to be protected from threats to health and safety due to severe cognitive impairment.
The certification must have been made by a licensed health care practitioner within the previous 12 months. Benefits received. For information on excluding benefits you receive from a long-term care contract from gross income, see Publication 525. Other coverage. You cannot take the deduction for any month you were eligible to participate in any employer (including your spouses) subsidized health plan at any time during that month, even if you did not actually participate. In addition, if you were eligible for any month or part of a month to participate in any subsidized health plan maintained by the employer of either your dependent or your child who was under age 27 at the end of 2011, do not use amounts paid for coverage for that month to figure the deduction. These rules are applied separately to plans that provide long-term care insurance and plans that do not provide long-term care insurance. However, any medical insurance payments not deductible on Form 1040, line 29, can be included as medical expenses on Schedule A (Form 1040), Itemized Deductions, if you itemize deductions. Effect on itemized deductions. Subtract the health insurance deduction from your medical insurance when figuring medical expenses on Schedule A (Form 1040) if you itemize deductions. Effect on self-employment tax. For tax years beginning before or after 2010, you cannot subtract the self-employed health insurance deduction when figuring net earnings for your self-employment tax from the business under which the insurance plan is established, or considered to be established as discussed earlier. For more information, see Schedule SE (Form 1040). How to figure the deduction. Generally, you can use the worksheet in the Form 1040 instructions to figure your deduction. However, if any of the following apply, you must use Worksheet 6-A in this chapter.
You used one of the optional methods to You received wages in 2011 from an S
corporation in which you were a more-than-2% shareholder. Health insurance premiums paid or reimbursed by the S corporation are shown as wages on Form W-2, Wage and Tax Statement.
The insurance plan must be established, or considered to be established as discussed in the following bullets, under your business.
Schedule C, C-EZ, or F, a policy can be either in the name of the business or in the name of the individual. name of the partnership or in the name of the partner. You can either pay the premiums yourself or your partnership can pay them and report the premium amounts on Schedule K-1 (Form 1065) as guaranteed payments to be included in your gross income. However, if the policy is in your name and you pay the premiums yourself, the partnership must reimburse you and report the premium amounts on Schedule K-1 (Form 1065) as guaranteed payments to be included in your gross income. Otherwise, the insurance plan will not be considered to be established under your business. Chapter 6 Insurance
refunds on the death of the insured or complete surrender or cancellation of the contract, and dividends under the contract may be used only to reduce future premiums or increase future benefits. value or other money that can be paid, assigned, pledged, or borrowed.
It must not provide for a cash surrender It generally must not pay or reimburse ex-
penses incurred for services or items that would be reimbursed under Medicare, except where Medicare is a secondary payer or the contract makes per diem or other periodic payments without regard to expenses.
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1.
2. 3. 4.
* If you used either optional method to figure your net earnings from self-employment from any business, do not enter your net profit from the business. Instead, enter the amount attributable to that business from Schedule SE (Form 1040), Section B, line 4b. * *Earned income includes net earnings and gains from the sale, transfer, or licensing of property you created. However, it does not include capital gain income.
Chapter 6
Insurance
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come, or Form 2555-EZ, Foreign Earned Income Exclusion. long-term care insurance to figure the deduction.
If you are claiming the health coverage tax credit, complete Form 8885, Health Coverage Tax Credit, before you figure this deduction. Health coverage tax credit. You may be able to take this credit only if you were an eligible trade adjustment assistance (TAA) recipient, alternative TAA (ATAA) recipient, reemployment trade adjustment assistance (RTAA) recipient, or Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) pension recipient. Use Form 8885 to figure the amount, if any, of this credit. When figuring the amount to enter on line 1 of Worksheet 6-A, do not include the following.
on a life insurance policy covering you, an employee, or any person with a financial interest in your business if you are directly or indirectly a beneficiary of the policy. You are included among possible beneficiaries of the policy if the policy owner is obligated to repay a loan from you using the proceeds of the policy. A person has a financial interest in your business if the person is an owner or part owner of the business or has lent money to the business. b. For contracts issued after June 8, 1997, you generally cannot deduct the premiums on any life insurance policy, endowment contract, or annuity contract if you are directly or indirectly a beneficiary. The disallowance applies without regard to whom the policy covers. c. Partners. If, as a partner in a partnership, you take out an insurance policy on your own life and name your partners as beneficiaries to induce them to retain their investments in the partnership, you are considered a beneficiary. You cannot deduct the insurance premiums. 4. Insurance to secure a loan. If you take out a policy on your life or on the life of another person with a financial interest in your business to get or protect a business loan, you cannot deduct the premiums as a business expense. Nor can you deduct the premiums as interest on business loans or as an expense of financing loans. In the event of death, the proceeds of the policy are generally not taxed as income even if they are used to liquidate the debt.
However, these rules do not apply to the following property. 1. Personal property you acquire for resale if your average annual gross receipts are $10 million or less for the 3 prior tax years. 2. Property you produce if you meet either of the following conditions. a. Your indirect costs of producing the property are $200,000 or less. b. You use the cash method of accounting and do not account for inventories.
More information. For more information on these rules, see Uniform Capitalization Rules in Publication 538 and the regulations under Internal Revenue Code section 263A.
payments shown in box 1 of Form 1099-H, Health Coverage Tax Credit (HCTC) Advance Payments.
More than one health plan and business. If you have more than one health plan during the year and each plan is established under a different business, you must use separate worksheets (Worksheet 6-A) to figure each plans net earnings limit. Include the premium you paid under each plan on line 1 or line 2 of that separate worksheet and your net profit (or wages) from that business on line 4 (or line 11). For a plan that provides long-term care insurance, the total of the amounts entered for each person on line 2 of all worksheets cannot be more than the appropriate limit shown on line 2 for that person.
Capitalized Premiums
Under the uniform capitalization rules, you must capitalize the direct costs and part of the indirect costs for certain production or resale activities. Include these costs in the basis of property you produce or acquire for resale, rather than claiming them as a current deduction. You recover the costs through depreciation, amortization, or cost of goods sold when you use, sell, or otherwise dispose of the property. Indirect costs include premiums for insurance on your plant or facility, machinery, equipment, materials, property produced, or property acquired for resale. Uniform capitalization rules. You may be subject to the uniform capitalization rules if you do any of the following, unless the property is produced for your use other than in a business or an activity carried on for profit. 1. Produce real property or tangible personal property. For this purpose, tangible personal property includes a film, sound recording, video tape, book, or similar property. 2. Acquire property for resale.
Nondeductible Premiums
You cannot deduct premiums on the following kinds of insurance. 1. Self-insurance reserve funds. You cannot deduct amounts credited to a reserve set up for self-insurance. This applies even if you cannot get business insurance coverage for certain business risks. However, your actual losses may be deductible. See Publication 547. 2. Loss of earnings. You cannot deduct premiums for a policy that pays for lost earnings due to sickness or disability. However, see the discussion on overhead insurance, item (8), under Deductible Premiums, earlier. 3. Certain life insurance and annuities. a. For contracts issued before June 9, 1997, you cannot deduct the premiums Page 20 Chapter 6 Insurance
IF you . . . Elect to deduct research and experimental costs as a current business expense Do not deduct research and experimental costs as a current business expense
THEN . . . Deduct all research and experimental costs in the first year you pay or incur the costs and all later years. If you meet the requirements, amortize them over at least 60 months, starting with the month you first receive an economic benefit from the research. See Research and Experimental Costs in chapter 8.
Useful Items
You may want to see: Publication t 544 Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets
Form (and Instructions) t 3468 Investment Credit t 8826 Disabled Access Credit See chapter 12 for information about getting publications and forms.
Carrying Charges
Carrying charges include the taxes and interest you pay to carry or develop real property or to carry, transport, or install personal property. Certain carrying charges must be capitalized under the uniform capitalization rules. (For information on capitalization of interest, see chapter 4.) You can elect to capitalize carrying charges not subject to the uniform capitalization rules, but only if they are otherwise deductible. You can elect to capitalize carrying charges separately for each project you have and for each type of carrying charge. For unimproved and unproductive real property, your election is good for only 1 year. You must decide whether to capitalize carrying charges each year the property remains unimproved and unproductive. For other real property, your election to capitalize carrying charges remains in effect until construction or development is completed. For personal property, your election is effective until the date you install or first use it, whichever is later. How to make the election. To make the election to capitalize a carrying charge, write a statement saying which charges you elect to capitalize. Attach it to your original tax return for the year the election is to be effective. However, if you timely filed your return for the year without making the election, you can still make the election by filing an amended return within 6 months of the due date of the return (excluding extensions). Attach the statement to the amended return and write Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2 on the statement. File the amended return at the same address you filed the original return. Chapter 7
For more information on the alternative minimum tax, see the instructions for one of the following forms.
Topics
This chapter discusses:
Carrying charges Research and experimental costs Intangible drilling costs Exploration costs Development costs Circulation costs Environmental cleanup costs Qualified disaster expenses Business start-up and organizational costs Reforestation costs Retired asset removal costs Barrier removal costs Film and television production costs
Formula. Invention. Patent. Pilot model. Process. Technique. Property similar to the items listed above.
It also includes products used by you in your trade or business or held for sale, lease, or license. Costs not included. Research and experimental costs do not include expenses for any of the following activities.
Efficiency surveys. Management studies. Quality control testing. Research in connection with literary, historical, or similar projects. production, or process.
How to make the election. You elect to deduct IDCs as a current business expense by taking the deduction on your income tax return for the first tax year you have eligible costs. No formal statement is required. If you file Schedule C (Form 1040), enter these costs under Other expenses. For oil and gas wells, your election is binding for the year it is made and for all later years. For geothermal wells, your election can be revoked by the filing of an amended return on which you do not take the deduction. You can file the amended return for the year up to the normal time of expiration for filing a claim for credit or refund, generally, within 3 years after the date you filed the original return or within 2 years after the date you paid the tax, whichever is later. Energy credit for costs of geothermal wells. If you capitalize the drilling and development costs of geothermal wells that you place in service during the tax year, you may be able to claim a business energy credit. See the instructions for Form 3468 for more information. Nonproductive well. If you capitalize your IDCs, you have another option if the well is nonproductive. You can deduct the IDCs of the nonproductive well as an ordinary loss. You must indicate and clearly state your election on your tax return for the year the well is completed. Once made, the election for oil and gas wells is binding for all later years. You can revoke your election for a geothermal well by filing an amended return that does not claim the loss. Costs incurred outside the United States. You cannot deduct as a current business expense all the IDCs paid or incurred for an oil, gas, or geothermal well located outside the United States. However, you can elect to include the costs in the adjusted basis of the well to figure depletion or depreciation. If you do not make this election, you can deduct the costs over the 10-year period beginning with the tax year in which you paid or incurred them. These rules do not apply to a nonproductive well.
exploration costs. Each shareholder, not the S corporation, elects whether to capitalize or to deduct that shareholders share of exploration costs. Reduced corporate deductions for exploration costs. A corporation (other than an S corporation) can deduct only 70% of its domestic exploration costs. It must capitalize the remaining 30% of costs and amortize them over the 60-month period starting with the month the exploration costs are paid or incurred. A corporation may also elect to capitalize and amortize mining exploration costs over a 10-year period. For more information on this method of amortization, see Internal Revenue Code section 59(e). The 30% the corporation capitalizes cannot be added to its basis in the property to figure cost depletion. However, the amount amortized is treated as additional depreciation and is subject to recapture as ordinary income on a disposition of the property. See Section 1250 Property under Depreciation Recapture in chapter 3 of Publication 544. These rules also apply to the deduction of development costs by corporations. See Development Costs, later. Recapture of exploration expenses. When your mine reaches the producing stage, you must recapture any exploration costs you elected to deduct. Use either of the following methods. Method 1 Include the deducted costs in gross income for the tax year the mine reaches the producing stage. Your election must be clearly indicated on the return. Increase your adjusted basis in the mine by the amount included in income. Generally, you must elect this recapture method by the due date (including extensions) of your return. However, if you timely filed your return for the year without making the election, you can still make the election by filing an amended return within 6 months of the due date of the return (excluding extensions). Make the election on your amended return and write Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2 on the form where you are including the income. File the amended return at the same address you filed the original return. Method 2 Do not claim any depletion deduction for the tax year the mine reaches the producing stage and any later tax years until the depletion you would have deducted equals the exploration costs you deducted. You also must recapture deducted exploration costs if you receive a bonus or royalty from mine property before it reaches the producing stage. Do not claim any depletion deduction for the tax year you receive the bonus or royalty and any later tax years until the depletion you would have deducted equals the exploration costs you deducted. Generally, if you dispose of the mine before you have fully recaptured the exploration costs you deducted, recapture the balance by treating all or part of your gain as ordinary income. Under these circumstances, you generally treat as ordinary income all of your gain if it is less than your adjusted exploration costs with respect to
Exploration Costs
The costs of determining the existence, location, extent, or quality of any mineral deposit are ordinarily capital expenditures if the costs lead to the development of a mine. You recover these costs through depletion as the mineral is removed from the ground. However, you can elect to deduct domestic exploration costs paid or incurred before the beginning of the development stage of the mine (except those for oil and gas wells). How to make the election. You elect to deduct exploration costs by taking the deduction on your income tax return, or on an amended income tax return, for the first tax year for which you wish to deduct the costs paid or incurred during the tax year. Your return must adequately describe and identify each property or mine, and clearly state how much is being deducted for each one. The election applies to the tax year you make this election and all later tax years. Partnerships and S corporations. Each partner, not the partnership, elects whether to capitalize or to deduct that partners share of
proceeds from production if these amounts are depletable income to the recipient. Chapter 7
Page 22
the mine. If your gain is more than your adjusted exploration costs, treat as ordinary income only a part of your gain, up to the amount of your adjusted exploration costs. Foreign exploration costs. If you pay or incur exploration costs for a mine or other natural deposit located outside the United States, you cannot deduct all the costs in the current year. You can elect to include the costs (other than for an oil, gas, or geothermal well) in the adjusted basis of the mineral property to figure cost depletion. (Cost depletion is discussed in chapter 9.) If you do not make this election, you must deduct the costs over the 10-year period beginning with the tax year in which you pay or incur them. These rules also apply to foreign development costs.
Circulation Costs
A publisher can deduct as a current business expense the costs of establishing, maintaining, or increasing the circulation of a newspaper, magazine, or other periodical. For example, a publisher can deduct the cost of hiring extra employees for a limited time to get new subscriptions through telephone calls. Circulation costs are deductible even if they normally would be capitalized. This rule does not apply to the following costs that must be capitalized.
Qualified contaminated site. A qualified contaminated site is any area that meets both of the following requirements. 1. You hold it for use in a trade or business, for the production of income, or as inventory. 2. There has been a release, threat of release, or disposal of any hazardous substance at or on the site. You must get a statement from the designated state environmental agency that the site meets requirement (2). A site is not eligible if it is on, or proposed for, the national priorities list under section 105(a)(8)(B) of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980. To find out if a site is on the national priorities list, contact the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Expenditures for depreciable property. You cannot deduct the cost of acquiring depreciable property used in connection with the abatement or control of hazardous substances at a qualified contaminated site. However, the part of the depreciation for such property that is otherwise allocated to the qualified contaminated site shall be treated as an environmental cleanup cost. When and how to elect. You elect to deduct environmental cleanup costs by taking the deduction on the income tax return (filed by the due date including extensions) for the tax year in which the costs are paid or incurred. The costs are deducted differently depending on the type of business entity involved. Individuals. Deduct the environmental cleanup costs on the Other Expenses line of Schedule C, E, or F (Form 1040). If the schedule requires you to separately identify each expense included in Other Expenses write Section 198 Election on the line next to the environmental cleanup costs. All other entities. All other taxpayers (including S corporations, partnerships, and trusts) deduct the environmental cleanup costs on the Other Deductions line of the appropriate federal income tax return. On a statement attached to the return that separately identifies each expense included in Other Deductions write Section 198 Election on the line next to the amount for environmental cleanup costs. More than one environmental cleanup cost. If, for any tax year, you pay or incur more than one environmental cleanup cost, you can elect to deduct one or more of such expenditures for that year. You can elect to deduct one expenditure and elect to capitalize another expenditure (whether or not they are of the same type or paid or incurred with respect to the same qualified contaminated site). An election to deduct an expenditure for one year has no effect on other years. You must make a separate election for each year in which you intend to deduct environmental cleanup costs. Recapture. This deduction may have to be recaptured as ordinary income under section 1245 when you sell or otherwise dispose of the property that would have received an addition to basis if you had not elected to deduct the expenditure. For more information on recapturing the Page 23
Development Costs
You can deduct costs paid or incurred during the tax year for developing a mine or any other natural deposit (other than an oil or gas well) located in the United States. These costs must be paid or incurred after the discovery of ores or minerals in commercially marketable quantities. Development costs also include depreciation on improvements used in the development of ores or minerals and costs incurred for you by a contractor. Development costs do not include the costs for the acquisition or improvement of depreciable property. Instead of deducting development costs in the year paid or incurred, you can elect to treat the cost as deferred expenses and deduct them ratably as the units of produced ores or minerals benefited by the expenses are sold. This election applies each tax year to expenses paid or incurred in that year. Once made, the election is binding for the year and cannot be revoked for any reason. How to make the election. The election to deduct development costs ratably as the ores or minerals are sold must be made for each mine or other natural deposit by a clear indication on your return or by a statement filed with the IRS office where you file your return. Generally, you must make the election by the due date of the return (including extensions). However, if you timely filed your return for the year without making the election, you can still make the election by filing an amended return within 6 months of the due date of the return (excluding extensions). Clearly indicate the election on your amended return and write Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2. File the amended return at the same address you filed the original return. Foreign development costs. The rules discussed earlier for foreign exploration costs apply to foreign development costs. Reduced corporate deductions for development costs. The rules discussed earlier for reduced corporate deductions for exploration costs also apply to corporate deductions for development costs.
purchase of any part of the business of another publisher of a newspaper, magazine, or other periodical, including the purchase of another publishers list of subscribers.
Other treatment of circulation costs. If you do not want to deduct circulation costs as a current business expense, you can elect one of the following ways to recover these costs.
properly chargeable to a capital account (see chapter 1). period beginning with the tax year they were paid or incurred.
How to make the election. You elect to capitalize circulation costs by attaching a statement to your return for the first tax year the election applies. Your election is binding for the year it is made and for all later years, unless you get IRS approval to revoke it.
deduction, see Depreciation Recapture in Publication 544. More information. For more information about the environmental cleanup cost deduction, see Internal Revenue Code section 198.
required, attach a statement containing the following information for each qualified timber property for which an election is being made.
The unique stand identification numbers. The total number of acres reforested during the tax year.
The nature of the reforestation treatments. The total amounts of qualified reforestation expenditures eligible to be amortized or deducted.
However, if you timely filed your return for the year without making the election, you can still make the election by filing an amended return within 6 months of the due date of the return (excluding extensions). Clearly indicate the election on your amended return and write Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2. File the amended return at the same address you filed the original return. The election applies when computing taxable income for the current tax year and all subsequent years. If you elected to deduct qualified timber costs on a federal income tax return filed before June 15, 2006, but did not include the above information, complete Part IV of Form T (Timber) or the required statement and attach it to the first federal income tax return you file after June 14, 2006. If you have not elected to deduct qualified timber costs in a prior year you may be able to do so by filing Form 3115, Application for Change in Accounting Method. For more information, see Notice 2006-47 on page 892 of Internal Revenue Bulletin 2006-20. Internal Revenue Bulletin 2006-20 is available at www. irs.gov/pub/irs-irbs/irb06-20.pdf. For additional information on reforestation costs, see chapter 8. Recapture. This deduction may have to be recaptured as ordinary income under section 1245 when you sell or otherwise dispose of the property that would have received an addition to basis if you had not elected to deduct the expenditure. For more information on recapturing the deduction, see Depreciation Recapture in Publication 544.
Reforestation Costs
Reforestation costs are generally capital expenditures. However, you can elect to deduct up to $10,000 ($5,000 if married filing separately; $0 for a trust) of qualifying reforestation costs paid or incurred after October 22, 2004, for each qualified timber property. The remaining costs can be amortized over an 84-month period. For information about amortizing reforestation costs, see chapter 8. Qualifying reforestation costs are the direct costs of planting or seeding for forestation or reforestation. Qualified timber property is property that contains trees in significant commercial quantities. See chapter 8 for more information on qualifying reforestation costs and qualified timber property. If you elect to deduct qualified reforestation costs, create and maintain separate timber accounts for each qualified timber property and include all reforestation costs and the dates each was applied. Do not include this qualified timber property in any account (for example, depletion block) for which depletion is allowed. How to make the election. You elect to deduct qualifying reforestation costs by claiming the deduction on your timely filed income tax return (including extensions) for the tax year the expenses were paid or incurred. If Form T (Timber), Forest Activities Schedule, is required, complete Part IV of Form T. If Form T is not
Federally declared disaster. A federally declared disaster is a disaster that occurred in an area declared by the President to be eligible for federal assistance under the Robert T. Stafford Relief and Emergency Assistance Act. Business-related property. Business-related property is property you held (a) for use in a trade or business or for the production of income or (b) that is stock in trade or other property included in inventory or held mainly for sale to customers. Recapture. If you made the election to deduct qualified disaster expenses, the deduction may have to be recaptured as ordinary income under section 1245 when you sell or otherwise dispose of the property that would have received an addition to basis had you not made the election. For more information on recapturing the deduction, see Depreciation and amortization under Gain Treated as Ordinary Income in Publication 544. More information. For more information about expensing of qualified disaster expenses, see Internal Revenue Code section 198A. Page 24 Chapter 7
You must own or lease the facility or vehicle for use in connection with your trade or business. A facility is all or any part of buildings, structures, equipment, roads, walks, parking lots, or similar real or personal property. A public transportation vehicle is a vehicle, such as a bus or railroad car, that provides transportation service to the public (including service for your customers, even if you are not in the business of providing transportation services). You cannot deduct any costs that you paid or incurred to completely renovate or build a facility or public transportation vehicle or to replace depreciable property in the normal course of business. Deduction limit. The most you can deduct as a cost of removing barriers to the disabled and the elderly for any tax year is $15,000. However, you can add any costs over this limit to the basis of the property and depreciate these excess costs. Partners and partnerships. The $15,000 limit applies to a partnership and also to each partner in the partnership. A partner can allocate the $15,000 limit in any manner among the partners individually incurred costs and the partners distributive share of partnership costs. If the partner cannot deduct the entire share of partnership costs, the partnership can add any costs not deducted to the basis of the improved property. A partnership must be able to show that any amount added to basis was not deducted by the partner and that it was over a partners $15,000 limit (as determined by the partner). If the partnership cannot show this, it is presumed that the partner was able to deduct the distributive share of the partnerships costs in full. Example. John Dukes distributive share of ABC partnerships deductible expenses for the removal of architectural barriers was $14,000. John had $12,000 of similar expenses in his sole proprietorship. He elected to deduct $7,000 of them. John allocated the remaining $8,000 of the $15,000 limit to his share of ABCs expenses. John can add the excess $5,000 of his own expenses to the basis of the property used in his business. Also, if ABC can show that John could not deduct $6,000 ($14,000 $8,000) of his share of the partnerships expenses because of how John applied the limit, ABC can add $6,000 to the basis of its property. Qualification standards. You can deduct your costs as a current expense only if the barrier removal meets the guidelines and requirements issued by the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990. You can view the Americans with Disabilities Act at www.ada.gov/pubs/ada.htm. The following is a list of some architectural barrier removal costs that can be deducted.
Floors. Toilet rooms. Water fountains. Public telephones. Elevators. Controls. Signage. Alarms. Protruding objects. Symbols of accessibility.
you may be able to claim the disabled access credit. If you choose to claim the credit, you must reduce the amount you deduct or capitalize by the amount of the credit. For more information about the disabled access credit, see Form 8826.
You can find the ADA guidelines and requirements for architectural barrier removal at www. usdoj.gov/crt/ada/reg3a.html. The costs for removal of transportation barriers from rail facilities, buses, and rapid and light rail vehicles are deductible. You can find the guidelines and requirements for transportation barrier removal at www.fta.dot.gov. Also, you can access the ADA website at www.ada.gov for additional information. Other barrier removals. To be deductible, expenses of removing any barrier not covered by the above standards must meet all three of the following tests. 1. The removed barrier must be a substantial barrier to access or use of a facility or public transportation vehicle by persons who have a disability or are elderly. 2. The removed barrier must have been a barrier for at least one major group of persons who have a disability or are elderly (such as people who are blind, deaf, or wheelchair users). 3. The barrier must be removed without creating any new barrier that significantly impairs access to or use of the facility or vehicle by a major group of persons who have a disability or are elderly. How to make the election. If you elect to deduct your costs for removing barriers to the disabled or the elderly, claim the deduction on your income tax return (partnership return for partnerships) for the tax year the expenses were paid or incurred. Identify the deduction as a separate item. The election applies to all the qualifying costs you have during the year, up to the $15,000 limit. If you make this election, you must maintain adequate records to support your deduction. For your election to be valid, you generally must file your return by its due date, including extensions. However, if you timely filed your return for the year without making the election, you can still make the election by filing an amended return within 6 months of the due date of the return (excluding extensions). Clearly indicate the election on your amended return and write Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2. File the amended return at the same address you filed the original return. Your election is irrevocable after the due date, including extensions, of your return. Disabled access credit. If you make your business accessible to persons with disabilities and your business is an eligible small business,
8. Amortization
Introduction
Amortization is a method of recovering (deducting) certain capital costs over a fixed period of time. It is similar to the straight line method of depreciation. The various amortizable costs covered in this chapter are included in the list below. However, this chapter does not discuss amortization of bond premium. For information on that topic, see chapter 3 of Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses.
Topics
This chapter discusses:
Deducting amortization Amortizing costs of starting a business Amortizing costs of getting a lease Amortizing costs of section 197 intangibles Amortizing reforestation costs Amortizing costs of geological and geophysical costs ties
Amortizing costs of pollution control facili Amortizing costs of research and experimentation
Ground and floor surfaces. Walks. Parking lots. Ramps. Entrances. Doors and doorways. Stairs.
Useful Items
You may want to see: Publication t 544 Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets Amortization Page 25
Chapter 8
t 550 t 946
Form (and Instructions) t 4562 Depreciation and Amortization t 4626 Alternative Minimum Tax Corporations t 6251 Alternative Minimum Tax Individuals See chapter 12 for information about getting publications and forms.
For costs paid or incurred after October 22, 2004, and before September 9, 2008, you can elect to deduct a limited amount of business start-up and organizational costs in the year your active trade or business begins. Any costs not deducted can be amortized ratably over a 180-month period, beginning with the month you begin business. If the election is made, you must attach any statement required by Regulations sections 1.195-1(b), 1.248-1(c), and 1.709-1(c), as in effect before September 9, 2008. Note. You can apply the provisions of Regulations sections 1.195-1, 1.248-1, and 1.709-1 to all business start-up and organizational costs paid or incurred after October 22, 2004, provided the period of limitations on assessment has not expired for the year of the election. Otherwise, the provisions under Regulations sections 1.195-1(b), 1.248-1(c), and 1.709-1(c), as in effect before September 9, 2008, will apply. For costs paid or incurred before October 23, 2004, you can elect to amortize business start-up and organization costs over an amortization period of 60 months or more. See How To Make the Election, later. The cost must qualify as one of the following.
and experimental costs. See Research and Experimental Costs, later. Purchasing an active trade or business. Amortizable start-up costs for purchasing an active trade or business include only investigative costs incurred in the course of a general search for or preliminary investigation of the business. These are costs that help you decide whether to purchase a business. Costs you incur in an attempt to purchase a specific business are capital expenses that you cannot amortize. Example. On June 1st, you hired an accounting firm and a law firm to assist you in the potential purchase of XYZ, Inc. They researched XYZs industry and analyzed the financial projections of XYZ, Inc. In September, the law firm prepared and submitted a letter of intent to XYZ, Inc. The letter stated that a binding commitment would result only after a purchase agreement was signed. The law firm and accounting firm continued to provide services including a review of XYZs books and records and the preparation of a purchase agreement. On October 22nd, you signed a purchase agreement with XYZ, Inc. All amounts paid or incurred to investigate the business before October 22nd are amortizable investigative costs. Amounts paid on or after that date relate to the attempt to purchase the business and therefore must be capitalized. Disposition of business. If you completely dispose of your business before the end of the amortization period, you can deduct any remaining deferred start-up costs. However, you can deduct these deferred start-up costs only to the extent they qualify as a loss from a business.
A business start-up cost. An organizational cost for a corporation. An organizational cost for a partnership.
Starting a Business
When you start a business, treat all eligible costs you incur before you begin operating the business as capital expenditures which are part of your basis in the business. Generally, you recover costs for particular assets through depreciation deductions. However, you generally cannot recover other costs until you sell the business or otherwise go out of business. For a discussion on how to treat these costs, see If your attempt to go into business is unsuccessful under Capital Expenses in chapter 1. For costs paid or incurred after September 8, 2008, you can deduct a limited amount of start-up and organizational costs. The costs that are not deducted currently can be amortized ratably over a 180-month period. The amortization period starts with the month you begin operating your active trade or business. You are not required to attach a statement to make this election. You can choose to forgo this election by affirmatively electing to capitalize your start-up costs on your income tax return filed by the due date (including extensions) for the tax year in which the active trade or business begins. Once made, the election to either amortize or capitalize start-up costs is irrevocable and applies to all start-up costs that are related to your trade or business. See Regulations sections 1.195-1, 1.248-1, and 1.709-1. Page 26 Chapter 8 Amortization
incurred it to operate an existing active trade or business (in the same field as the one you entered into). your active trade or business begins.
curing prospective distributors, suppliers, or customers. sultants, or for similar professional services.
The cost of temporary directors. The cost of organizational meetings. State incorporation fees. The cost of legal services.
Nonqualifying costs. The following items are capital expenses that cannot be amortized:
Nonqualifying costs. Start-up costs do not include deductible interest, taxes, or research
Costs for issuing and selling stock or securities, such as commissions, professional fees, and printing costs.
costs can be deducted only to the extent they qualify as a loss from a business.
How To Amortize
Deduct start-up and organizational costs in equal amounts over the applicable amortization period (discussed earlier). You can choose an amortization period for start-up costs that is different from the period you choose for organizational costs, as long as both are not less than the applicable amortization period. Once you choose an amortization period, you cannot change it. To figure your deduction, divide your total start-up or organizational costs by the months in the amortization period. The result is the amount you can deduct for each month. Cash method partnership. A partnership using the cash method of accounting can deduct an organizational cost only if it has been paid by the end of the tax year. However, any cost the partnership could have deducted as an organizational cost in an earlier tax year (if it had been paid that year) can be deducted in the tax year of payment.
cannot make this election. You, as a shareholder or partner, cannot amortize any costs you incur in setting up your corporation or partnership. Only the corporation or partnership can amortize these costs. However, you, as an individual, can elect to amortize costs you incur to investigate an interest in an existing partnership. These costs qualify as business start-up costs if you acquire the partnership interest. Start-up costs election statement. If you elect to amortize your start-up costs, attach a separate statement (if required) that contains the following information.
It is chargeable to a capital account (see It could be amortized over the life of the
partnership if the partnership had a fixed life. nership return (excluding extensions) for the first tax year in which the partnership is in business. However, if the partnership uses the cash method of accounting and pays the cost after the end of its first tax year, see Cash method partnership under How To Amortize, later. benefit the partnership throughout its entire life.
A description of each start-up cost in The month your active business began (or
was acquired).
The number of months in your amortization period (which is generally 180 months).
Filing the statement early. You can elect to amortize your start-up costs by filing the statement with a return for any tax year before the year your active business begins. If you file the statement early, the election becomes effective in the month of the tax year your active business begins. Revised statement. You can file a revised statement to include any start-up costs not included in your original statement. However, you cannot include on the revised statement any cost you previously treated on your return as a cost other than a start-up cost. You can file the revised statement with a return filed after the return on which you elected to amortize your start-up costs. Organizational costs election statement. If you elect to amortize your corporations or partnerships organizational costs, attach a separate statement (if required) that contains the following information.
ganization of the partnership, such as negotiation and preparation of the partnership agreement. the organization of the partnership.
The cost of acquiring assets for the part The cost of admitting or removing part-
nership or transferring assets to the partnership. ners, other than at the time the partnership is first organized. the operation of the partnership trade or business including a contract between a partner and the partnership.
A description of each cost. The amount of each cost. The date each cost was incurred. The month your corporation or partnership began active business (or acquired the business). tion period (which is generally 180 months).
ests in the partnership such as brokerage, registration, and legal fees and printing costs. These syndication fees are capital expenses that cannot be depreciated or amortized.
Liquidation of partnership. If a partnership is liquidated before the end of the amortization period, the unamortized amount of qualifying organizational costs can be deducted in the partnerships final tax year. However, these
Partnerships. The statement prepared for a cash basis partnership must also indicate the amount paid before the end of the year for each cost. You do not need to separately list any partnership organizational cost that is less than $10. Instead, you can list the total amount of these costs with the dates the first and last costs were incurred. After a partnership makes the election to amortize organizational costs, it can later file an amended return to include additional organizational costs not included in the partnerships original return and statement. Chapter 8 Amortization Page 27
Getting a Lease
If you get a lease for business property, you recover the cost by amortizing it over the term of the lease. The term of the lease for amortization purposes generally includes all renewal options (and any other period for which you and the lessor reasonably expect the lease to be renewed). However, renewal periods are not included if 75% or more of the cost of acquiring the lease is for the term of the lease remaining on the acquisition date (not including any period for which you may choose to renew, extend, or continue the lease). For more information on the costs of getting a lease, see Cost of Getting a Lease in chapter 3. How to amortize. Enter your deduction in Part VI of Form 4562 if you are deducting amortization that begins during the current year, or on the appropriate line of your tax return if you are not otherwise required to file Form 4562.
cost of property that is not a section 197 intangible. For example, if the cost of computer software is not separately stated from the cost of hardware or other tangible property and you consistently treat it as part of the cost of the hardware or other tangible property, these rules do not apply. Similarly, none of the cost of acquiring real property held for the production of rental income is considered the cost of goodwill, going concern value, or any other section 197 intangible.
the terms and conditions of employment, whether contractual or otherwise, and any other value placed on employees or any of their attributes. For example, you must amortize the part of the purchase price of a business that is for the existence of a highly skilled workforce. Also, you must amortize the cost of acquiring an existing employment contract or relationship with employees or consultants. Business books and records, etc. This includes the intangible value of technical manuals, training manuals or programs, data files, and accounting or inventory control systems. It also includes the cost of customer lists, subscription lists, insurance expirations, patient or client files, and lists of newspaper, magazine, radio, and television advertisers. Patents, copyrights, etc. This includes package design, computer software, and any interest in a film, sound recording, videotape, book, or other similar property, except as discussed later under Assets That Are Not Section 197 Intangibles. Customer-based intangible. This is the composition of market, market share, and any other value resulting from the future provision of goods or services because of relationships with customers in the ordinary course of business. For example, you must amortize the part of the purchase price of a business that is for the existence of the following intangibles.
A customer base. A circulation base. An undeveloped market or market growth. Insurance in force. A mortgage servicing contract. An investment management contract. Any other relationship with customers involving the future provision of goods or services.
The month the intangible is acquired, or The month the trade or business or activity
engaged in for the production of income begins. You cannot deduct amortization for the month you dispose of the intangible. If you pay or incur an amount that increases the basis of an amortizable section 197 intangible after the 15-year period begins, amortize it over the remainder of the 15-year period beginning with the month the basis increase occurs. You are not allowed any other depreciation or amortization deduction for an amortizable section 197 intangible. Tax-exempt use property subject to a lease. The amortization period for any section 197 intangible leased under a lease agreement entered into after March 12, 2004, to a tax-exempt organization, governmental unit, or foreign person or entity (other than a partnership), shall not be less than 125 percent of the lease term. Cost attributable to other property. The rules for section 197 intangibles do not apply to any amount that is included in determining the Page 28 Chapter 8 Amortization
Accounts receivable or other similar rights to income for goods or services provided to customers before the acquisition of a trade or business are not section 197 intangibles. Supplier-based intangible. A supplier-based intangible is the value resulting from the future acquisitions, (through contract or other relationships with suppliers in the ordinary course of business) of goods or services that you will sell or use. The amount you pay or incur for supplier-based intangibles includes, for example, any portion of the purchase price of an acquired trade or business that is attributable to the existence of a favorable relationship with persons providing distribution services (such as a favorable shelf or display space or a retail outlet), or the existence of favorable supply contracts. Do not include any amount required to be paid for the goods or services to honor the terms of the agreement or other relationship. Also, see Assets That Are Not Section 197 Intangibles below. Government-granted license, permit, etc. This is any right granted by a governmental unit or an agency or instrumentality of a governmental unit. For example, you must amortize the capitalized costs of acquiring (including issuing
Going concern value. This is the additional value of a trade or business that attaches to property because the property is an integral part of an ongoing business activity. It includes value based on the ability of a business to continue to function and generate income even though there is a change in ownership (but does not include any other section 197 intangible). It also includes value based on the immediate use or availability of an acquired trade or business, such as the use of earnings during any period in which the business would not otherwise be available or operational. Workforce in place, etc. This includes the composition of a workforce (for example, its experience, education, or training). It also includes
or renewing) a liquor license, a taxicab medallion or license, or a television or radio broadcasting license. Covenant not to compete. Section 197 intangibles include a covenant not to compete (or similar arrangement) entered into in connection with the acquisition of an interest in a trade or business, or a substantial portion of a trade or business. An interest in a trade or business includes an interest in a partnership or a corporation engaged in a trade or business. An arrangement that requires the former owner to perform services (or to provide property or the use of property) is not similar to a covenant not to compete to the extent the amount paid under the arrangement represents reasonable compensation for those services or for that property or its use. Franchise, trademark, or trade name. A franchise, trademark, or trade name is a section 197 intangible. You must amortize its purchase or renewal costs, other than certain contingent payments that you can deduct currently. For information on currently deductible contingent payments, see chapter 11. Professional sports franchise. A franchise engaged in professional sports and any intangible assets acquired in connection with acquiring the franchise (including player contracts) is a section 197 intangible amortizable over a 15-year period. Contract for the use of, or a term interest in, a section 197 intangible. Section 197 intangibles include any right under a license, contract, or other arrangement providing for the use of any section 197 intangible. It also includes any term interest in any section 197 intangible, whether the interest is outright or in trust.
6. An interest under either of the following. a. An existing lease or sublease of tangible property. b. A debt that was in existence when the interest was acquired. 7. A right to service residential mortgages unless the right is acquired in connection with the acquisition of a trade or business or a substantial part of a trade or business. 8. Certain transaction costs incurred by parties to a corporate organization or reorganization in which any part of a gain or loss is not recognized. Intangible property that is not amortizable under the rules for section 197 intangibles can be depreciated if it meets certain requirements. You generally must use the straight line method over its useful life. For certain intangibles, the depreciation period is specified in the law and regulations. For example, the depreciation period for computer software that is not a section 197 intangible is generally 36 months. For more information on depreciating intangible property, see Intangible Property under What Method Can You Use To Depreciate Your Property? in chapter 1 of Publication 946. Computer software. Section 197 intangibles do not include the following types of computer software. 1. Software that meets all the following requirements. a. It is, or has been, readily available for purchase by the general public. b. It is subject to a nonexclusive license. c. It has not been substantially modified. This requirement is considered met if the cost of all modifications is not more than the greater of 25% of the price of the publicly available unmodified software or $2,000. 2. Software that is not acquired in connection with the acquisition of a trade or business or a substantial part of a trade or business. Computer software defined. Computer software includes all programs designed to cause a computer to perform a desired function. It also includes any database or similar item that is in the public domain and is incidental to the operation of qualifying software. Rights of fixed duration or amount. Section 197 intangibles do not include any right under a contract or from a governmental agency if the right is acquired in the ordinary course of a trade or business (or in an activity engaged in for the production of income) but not as part of a purchase of a trade or business and either:
Goodwill. Going concern value. A covenant not to compete. A franchise, trademark, or trade name. A customer-related information base, customer-based intangible, or similar item.
CAUTION
Anti-Churning Rules
Anti-churning rules prevent you from amortizing most section 197 intangibles if the transaction in which you acquired them did not result in a significant change in ownership or use. These rules apply to goodwill and going concern value, and to any other section 197 intangible that is not otherwise depreciable or amortizable. Under the anti-churning rules, you cannot use 15-year amortization for the intangible if any of the following conditions apply. 1. You or a related person (defined later) held or used the intangible at any time from July 25, 1991, through August 10, 1993. 2. You acquired the intangible from a person who held it at any time during the period in (1) and, as part of the transaction, the user did not change. 3. You granted the right to use the intangible to a person (or a person related to that person) who held or used it at any time during the period in (1). This applies only if the transaction in which you granted the right and the transaction in which you acquired the intangible are part of a series of related transactions. See Related person, later, for more information. Exceptions. The anti-churning rules do not apply in the following situations. Chapter 8 Amortization Page 29
Has a fixed life of less than 15 years, or Is of a fixed amount that, except for the
rules for section 197 intangibles, would be recovered under a method similar to the unit-of-production method of cost recovery.
You acquired the intangible from a decedent and its basis was stepped up to its fair market value.
notify you in writing by the due date of the return on which the choice is made. Anti-abuse rule. You cannot amortize any section 197 intangible acquired in a transaction for which the principal purpose was either of the following.
tion 197 intangible by the seller or transferor you acquired it from. This exception does not apply if the transaction in which you acquired the intangible and the transaction in which the seller or transferor acquired it are part of a series of related transactions. later, applies.
or businesses under common control (as described in section 41(f)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code).
When to determine relationship. Persons are treated as related if the relationship existed at the following time.
To avoid the requirement that the intangible be acquired after August 10, 1993.
diately before or immediately after the transaction in which the intangible was acquired. tions (or a series of transactions that comprise a qualified stock purchase under section 338(d)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code), immediately before the earliest transaction or immediately after the last transaction.
An individual and his or her brothers, sisters, half-brothers, half-sisters, spouse, ancestors (parents, grandparents, etc.), and lineal descendants (children, grandchildren, etc.).
Ownership of stock. In determining whether an individual directly or indirectly owns any of the outstanding stock of a corporation, the following rules apply. Rule 1. Stock directly or indirectly owned by or for a corporation, partnership, estate, or trust is considered owned proportionately by or for its shareholders, partners, or beneficiaries. Rule 2. An individual is considered to own the stock directly or indirectly owned by or for his or her family. Family includes only brothers and sisters, half-brothers and half-sisters, spouse, ancestors, and lineal descendants. Rule 3. An individual owning (other than by applying Rule 2) any stock in a corporation is considered to own the stock directly or indirectly owned by or for his or her partner. Rule 4. For purposes of applying Rule 1, 2, or 3, treat stock constructively owned by a person under Rule 1 as actually owned by that person. Do not treat stock constructively owned by an individual under Rule 2 or 3 as owned by the individual for reapplying Rule 2 or 3 to make another person the constructive owner of the stock. Gain-recognition exception. This exception to the anti-churning rules applies if the person you acquired the intangible from (the transferor) meets both of the following requirements.
same controlled group as defined in section 1563(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, except that more than 20% is substituted for at least 80% in that definition and the determination is made without regard to subsections (a)(4) and (e)(3)(C) of section 1563. (For an exception, see section 1.197-2(h)(6)(iv) of the regulations.) than 20% of the value of the corporations outstanding stock is owned, directly or indirectly, by or for the trust or grantor of the trust. ary and beneficiary, of any trust.
Amended Return
If you deducted an incorrect amount for amortization, you can file an amended return to correct the following.
A mathematical error made in any year. A posting error made in any year. An amortization deduction for a section
197 intangible for which you have not adopted a method of accounting.
The grantor and fiduciary, and the fiduci The fiduciaries of two different trusts, and
the fiduciaries and beneficiaries of two different trusts, if the same person is the grantor of both trusts.
When to file. If an amended return is allowed, you must file it by the later of the following dates.
The executor and beneficiary of an estate. A tax-exempt educational or charitable organization and a person who directly or indirectly controls the organization (or whose family members control it).
nal return for the year in which you did not deduct the correct amount. (A return filed early is considered filed on the due date.) that year.
same persons own more than 20% of the value of the outstanding stock of the corporation and more than 20% of the capital or profits interest in the partnership. and a regular corporation, if the same persons own more than 20% of the value of the outstanding stock of each corporation. own, directly or indirectly, more than 20% of the capital or profits interests in both partnerships. directly or indirectly, more than 20% of the Chapter 8 Amortization
(as described under Related person, earlier) if the 20% test for ownership of stock and partnership interests were replaced by a 50% test. the disposition of the intangible and pay income tax on the gain at the highest tax rate. See chapter 2 in Publication 544 for information on making this choice.
If this exception applies, the anti-churning rules apply only to the amount of your adjusted basis in the intangible that is more than the gain recognized by the transferor. Notification. If the person you acquired the intangible from chooses to recognize gain under the rules for this exception, that person must
riod of recovery, or convention of an amortizable asset. able assets from a single asset account to a multiple asset account (pooling), or vice versa.
able assets from one type of multiple asset account to a different type of multiple asset account.
loss. For more information on ordinary or capital gain or loss on business property, see chapter 3 in Publication 544. Nondeductible loss. You cannot deduct any loss on the disposition or worthlessness of a section 197 intangible that you acquired in the same transaction (or series of related transactions) as other section 197 intangibles you still have. Instead, increase the adjusted basis of each remaining amortizable section 197 intangible by a proportionate part of the nondeductible loss. Figure the increase by multiplying the nondeductible loss on the disposition of the intangible by the following fraction.
Changes in amortization that are not a change in method of accounting include the following:
An adjustment in the useful life of an am Generally, the making of a late amortization election or the revocation of a timely valid amortization election. of an amortizable asset.
each remaining intangible on the date of the disposition. ses of all remaining amortizable section 197 intangibles on the date of the disposition.
tax year. See Reforestation Costs in chapter 7. You can elect to amortize the qualifying costs that are not deducted currently over an 84-month period. There is no limit on the amount of your amortization deduction for reforestation costs paid or incurred during the tax year. The election to amortize reforestation costs incurred by a partnership, S corporation, or estate must be made by the partnership, corporation, or estate. A partner, shareholder, or beneficiary cannot make that election. A partners or shareholders share of amortizable costs is figured under the general rules for allocating items of income, loss, deduction, etc., of a partnership or S corporation. The amortizable costs of an estate are divided between the estate and the income beneficiary based on the income of the estate allocable to each. Qualifying costs. Reforestation costs are the direct costs of planting or seeding for forestation or reforestation. Qualifying costs include only those costs you must capitalize and include in the adjusted basis of the property. They include costs for the following items.
Covenant not to compete. A covenant not to compete, or similar arrangement, is not considered disposed of or worthless before you dispose of your entire interest in the trade or business for which you entered into the covenant. Nonrecognition transfers. If you acquire a section 197 intangible in a nonrecognition transfer, you are treated as the transferor with respect to the part of your adjusted basis in the intangible that is not more than the transferors adjusted basis. You amortize this part of the adjusted basis over the intangibles remaining amortization period in the hands of the transferor. Nonrecognition transfers include transfers to a corporation, partnership contributions and distributions, like-kind exchanges, and involuntary conversions. In a like-kind exchange or involuntary conversion of a section 197 intangible, you must continue to amortize the part of your adjusted basis in the acquired intangible that is not more than your adjusted basis in the exchanged or converted intangible over the remaining amortization period of the exchanged or converted intangible. Amortize over a new 15-year period the part of your adjusted basis in the acquired intangible that is more than your adjusted basis in the exchanged or converted intangible. Example. You own a section 197 intangible you have amortized for 4 full years. It has a remaining unamortized basis of $30,000. You exchange the asset plus $10,000 for a like-kind section 197 intangible. The nonrecognition provisions of like-kind exchanges apply. You amortize $30,000 of the $40,000 adjusted basis of the acquired intangible over the 11 years remaining in the original 15-year amortization period for the transferred asset. You amortize the other $10,000 of adjusted basis over a new 15-year period. For more information, see Regulations section 1.197-2(g).
Site preparation. Seeds or seedlings. Labor. Tools. Depreciation on equipment used in planting and seeding.
Qualifying costs do not include costs for which the government reimburses you under a cost-sharing program, unless you include the reimbursement in your income. Qualified timber property. Qualified timber property is property that contains trees in significant commercial quantities. It can be a woodlot or other site that you own or lease. The property qualifies only if it meets all of the following requirements.
It is located in the United States. It is held for the growing and cutting of
timber you will either use in, or sell for use in, the commercial production of timber products. tree seedlings in the manner normally used in forestation or reforestation.
Qualified timber property does not include property on which you have planted shelter belts or ornamental trees, such as Christmas trees. Amortization period. The 84-month amortization period starts on the first day of the first month of the second half of the tax year you incur the costs (July 1 for a calendar year taxpayer), regardless of the month you actually incur the costs. You can claim amortization deductions for no more than 6 months of the first and last (eighth) tax years of the period. Life tenant and remainderman. If one person holds the property for life with the remainder going to another person, the life tenant is entitled to the full amortization for qualifying reforestation costs incurred by the life tenant. Any remainder interest in the property is ignored for amortization purposes. Chapter 8 Amortization Page 31
Reforestation Costs
You can elect to deduct a limited amount of reforestation costs paid or incurred during the
Recapture. If you dispose of qualified timber property within 10 years after the tax year you incur qualifying reforestation expenses, report any gain as ordinary income up to the amortization you took. See chapter 3 of Publication 544 for more information. How to make the election. To elect to amortize qualifying reforestation costs, complete Part VI of Form 4562 and attach a statement that contains the following information.
for costs paid or incurred after December 19, 2007). If you retire or abandon the property during the amortization period, no amortization deduction is allowed in the year of retirement or abandonment.
Basis reduction for corporations. A corporation must reduce the amortizable basis of a pollution control facility by 20% before figuring the amortization deduction. More information. For more information on the amortization of pollution control facilities, see Code sections 169 and 291(c) and the related regulations.
Send the application to: Internal Revenue Service Associate Chief Counsel Passthroughs and Special Industries CC:PSI:6 1111 Constitution Ave., NW, IR-5300 Washington, DC 20224
in service after April 11, 2005. If acquired, the original use must begin with you after April 11, 2005. with an electric generation plant or other property placed in operation after December 31, 1975, that is primarily coal fired.
9. Depletion
Whats New
Oil and gas from marginal properties. The temporary suspension of the 100% taxable income limit on percentage depletion on oil and natural gas produced from marginal properties applies to depletion in tax years beginning in 2010 or 2011. See Taxable income limit under Oil and Gas Wells in this chapter.
CAUTION
Individuals, corporations, estates, and trusts who claim depletion deductions may be liable for alternative minimum
tax. Basis adjustment for depletion. You must reduce the basis of your property by the depletion allowed or allowable, whichever is greater.
Mineral Property
Mineral property includes oil and gas wells, mines, and other natural deposits (including geothermal deposits). For this purpose, the term property means each separate interest you own in each mineral deposit in each separate tract or parcel of land. You can treat two or more separate interests as one property or as separate properties. See section 614 of the Internal Revenue Code and the related regulations for rules on how to treat separate mineral interests. There are two ways of figuring depletion on mineral property.
Introduction
Depletion is the using up of natural resources by mining, drilling, quarrying stone, or cutting timber. The depletion deduction allows an owner or operator to account for the reduction of a products reserves. There are two ways of figuring depletion: cost depletion and percentage depletion. For mineral property, you generally must use the method that gives you the larger deduction. For standing timber, you must use cost depletion.
Generally, the election must be made on a timely filed return (including extensions) for the tax year in which you incurred the costs. However, if you timely filed your return for the year without making the election, you can still make the election by filing an amended return within 6 months of the due date of the return (excluding extensions). Attach Form 4562 to the amended return and write Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2 on Form 4562. File the amended return at the same address you filed the original return. Revoking the election. You must obtain consent from the IRS to revoke your election. Your request to revoke the election must be submitted to the IRS in the form of a letter ruling before the end of the tax year in which the optional recovery period ends. The request must contain all of the information necessary to demonstrate the rare and unusual circumstances that would justify granting revocation. If the request for revocation is approved, any unamortized costs are deductible in the year the revocation is effective.
Topics
This chapter discusses:
Cost Depletion
To figure cost depletion you must first determine the following.
The propertys basis for depletion. The total recoverable units of mineral in
the propertys natural deposit. the tax year.
Basis for depletion. To figure the propertys basis for depletion, subtract all the following from the propertys adjusted basis. 1. Amounts recoverable through: a. Depreciation deductions, b. Deferred expenses (including deferred exploration and development costs), and c. Deductions other than depletion. 2. The residual value of land and improvements at the end of operations. 3. The cost or value of land acquired for purposes other than mineral production. Adjusted basis. The adjusted basis of your property is your original cost or other basis, plus certain additions and improvements, and minus certain deductions such as depletion allowed or allowable and casualty losses. Your adjusted basis can never be less than zero. See Publication 551, Basis of Assets, for more information on adjusted basis. Chapter 9 Depletion Page 33
terest in mineral deposits or standing timber. extraction of the mineral or cutting of the timber to which you must look for a return of your capital investment.
A contractual relationship that allows you an economic or monetary advantage from products of the mineral deposit or standing timber is not, in itself, an economic interest. A production payment carved out of, or retained on the sale of, mineral property is not an economic interest.
Total recoverable units. The total recoverable units is the sum of the following.
return for the first tax year for which the safe harbor is elected. The statement must indicate that you are electing the safe harbor provided by Revenue Procedure 2004-19. The election, if made, is effective for the tax year in which it is made and all later years. It cannot be revoked for the tax year in which it is elected, but may be revoked in a later year. Once revoked, it cannot be re-elected for the next 5 years.
Losses sustained.
The following rules apply when figuring your taxable income from the property for purposes of the taxable income limit.
You must estimate or determine recoverable units (tons, pounds, ounces, barrels, thousands of cubic feet, or other measure) of mineral products using the current industry method and the most accurate and reliable information you can obtain. You must include ores and minerals that are developed, in sight, blocked out, or assured. You must also include probable or prospective ores or minerals that are believed to exist based on good evidence. But see Elective safe harbor for owners of oil and gas property, later. Number of units sold. You determine the number of units sold during the tax year based on your method of accounting. Use the following table to make this determination. IF you use ... The cash method of accounting THEN the units sold during the year are ... The units sold for which you receive payment during the tax year (regardless of the year of sale). The units sold based on your inventories and method of accounting for inventory.
Percentage Depletion
To figure percentage depletion, you multiply a certain percentage, specified for each mineral, by your gross income from the property during the tax year. The rates to be used and other rules for oil and gas wells are discussed later under Independent Producers and Royalty Owners and under Natural Gas Wells. Rates and other rules for percentage depletion of other specific minerals are found later in Mines and Geothermal Deposits. Gross income. When figuring percentage depletion, subtract from your gross income from the property the following amounts.
Do not deduct any net operating loss deduction from the gross income from the property.
Corporations do not deduct charitable contributions from the gross income from the property.
of section 1245 property that was used in connection with mineral property, reduce any allowable deduction for mining expenses by the part of any gain you must report as ordinary income that is allocable to the mineral property. See section 1.613-5(b)(1) of the regulations for information on how to figure the ordinary gain allocable to the property.
A bonus payment includes amounts you paid as a lessee to satisfy a production payment retained by the lessor. Use the following fraction to figure the part of the bonus you must subtract. No. of units sold in the tax year Recoverable units from the property Bonus Payments
The well produces natural gas that is either sold under a fixed contract or produced from geopressured brine.
The number of units sold during the tax year does not include any for which depletion deductions were allowed or allowable in earlier years. Figuring the cost depletion deduction. Once you have figured your propertys basis for depletion, the total recoverable units, and the number of units sold during the tax year, you can figure your cost depletion deduction by taking the following steps. Step 1 Action Divide your propertys basis for depletion by total recoverable units. Multiply the rate per unit by units sold during the tax year. Result Rate per unit. Cost depletion deduction.
For oil and gas wells and geothermal deposits, more information about the definition of gross income from the property is under Oil and Gas Wells, later. For other property, more information about the definition of gross income from the property is under Mines and Geothermal Deposits, later. Taxable income limit. The percentage depletion deduction generally cannot be more than 50% (100% for oil and gas property) of your taxable income from the property figured without the depletion deduction and the domestic production activities deduction. Taxable income from the property means gross income from the property minus all allowable deductions (except any deduction for depletion or domestic production activities) attributable to mining processes, including mining transportation. These deductible items include, but are not limited to, the following.
If you are an independent producer or royalty owner, see Independent Producers and Royalty Owners, next. For information on the depletion deduction for wells that produce natural gas that is either sold under a fixed contract or produced from geopressured brine, see Natural Gas Wells, later.
You must keep accounts for the depletion of each property and adjust these accounts each year for units sold and depletion claimed. Elective safe harbor for owners of oil and gas property. Instead of using the method described earlier to determine the total recoverable units, you can use an elective safe harbor. If you choose the elective safe harbor, the total recoverable units equal 105% of a propertys proven reserves (both developed and undeveloped). For details, see Revenue Procedure 2004-19 on page 563 of Internal Revenue Bulletin 2004-10, available at www.irs.gov/pub/irs-irbs/irb04-10. pdf. To make the election, attach a statement to your timely filed (including extensions) original Page 34 Chapter 9 Depletion
Operating expenses. Certain selling expenses. Administrative and financial overhead. Depreciation. Intangible drilling and development costs. Exploration and development expenditures.
Related person. You and another person are related persons if either of you holds a significant ownership interest in the other person or if a third person holds a significant ownership interest in both of you. For example, a corporation, partnership, estate, or trust and anyone who holds a significant ownership interest in it are related persons. A partnership and a trust are related persons if one person holds a significant ownership interest in each of them. For purposes of the related person rules, significant ownership interest means direct or indirect ownership of 5% or more in any one of the following.
Related person. To determine if you and another person are related persons, see Related person under Refiners who cannot claim percentage depletion, earlier. Sales through a related person. You are considered to be selling through a related person if any sale by the related person produces gross income from which you may benefit because of your direct or indirect ownership interest in the person. You are not considered to be selling through a related person who is a retailer if all the following apply.
for your net profits interest, you must first determine your percentage participation (as measured by the net profits) in the gross revenue from the property. To figure this percentage, you divide the income you receive for your net profits interest by the gross revenue from the property. Then multiply the total production from the property by your percentage participation to figure your share of the production. Example. John Oak owns oil property in which Paul Elm owns a 20% net profits interest. During the year, the property produced 10,000 barrels of oil, which John sold for $200,000. John had expenses of $90,000 attributable to the property. The property generated a net profit of $110,000 ($200,000 $90,000). Paul received income of $22,000 ($110,000 .20) for his net profits interest. Paul determined his percentage participation to be 11% by dividing $22,000 (the income he received) by $200,000 (the gross revenue from the property). Paul determined his share of the oil production to be 1,100 barrels (10,000 barrels 11%). Depletable oil or natural gas quantity. Generally, your depletable oil quantity is 1,000 barrels. Your depletable natural gas quantity is 6,000 cubic feet multiplied by the number of barrels of your depletable oil quantity that you choose to apply. If you claim depletion on both oil and natural gas, you must reduce your depletable oil quantity (1,000 barrels) by the number of barrels you use to figure your depletable natural gas quantity. Example. You have both oil and natural gas production. To figure your depletable natural gas quantity, you choose to apply 360 barrels of your 1000-barrel depletable oil quantity. Your depletable natural gas quantity is 2.16 million cubic feet of gas (360 6000). You must reduce your depletable oil quantity to 640 barrels (1000 360). If you have production from marginal wells, see section 613A(c)(6) of the Internal Revenue Code to figure your depletable oil or natural gas quantity. Business entities and family members. You must allocate the depletable oil or gas quantity among the following related persons in proportion to each entitys or family members production of domestic oil or gas for the year.
are not related to either you or the retailer. from your customers or persons related to your customers. to acquire oil or natural gas you produced for resale or made available for purchase by the retailer.
The retailer does not buy oil or natural gas There are no arrangements for the retailer
controls the final disposition of the oil or natural gas you sold or the original source of the petroleum products the retailer acquired for resale.
Transferees who cannot claim percentage depletion. You cannot claim percentage depletion if you received your interest in a proven oil or gas property by transfer after 1974 and before October 12, 1990. For a definition of the term transfer, see section 1.613A-7(n) of the regulations. For a definition of the term interest in proven oil or gas property, see section 1.613A-7(p) of the regulations. Figuring percentage depletion. Generally, as an independent producer or royalty owner, you figure your percentage depletion by computing your average daily production of domestic oil or gas and comparing it to your depletable oil or gas quantity. If your average daily production does not exceed your depletable oil or gas quantity, you figure your percentage depletion by multiplying the gross income from the oil or gas property (defined later) by 15%. If your average daily production of domestic oil or gas exceeds your depletable oil or gas quantity, you must make an allocation as explained later under Average daily production exceeds depletable quantities. In addition, there is a limit on the percentage depletion deduction. See Taxable income limit, later. Average daily production. Figure your average daily production by dividing your total domestic production of oil or gas for the tax year by the number of days in your tax year. Partial interest. If you have a partial interest in the production from a property, figure your share of the production by multiplying total production from the property by your percentage of interest in the revenues from the property. You have a partial interest in the production from a property if you have a net profits interest in the property. To figure the share of production
Bulk sales of aviation fuels to the Depart Sales of oil or natural gas or their
by-products outside the United States if none of your domestic production or that of a related person is exported during the tax year or the prior tax year.
that, for this purpose, the stock ownership requirement in that definition is more than 50% rather than at least 80%. Gross income from the property. For purposes of percentage depletion, gross income from the property (in the case of oil and gas wells) is the amount you receive from the sale of the oil or gas in the immediate vicinity of the well. If you do not sell the oil or gas on the property, but manufacture or convert it into a refined product before sale or transport it before sale, the gross income from the property is the representative market or field price (RMFP) of the oil or gas, before conversion or transportation. If you sold gas after you removed it from the premises for a price that is lower than the RMFP, determine gross income from the property for percentage depletion purposes without regard to the RMFP. Gross income from the property does not include lease bonuses, advance royalties, or other amounts payable without regard to production from the property. Average daily production exceeds depletable quantities. If your average daily production for the year is more than your depletable oil or natural gas quantity, figure your allowance for depletion for each domestic oil or natural gas property as follows. 1. Figure your average daily production of oil or natural gas for the year. 2. Figure your depletable oil or natural gas quantity for the year. 3. Figure depletion for all oil or natural gas produced from the property using a percentage depletion rate of 15%. 4. Multiply the result figured in (3) by a fraction, the numerator of which is the result figured in (2) and the denominator of which is the result figured in (1). This is your depletion allowance for that property for the year. Taxable income limit. If you are an independent producer or royalty owner of oil and gas, your deduction for percentage depletion is limited to the smaller of the following.
gas from marginal properties. For more information, see section 613A(c)(6) of the Internal Revenue Code.
limit and the depletable oil or natural gas quantity. Also, the adjusted basis of a partners interest in the partnership is not affected by the depletion allowance. An electing large partnership is one that meets both the following requirements.
Refiners who cannot claim percentage de Retailers who cannot claim percentage
pletion (discussed under Independent Producers and Royalty Owners, earlier). depletion (discussed under Independent Producers and Royalty Owners, earlier). tion of domestic crude oil and natural gas is more than 500 barrels during the tax year in which the partnership tax year ends. Average daily production is discussed earlier.
property figured without the deduction for depletion and the deduction for domestic production activities under section 199 of the Internal Revenue Code. For a definition of taxable income from the property, see Taxable income limit, earlier, under Mineral Property. sources, figured without the depletion allowance, the deduction for domestic production activities, any net operating loss carryback, and any capital loss carryback.
Produced from a well you began to drill Determined in accordance with section
after September 1978 and before 1984. 503 of the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978 to be produced from geopressured brine.
You can carry over to the following year any amount you cannot deduct because of the 65%-of-taxable-income limit. Add it to your depletion allowance (before applying any limits) for the following year. For tax years beginning after 2008 and before 2012, the 100% taxable income limit does not apply to percentage depletion on oil and natural Page 36 Chapter 9 Depletion
Form 6198, At-Risk Limitations. Form 8582, Passive Activity Loss Limitations. Electing large partnerships must figure depletion allowance. An electing large partnership, rather than each partner, generally must figure the depletion allowance. The partnership figures the depletion allowance without taking into account the 65-percent-of-taxable-income
Mines and other natural deposits. For a natural deposit, the percentage of your gross income from the property that you can deduct as depletion depends on the type of deposit. The following is a list of the percentage depletion rates for the more common minerals. DEPOSITS Sulphur, uranium, and, if from deposits in the United States, asbestos, lead ore, zinc ore, nickel ore, and mica . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gold, silver, copper, iron ore, and certain oil shale, if from deposits in the United States . . . . . . . . . . . Borax, granite, limestone, marble, mollusk shells, potash, slate, soapstone, and carbon dioxide produced from a well . . . . . . . . Coal, lignite, and sodium chloride Clay and shale used or sold for use in making sewer pipe or bricks or used or sold for use as sintered or burned lightweight aggregates Clay used or sold for use in making drainage and roofing tile, flower pots, and kindred products, and gravel, sand, and stone (other than stone used or sold for use by a mine owner or operator as dimension or ornamental stone) RATE
waste or residue of prior mining. This does not apply to extraction from waste or residue of prior mining by the purchaser of the waste or residue or the purchaser of the rights to extract ores or minerals from the waste or residue. Treatment processes. The processes included as mining depend on the ore or mineral mined. To qualify as mining, the treatment processes must be applied by the mine owner or operator. For a listing of treatment processes considered as mining, see section 613(c)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code and the related regulations. Transportation of more than 50 miles. If the IRS finds that the ore or mineral must be transported more than 50 miles to plants or mills to be treated because of physical and other requirements, the additional authorized transportation is considered mining and included in the computation of gross income from mining. If you wish to include transportation of more than 50 miles in the computation of gross income from mining, request an advance ruling from the IRS. Include in the request the facts about the physical and other requirements that prevented the construction and operation of the plant within 50 miles of the point of extraction. For more information about requesting an advance ruling, see Revenue Procedure 2012-1, available at www.irs.gov/irb/ 2012-01_IRB/ar06.html. Disposal of coal or iron ore. You cannot take a depletion deduction for coal (including lignite) or iron ore mined in the United States if both the following apply.
22%
15%
14% 10%
71/2%
5%
You can find a complete list of minerals and their percentage depletion rates in section 613(b) of the Internal Revenue Code. Corporate deduction for iron ore and coal. The percentage depletion deduction of a corporation for iron ore and coal (including lignite) is reduced by 20% of:
Gross income from the property. For property other than a geothermal deposit or an oil or gas well, gross income from the property means the gross income from mining. Mining includes all the following.
not more than 50 miles) from the point of extraction to the plants or mills in which the treatment processes are applied.
Excise tax. Gross income from mining includes the separately stated excise tax received by a mine operator from the sale of coal to compensate the operator for the excise tax the mine operator must pay to finance black lung benefits. Extraction. Extracting ores or minerals from the ground includes extraction by mine owners or operators of ores or minerals from the
Timber
You can figure timber depletion only by the cost method. Percentage depletion does not apply to timber. Base your depletion on your cost or other basis in the timber. Your cost does not include Chapter 9 Depletion Page 37
the cost of land or any amounts recoverable through depreciation. Depletion takes place when you cut standing timber. You can figure your depletion deduction when the quantity of cut timber is first accurately measured in the process of exploitation. Figuring cost depletion. To figure your cost depletion allowance, you multiply the number of timber units cut by your depletion unit. Timber units. When you acquire timber property, you must make an estimate of the quantity of marketable timber that exists on the property. You measure the timber using board feet, log scale, cords, or other units. If you later determine that you have more or less units of timber, you must adjust the original estimate. The term timber property means your economic interest in standing timber in each tract or block representing a separate timber account. Depletion unit. You figure your depletion unit each year by taking the following steps. 1. Determine your cost or adjusted basis of the timber on hand at the beginning of the year. Adjusted basis is defined under Cost Depletion in the discussion on Mineral Property. 2. Add to the amount determined in (1) the cost of any timber units acquired during the year and any additions to capital. 3. Figure the number of timber units to take into account by adding the number of timber units acquired during the year to the number of timber units on hand in the account at the beginning of the year and then adding (or subtracting) any correction to the estimate of the number of timber units remaining in the account. 4. Divide the result of (2) by the result of (3). This is your depletion unit. Example. You bought a timber tract for $160,000 and the land was worth as much as the timber. Your basis for the timber is $80,000. Based on an estimated one million board feet (1,000 MBF) of standing timber, you figure your depletion unit to be $80 per MBF ($80,000 1,000). If you cut 500 MBF of timber, your depletion allowance would be $40,000 (500 MBF $80). When to claim depletion. Claim your depletion allowance as a deduction in the year of sale or other disposition of the products cut from the timber, unless you choose to treat the cutting of timber as a sale or exchange (explained below). Include allowable depletion for timber products not sold during the tax year the timber is cut as a cost item in the closing inventory of timber products for the year. The inventory is your basis for determining gain or loss in the tax year you sell the timber products. Example. The facts are the same as in the previous example except that you sold only half of the timber products in the cutting year. You would deduct $20,000 of the $40,000 depletion that year. You would add the remaining $20,000 depletion to your closing inventory of timber products. Page 38 Chapter 10 Business Bad Debts
Electing to treat the cutting of timber as a sale or exchange. You can elect, under certain circumstances, to treat the cutting of timber held for more than 1 year as a sale or exchange. You must make the election on your income tax return for the tax year to which it applies. If you make this election, subtract the adjusted basis for depletion from the fair market value of the timber on the first day of the tax year in which you cut it to figure the gain or loss on the cutting. You generally report the gain as long-term capital gain. The fair market value then becomes your basis for figuring your ordinary gain or loss on the sale or other disposition of the products cut from the timber. For more information, see Timber in chapter 2 of Publication 544, Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets. You may revoke an election to treat the cutting of timber as a sale or exchange without IRSs consent. The prior election (and revocation) is disregarded for purposes of making a subsequent election. See Form T (Timber), Forest Activities Schedule, for more information. Form T. Complete and attach Form T (Timber) to your income tax return if you claim a deduction for timber depletion, choose to treat the cutting of timber as a sale or exchange, or make an outright sale of timber.
Useful Items
You may want to see: Publication t 525 t 536 t 544 t 550 t 556 Taxable and Nontaxable Income Net Operating Losses (NOLs) for Individuals, Estates, and Trusts Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets Investment Income and Expenses Examination of Returns, Appeal Rights, and Claims for Refund
A debt is closely related to your trade or business if your primary motive for incurring the debt is business related. Bad debts of a corporation (other than an S corporation) are always business bad debts. Credit sales. Business bad debts are mainly the result of credit sales to customers. Goods that have been sold, but not yet paid for, and services that have been performed, but not yet paid for, are recorded in your books as either accounts receivable or notes receivable. After a reasonable period of time, if you have tried to collect the amount due, but are unable to do so, the uncollectible part becomes a business bad debt. Accounts or notes receivable valued at fair market value (FMV) when received are deductible only at that value, even though the FMV may be less than the face value. If you purchased an account receivable for less than its face value, and the receivable subsequently becomes worthless, the most you are allowed to deduct is the amount you paid to acquire it. You can claim a business bad debt deduction only if the amount owed to CAUTION you was previously included in gross income. This applies to amounts owed to you from all sources of taxable income, including sales, services, rents, and interest.
Topics
This chapter discusses:
Definition of business bad debt When a debt becomes worthless How to claim a business bad debt Recovery of a bad debt
Accrual method. If you use the accrual method of accounting, you generally report income as you earn it. You can only claim a bad debt deduction for an uncollectible receivable if you have previously included the uncollectible amount in income. If you qualify, you can use the nonaccrual-experience method of accounting discussed later. Under this method, you do not have to accrue income that, based on your experience, you do not expect to collect.
Cash method. If you use the cash method of accounting, you generally report income when you receive payment. You cannot claim a bad debt deduction for amounts owed to you because you never included those amounts in income. For example, a cash basis architect cannot claim a bad debt deduction if a client fails to pay the bill because the architects fee was never included in income. Debts from a former business. If you sell your business but retain its receivables, these debts are business debts because they arose out of your trade or business. If any of these receivables subsequently become worthless, the loss is still a business bad debt. Debt acquired from a decedent. The character of a loss from debts of a business acquired from a decedent is determined in the same way as debts acquired on the purchase of a business. The executor of the decedents estate treats any loss from the debts as a business bad debt if the debts were closely related to the decedents trade or business when they became worthless. Otherwise, a loss from these debts becomes a nonbusiness bad debt for the decedents estate. Liquidation. If you liquidate your business and some of the accounts receivable that you retain become worthless, they become business bad debts.
paid that is attributable to the insolvent partners share. Business loan guarantee. If you guarantee a debt that subsequently becomes worthless, the debt can qualify as a business bad debt if all the following requirements are met.
evidence of the worthlessness of at least a part of an unsecured and unpreferred debt. Property received for debt. If you receive property in partial settlement of a debt, reduce the debt by the propertys fair market value (FMV), which becomes the propertys basis. You can deduct the remaining debt as a bad debt if and when it becomes worthless. If you later sell the property for more than its basis, any gain on the sale is due to the appreciation of the property. It is not a recovery of a bad debt. For information on the sale of an asset, see Publication 544.
You have a legal duty to pay the debt. You made the guarantee before the debt
became worthless. You meet this requirement if you reasonably expected you would not have to pay the debt without full reimbursement from the borrower. making the guarantee. You meet this requirement if you made the guarantee in accord with normal business practice or for a good faith business purpose.
Example. Jane Zayne owns the Zayne Dress Company. She guaranteed payment of a $20,000 note for Elegant Fashions, a dress outlet. Elegant Fashions is one of Zaynes largest clients. Elegant Fashions later defaulted on the loan. As a result, Ms. Zayne paid the remaining balance of the loan in full to the bank. She can claim a business bad debt deduction only for the amount she paid, since her guarantee was made in the course of her trade or business for a good faith business purpose. She was motivated by the desire to retain one of her better clients and keep a sales outlet. Deductible in the year paid. If you make a payment on a loan you guaranteed, you can deduct it in the year paid, unless you have rights against the borrower. Rights against a borrower. When you make payment on a loan you guaranteed, you may have the right to take the place of the lender. The debt is then owed to you. If you have this right, or some other right to demand payment from the borrower, you cannot claim a bad debt deduction until these rights become partly or totally worthless. Joint debtor. If two or more debtors jointly owe you money, your inability to collect from one does not enable you to deduct a proportionate amount as a bad debt. Sale of mortgaged property. If mortgaged or pledged property is sold for less than the debt, the unpaid, uncollectible balance of the debt is a bad debt.
deduction for a totally worthless debt. However, you may want to do so. If you do not and the IRS later rules the debt is only partly worthless, you will not be allowed a deduction for the debt in that tax year because a deduction of a partly worthless bad debt is limited to the amount actually charged off. See Partly worthless debts, earlier. Filing a claim for refund. If you did not deduct a bad debt on your original return for the year it became worthless, you can file a claim for a credit or refund. If the bad debt was totally worthless, you must file the claim by the later of the following dates.
Service related income. You can use the nonaccrual-experience method only for amounts earned by performing services. You cannot use this method for amounts owed to you from activities such as lending money, selling goods, or acquiring receivables or other rights to receive payment. Gross receipts test. To find out if you meet the $5 million gross receipts test for all prior years, you must figure the average annual gross receipts for each prior year. If your average annual gross receipts for any year exceeds $5 million, you cannot use the non-accural experience method. The average annual gross receipts for any year is the average of gross receipts from the year in question and the 2 previous years. For example, if you were figuring the average annual gross receipts for 2011, you would average your gross receipts for 2009, 2010, and 2011. Interest or penalty charged. Generally, you cannot use the nonaccrual-experience method for amounts due on which you charge interest or a late payment penalty. However, do not treat a discount offered for early payment as the charging of interest or a penalty if both the following apply.
Introduction
This chapter covers business expenses that may not have been explained to you, as a business owner, in previous chapters of this publication.
Topics
This chapter discusses: Travel, meals, and entertainment Bribes and kickbacks Charitable contributions Education expenses Lobbying expenses Penalties and fines Repayments (claim of right) Other miscellaneous expenses
Sole proprietor or Form 1040X farmer Corporation S corporation Partnership Form 1120X Form 1120S (check box H(4)) Form 1065 (check box G(5))
Change in accounting method. See Form 3115, Application for Change in Accounting Method, and the Instructions for Form 3115 for information on obtaining consent to change to a nonaccrual-experience method (other than one of the safe harbor methods) or to change from one method to another.
Useful Items
Publication
t 15-B Employers Tax Guide to Fringe Benefits t 463 t 526 t 529 t 544 t 970 Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses Charitable Contributions Miscellaneous Deductions Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets Tax Benefits for Education
Nonaccrual-Experience Method
If you use an accrual method of accounting and qualify under the rules explained in this section, you can use the nonaccrual-experience method for bad debts. Under this method, you do not accrue service related income you expect to be uncollectible. Because the expected uncollectible amounts are not included in income, these amounts are not later deducted from income. Generally, you can use the nonaccrual-experience method for accounts receivable for services you performed only if:
t 1542 Per Diem Rates See chapter 12 for information about getting publications and forms.
accounting, actuarial science, architecture, consulting, engineering, health, law, or the performing arts, or for all prior years.
No amount.
The excess amount as wages in box 1. The amount up to the federal rate is reported only in box 12 it is not reported in box 1. The excess amount as wages in box 1. The amount up to the federal rate is reported only in box 12 it is not reported in box 1.
Reimbursements
A reimbursement or allowance arrangement provides for payment of advances, reimbursements, and allowances for travel, meals, and entertainment expenses incurred by your employees during the ordinary course of business. If the expenses are substantiated, you can deduct the allowable amount on your tax return. Because of differences between accounting methods and tax law, the amount you can deduct for tax purposes may not be the same as the amount you deduct on your business books and records. For example, you can deduct 100% of the cost of meals on your business books and records. However, only 50% of these costs are allowed by law as a tax deduction. How you deduct a business expense under a reimbursement or allowance arrangement depends on whether you have:
2. Adequately account to you for these expenses within a reasonable period of time, and 3. Return any excess reimbursement or allowance within a reasonable period of time. An arrangement under which you advance money to employees is treated as meeting (3) above only if the following requirements are also met.
Excess reimbursement or allowance. An excess reimbursement or allowance is any amount you pay to an employee that is more than the business-related expenses for which the employee adequately accounted. The employee must return any excess reimbursement or other expense allowance to you within a reasonable period of time. Reasonable period of time. A reasonable period of time depends on the facts and circumstances. Generally, actions that take place within the times specified in the following list will be treated as taking place within a reasonable period of time. 1. You give an advance within 30 days of the time the employee pays or incurs the expense. 2. Your employees adequately account for their expenses within 60 days after the expenses were paid or incurred. 3. Your employees return any excess reimbursement within 120 days after the expenses were paid or incurred. 4. You give a periodic statement (at least quarterly) to your employees that asks them to either return or adequately account for outstanding advances and they comply within 120 days of the date of the statement. How to deduct. You can claim a deduction for travel, meals, and entertainment expenses if you reimburse your employees for these expenses under an accountable plan. Generally, the amount you can deduct for meals and entertainment is subject to a 50% limit, discussed later. If you are a sole proprietor, or are filing as a Chapter 11 Other Expenses Page 41
If any expenses reimbursed under this arrangement are not substantiated, or an excess reimbursement is not returned within a reasonable period of time by an employee, you cannot treat these expenses as reimbursed under an accountable plan. Instead, treat the reimbursed expenses as paid under a nonaccountable plan, discussed later. Adequate accounting. Your employees must adequately account to you for their travel, meals, and entertainment expenses. They must give you documentary evidence of their travel, mileage, and other employee business expenses. This evidence should include items such as receipts, along with either a statement of expenses, an account book, a day-planner, or similar record in which the employee entered each expense at or near the time the expense was incurred.
Accountable Plans
An accountable plan requires your employees to meet all of the following requirements. Each employee must: 1. Have paid or incurred deductible expenses while performing services as your employee,
single member limited liability company, deduct the travel reimbursement on line 24a and the deductible part of the meals and entertainment reimbursement on line 24b, Schedule C (Form 1040) or line 2, Schedule C-EZ (Form 1040). If you are filing an income tax return for a corporation, include the reimbursement on the Other deductions line of Form 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return. If you are filing any other business income tax return, such as a partnership or S corporation return, deduct the reimbursement on the appropriate line of the return as provided in the instructions for that return.
Regular federal per diem rate. The regular federal per diem rate is the highest amount the federal government will pay to its employees while away from home on travel. It has two components: 1. Lodging expense, and 2. Meal and incidental expense (M & IE). The rates are different for different locations. Publication 1542 lists the rates in the continental United States. Standard meal allowance. The federal rate for meal and incidental expenses (M & IE) is the standard meal allowance. You can pay only an M & IE allowance to employees who travel away from home if:
than or equal to the appropriate federal rate, that allowance is not included as part of the employees pay in box 1 of the employees Form W-2. Deduct the allowance as travel expenses (including meals that may be subject to the 50% limit, discussed later). See How to deduct under Accountable Plans, earlier. Allowance more than the federal rate. If your employees allowance is more than the appropriate federal rate, you must report the allowance as two separate items. Include the allowance amount up to the federal rate in box 12 (code L) of the employees Form W-2. Deduct it as travel expenses (as explained above). This part of the allowance is treated as reimbursed under an accountable plan. Include the amount that is more than the federal rate in box 1 (and in boxes 3 and 5 if they apply) of the employees Form W-2. Deduct it as wages subject to income tax withholding, social security, Medicare, and federal unemployment taxes. This part of the allowance is treated as reimbursed under a nonaccountable plan as explained later under Nonaccountable Plans.
You provide for the lodging, You pay for the actual expense of the
lodging directly to the provider,
similar to that used in computing the employees wages (that is, number of hours worked or miles traveled).
Internet access. Per diem rates are available on the Internet. You can access per diem rates at www.gsa.gov. High-low method. This is a simplified method of computing the federal per diem rate for travel within the continental United States. It eliminates the need to keep a current list of the per diem rate for each city. Under the high-low method, the per diem amount for travel during January through September of 2011 is $233 ($65 for M&IE) for certain high-cost locations. All other areas have a per diem amount of $160 ($52 for M&IE). The high-cost locations eligible for the higher per diem amount under the high-low method are listed in Publication 1542. Effective October 1, 2011, the per diem rate for high-cost locations increased to $242 ($65 for M&IE). The rate for all other locations increased to $163 ($52 for M&IE). For October, November, and December 2011, you can either continue to use the rates described in the preceding paragraph or change to the new rates. However, you must use the same rates for all employees reimbursed under the high-low method. For more information about the high-low method, see Revenue Procedure 2011-47, which can be found on the Internet at www.irs.gov/irb/2011-42_IRB/ar12.html. See Publication 1542 (available on the Internet at IRS.gov) for the current per diem rates for all locations. Reporting per diem and car allowances. The following discussion explains how to report per diem and car allowances. The manner in which you report them depends on how the allowance compares to the federal rate. See Table 11-1. Allowance less than or equal to the federal rate. If your allowance for the employee is less
The per diem allowance. The federal rate for M & IE.
If you provide your employees with a per diem allowance that covers lodging, meals, and incidental expenses, you must treat an amount equal to the federal M & IE rate for the area of travel as an expense for food and beverages. If
the per diem allowance you provide is less than the federal per diem rate for the area of travel, you can treat 40% of the per diem allowance as the amount for food and beverages. Meal expenses when subject to hours of service limits. You can deduct 80% of the cost of reimbursed meals your employees consume while away from their tax home on business during, or incident to, any period subject to the Department of Transportations hours of service limits. See Publication 463 for a detailed discussion of individuals subject to the Department of Transportations hours of service limits. De minimis (minimal) fringe benefit. The 50% limit does not apply to an expense for food or beverage that is excluded from the gross income of an employee because it is a de minimis fringe benefit. See Publication 15-B for additional information on de minimis fringe benefits. Company cafeteria or executive dining room. The cost of food and beverages you provide primarily to your employees on your business premises is deductible. This includes the cost of maintaining the facilities for providing the food and beverages. These expenses are subject to the 50% limit unless they qualify as a de minimis fringe benefit, as just discussed, or unless they are compensation to your employees (explained later). Employee activities. The expense of providing recreational, social, or similar activities (including the use of a facility) for your employees is deductible and is not subject to the 50% limit. The benefit must be primarily for your employees who are not highly compensated. For this purpose, a highly compensated employee is an employee who meets either of the following requirements. 1. Owned a 10% or more interest in the business during the year or the preceding year. An employee is treated as owning any interest owned by his or her brother, sister, spouse, ancestors, and lineal descendants. 2. Received more than $110,000 in pay for the preceding year. You can choose to include only employees who were also in the top 20% of employees when ranked by pay for the preceding year. For example, the expenses for food, beverages, and entertainment for a company-wide picnic are not subject to the 50% limit. Meals or entertainment treated as compensation. The 50% limit does not apply to either of the following. 1. Expenses for meals or entertainment that you treat as: a. Compensation to an employee who was the recipient of the meals or entertainment, and b. Wages subject to withholding of federal income tax. 2. Expenses for meals or entertainment if: a. A recipient of the meals or entertainment who is not your employee has to
include the expenses in gross income as compensation for services or as a prize or award, and b. You include that amount on a Form 1099 issued to the recipient, if a Form 1099 is required. Sales of meals or entertainment. You can deduct the cost of meals or entertainment (including the use of facilities) you sell to the public. For example, if you run a nightclub, your expense for the entertainment you furnish to your customers, such as a floor show, is a business expense that is fully deductible. The 50% limit does not apply to this expense. Providing meals or entertainment to general public to promote goodwill. You can deduct the cost of providing meals, entertainment, or recreational facilities to the general public as a means of advertising or promoting goodwill in the community. The 50% limit does not apply to this expense. Director, stockholder, or employee meetings. You can deduct entertainment expenses directly related to business meetings of your employees, partners, stockholders, agents, or directors. You can provide some minor social activities, but the main purpose of the meeting must be your companys business. These expenses are subject to the 50% limit. Trade association meetings. You can deduct expenses directly related to and necessary for attending business meetings or conventions of certain tax-exempt organizations. These organizations include business leagues, chambers of commerce, real estate boards, and trade and professional associations.
You can usually deduct as a business expense the cost of institutional or goodwill advertising to keep your name before the public if it relates to business you reasonably expect to gain in the future. For example, the cost of advertising that encourages people to contribute to the Red Cross, to buy U.S. Savings Bonds, or to participate in similar causes is usually deductible. Anticipated liabilities. Anticipated liabilities or reserves for anticipated liabilities are not deductible. For example, assume you sold 1-year TV service contracts this year totaling $50,000. From experience, you know you will have expenses of about $15,000 in the coming year for these contracts. You cannot deduct any of the $15,000 this year by charging expenses to a reserve or liability account. You can deduct your expenses only when you actually pay or accrue them, depending on your accounting method. Bribes and kickbacks. Engaging in the payment of bribes or kickbacks is a serious criminal matter. Such activity could result in criminal prosecution. Any payments that appear to have been made, either directly or indirectly, to an official or employee of any government or an agency or instrumentality of any government are not deductible for tax purposes and are in violation of the law. Payments paid directly or indirectly to a person in violation of any federal or state law (but only if that state law is generally enforced, defined below) that provides for a criminal penalty or for the loss of a license or privilege to engage in a trade or business are also not allowed as a deduction for tax purposes. Meaning of generally enforced. A state law is considered generally enforced unless it is never enforced or enforced only for infamous persons or persons whose violations are extraordinarily flagrant. For example, a state law is generally enforced unless proper reporting of a violation of the law results in enforcement only under unusual circumstances. Kickbacks. A kickback is a payment for referring a client, patient, or customer. The common kickback situation occurs when money or property is given to someone as payment for influencing a third party to purchase from, use the services of, or otherwise deal with the person who pays the kickback. In many cases, the person whose business is being sought or enjoyed by the person who pays the kickback is not aware of the payment. For example, the Yard Corporation is in the business of repairing ships. It returns 10% of the repair bills as kickbacks to the captains and chief officers of the vessels it repairs. Although this practice is considered an ordinary and necessary expense of getting business, it is clearly a violation of a state law that is generally enforced. These expenditures are not deductible for tax purposes, whether or not the owners of the shipyard are subsequently prosecuted. Form 1099-MISC. It does not matter whether any kickbacks paid during the tax year are deductible on your income tax return in regards to information reporting. See Form 1099-MISC for more information. Car and truck expenses. The costs of operating a car, truck, or other vehicle in your business Chapter 11 Other Expenses Page 43
Nonaccountable Plans
A nonaccountable plan is an arrangement that does not meet the requirements for an accountable plan. All amounts paid, or treated as paid, under a nonaccountable plan are reported as wages on Form W-2. The payments are subject to income tax withholding, social security, Medicare, and federal unemployment taxes. You can deduct the reimbursement as compensation or wages only to the extent it meets the deductibility tests for employees pay in chapter 2. Deduct the allowable amount as compensation or wages on the appropriate line of your income tax return, as provided in its instructions.
Miscellaneous Expenses
In addition to travel, meal, and entertainment expenses, there are other expenses you can deduct. Advertising expenses. You generally can deduct reasonable advertising expenses that are directly related to your business activities. Generally, you cannot deduct amounts paid to influence legislation (i.e., lobbying). See Lobbying expenses, later.
are deductible. For more information on how to figure your deduction, see Publication 463. Charitable contributions. Cash payments to an organization, charitable or otherwise, may be deductible as business expenses if the payments are not charitable contributions or gifts and are directly related to your business. If the payments are charitable contributions or gifts, you cannot deduct them as business expenses. However, corporations (other than S corporations) can deduct charitable contributions on their income tax returns, subject to limitations. See the Instructions for Form 1120 for more information. Sole proprietors, partners in a partnership, or shareholders in an S corporation may be able to deduct charitable contributions made by their business on Schedule A (Form 1040). Example. You paid $15 to a local church for a half-page ad in a program for a concert it is sponsoring. The purpose of the ad was to encourage readers to buy your products. Your payment is not a charitable contribution. You can deduct it as an advertising expense. Example. You made a $100,000 donation to a committee organized by the local Chamber of Commerce to bring a convention to your city, intended to increase business activity, including yours. Your payment is not a charitable contribution. You can deduct it as a business expense. See Publication 526 for a discussion of donated inventory, including capital gain property. Club dues and membership fees. Generally, you cannot deduct amounts paid or incurred for membership in any club organized for business, pleasure, recreation, or any other social purpose. This includes country clubs, golf and athletic clubs, hotel clubs, sporting clubs, airline clubs, and clubs operated to provide meals under circumstances generally considered to be conducive to business discussions. Exception. The following organizations are not treated as clubs organized for business, pleasure, recreation, or other social purpose unless one of the main purposes is to conduct entertainment activities for members or their guests or to provide members or their guests with access to entertainment facilities.
of contract or fiduciary duty, or antitrust violations. You must include this compensation in your income. However, you may be able to take a special deduction. The deduction applies only to amounts recovered for actual economic injury, not any additional amount. The deduction is the smaller of the following.
you to be able to work (impairment-related expenses) as a business expense, rather than as a medical expense. You are disabled if you have either of the following.
damages in the tax year reduced by the amount you paid or incurred in the year to recover that amount. deducted.
ple, blindness or deafness) that functionally limits your being employed. stantially limits one or more of your major life activities.
clearly not needed or used, other than incidentally, in your personal activities. for under other tax law provisions.
Boards of trade. Business leagues. Chambers of commerce. Civic or public service organizations. Professional organizations such as bar associations and medical associations.
if you itemize deductions. However, the deduction is subject to the 2% limitation on miscellaneous itemized deductions. See Publication 529, Miscellaneous Deductions. Tax preparation fees. The cost of hiring a tax professional, such as a C.P.A., to prepare that part of your tax return relating to your business as a sole proprietor is deductible on Schedule C or Schedule C-EZ. Any remaining cost may be deductible on Schedule A (Form 1040) if you itemize deductions. You can also claim a business deduction for amounts paid or incurred in resolving asserted tax deficiencies for your business operated as a sole proprietor. Licenses and regulatory fees. Licenses and regulatory fees for your trade or business paid annually to state or local governments generally are deductible. Some licenses and fees may have to be amortized. See chapter 8 for more information. Lobbying expenses. Generally, lobbying expenses are not deductible. Lobbying expenses include amounts paid or incurred for any of the following activities.
3. Any officer or employee of the White House Office of the Executive Office of the President and the two most senior level officers of each of the other agencies in the Executive Office. 4. Any individual who: a. Is serving in a position in Level I of the Executive Schedule under section 5312 of title 5, United States Code, b. Has been designated by the President as having Cabinet-level status, or c. Is an immediate deputy of an individual listed in item (a) or (b). Exceptions to denial of deduction. The general denial of the deduction does not apply to the following.
are now required to pay an additional amount for each day that completion is delayed beyond the completion date stipulated in the contract. These additional costs are deductible business expenses. On the other hand, penalties or fines paid to any government agency or instrumentality because of a violation of any law are not deductible. These fines or penalties include the following amounts.
state, or local law in a civil action, including certain additions to tax and additional amounts and assessable penalties imposed by the Internal Revenue Code. liability for a fine or penalty, whether civil or criminal. ceeding that could result in a fine or penalty.
Influencing legislation. Participating in or intervening in any political campaign for, or against, any candidate for public office.
nicating with, any committee or member of any local council or similar governing body concerning its legislation (local legislation) if the legislation is of direct interest to you or to you and an organization of which you are a member. An Indian tribal government is treated as a local council or similar governing body. islation and communicating directly with a covered executive branch official if those expenses for the tax year do not exceed $2,000 (excluding overhead expenses).
Fines for violating city housing codes. Fines paid by truckers for violating state
maximum highway weight laws.
Attempting to influence the general public, Communicating directly with covered ex-
or segments of the public, about elections, legislative matters, or referendums. ecutive branch officials (defined later) in any attempt to influence the official actions or positions of those officials. dinating any of the preceding activities.
Researching, preparing, planning, or coorYour expenses for influencing legislation and communicating directly with a covered executive branch official include a portion of your labor costs and general and administrative costs of your business. For information on making this allocation, see section 1.162-28 of the regulations. You cannot claim a charitable or business expense deduction for amounts paid to an organization if both of the following apply.
in the trade or business of lobbying (professional lobbyists) on behalf of another person (but does apply to payments by the other person to the lobbyist for lobbying activities).
Fines for violating air quality laws. Civil penalties for violating federal laws regarding mining safety standards and discharges into navigable waters.
Moving machinery. Generally, the cost of moving machinery from one city to another is a deductible expense. So is the cost of moving machinery from one plant to another, or from one part of your plant to another. You can deduct the cost of installing the machinery in the new location. However, you must capitalize the costs of installing or moving newly purchased machinery. Outplacement services. The costs of outplacement services you provide to your employees to help them find new employment, such as career counseling, resume assistance, skills as sessment, etc. are deductible. The costs of outplacement services may cover more than one deduction category. For example, deduct as a utilities expense the cost of telephone calls made under this service and deduct as rental expense the cost of renting machinery and equipment for this service. For information on whether the value of outplacement services is includable in your employees income, see Publication 15-B. Penalties and fines. Penalties paid for late performance or nonperformance of a contract are generally deductible. For instance, you own and operate a construction company. Under a contract, you are to finish construction of a building by a certain date. Due to construction delays, the building is not completed and ready for occupancy on the date stipulated in the contract. You
Court costs or stenographic and printing Compensatory damages paid to a governPolitical contributions. Contributions or gifts paid to political parties or candidates are not deductible. In addition, expenses paid or incurred to take part in any political campaign of a candidate for public office are not deductible. Indirect political contributions. You cannot deduct indirect political contributions and costs of taking part in political activities as business expenses. Examples of nondeductible expenses include the following.
The organization conducts lobbying activities on matters of direct financial interest to your business.
to avoid the rules discussed earlier that prohibit a business deduction for lobbying expenses.
If a tax-exempt organization, other than a section 501(c)(3) organization, provides you with a notice on the part of dues that is allocable to nondeductible lobbying and political expenses, you cannot deduct that part of the dues. Covered executive branch official. For purposes of this discussion, a covered executive branch official is any of the following. 1. The President. 2. The Vice President.
political party, or in any other publication if any of the proceeds from the publication are for, or intended for, the use of a political party or candidate. ing, but not limited to, galas, dances, film presentations, parties, and sporting events) if any of the proceeds from the function are for, or intended for, the use of a political party or candidate. Other Expenses Page 45
Chapter 11
Method 2. Figure your tax for 2011 claiming a credit for the repaid amount. Follow these steps. 1. Figure your tax for 2011 without deducting the repaid amount. 2. Refigure your tax from the earlier year without including in income the amount you repaid in 2011. 3. Subtract the tax in (2) from the tax shown on your return for the earlier year. This is the amount of your credit. 4. Subtract the answer in (3) from the tax for 2011 figured without the deduction (step 1). If Method 1 results in less tax, deduct the amount repaid as discussed earlier under Type of deduction. If Method 2 results in less tax, claim the credit on line 71 of Form 1040, and write I.R.C. 1341 next to line 71. Example. For 2010, you filed a return and reported your income on the cash method. In 2011, you repaid $5,000 included in your 2010 gross income under a claim of right. Your filing status in 2011 and 2010 is single. Your income and tax for both years are as follows: 2010 With Income $15,000 $ 1,835 2010 Without Income $10,000 $ 1,085
the deduction or credit in the tax year in which the obligation for the repayment accrues. Subscriptions. Subscriptions to professional, technical, and trade journals that deal with your business field are deductible. Supplies and materials. Unless you have deducted the cost in any earlier year, you generally can deduct the cost of materials and supplies actually consumed and used during the tax year. If you keep incidental materials and supplies on hand, you can deduct the cost of the incidental materials and supplies you bought during the tax year if all the following requirements are met.
Repairs. The cost of repairing or improving property used in your trade or business is either a deductible or capital expense. Routine maintenance that keeps your property in a normal efficient operating condition, but that does not materially increase the value or substantially prolong the useful life of the property, is deductible in the year that it is incurred. Otherwise, the cost must be capitalized and depreciated. See Form 4562 and its instructions for how to compute and claim the depreciation deduction. The cost of repairs includes the costs of labor, supplies, and certain other items. The value of your own labor is not deductible. Examples of repairs include:
Cleaning and repairing roofs and gutters, Fixing plumbing leaks (but not replacement of fixtures). Repayments. If you had to repay an amount you included in your income in an earlier year, you may be able to deduct the amount repaid for the year in which you repaid it. Or, if the amount you repaid is more than $3,000, you may be able to take a credit against your tax for the year in which you repaid it. Type of deduction. The type of deduction you are allowed in the year of repayment depends on the type of income you included in the earlier year. For instance, if you repay an amount you previously reported as a capital gain, deduct the repayment as a capital loss on Form 8949. If you reported it as self-employment income, deduct it as a business deduction on Schedule C or Schedule C-EZ (Form 1040) or Schedule F (Form 1040). If you reported the amount as wages, unemployment compensation, or other nonbusiness ordinary income, enter it on Schedule A (Form 1040) as a miscellaneous itemized deduction that is subject to the 2% limitation. However, if the repayment is over $3,000 and Method 1 (discussed later) applies, deduct it on Schedule A (Form 1040) as a miscellaneous itemized deduction that is not subject to the 2% limitation. Repayment $3,000 or less. If the amount you repaid was $3,000 or less, deduct it from your income in the year you repaid it. Repayment over $3,000. If the amount you repaid was more than $3,000, you can deduct the repayment, as described earlier. However, you can instead choose to take a tax credit for the year of repayment if you included the income under a claim of right. This means that at the time you included the income, it appeared that you had an unrestricted right to it. If you qualify for this choice, figure your tax under both methods and use the method that results in less tax. Method 1. Figure your tax for 2011 claiming a deduction for the repaid amount. Page 46 Chapter 12 How To Get Tax Help
2011 2011 Without Deduction With Deduction $49,950 $8,619 $44,950 $7,369
Your tax under Method 1 is $7,369. Your tax under Method 2 is $7,869, figured as follows: Tax previously determined for 2010 $ 1,835 Less: Tax as refigured . . . . . . . . . . 1,085 Decrease in 2010 tax $ 750 Regular tax liability for 2011 . . . . . . . $8,619 Less: Decrease in 2010 tax . . . . . . . 750 Refigured tax for 2011 $ 7,869 Because you pay less tax under Method 1, you should take a deduction for the repayment in 2011. Repayment does not apply. This discussion does not apply to the following.
on your own. Remember, the worst thing you can do is nothing at all. TAS can help if you cant resolve your problem with the IRS and:
Your problem is causing financial difficul You face (or your business is facing) an
immediate threat of adverse action.
IRS but no one has responded, or the IRS has not responded to you by the date promised.
If you qualify for our help, well do everything we can to get your problem resolved. You will be assigned to one advocate who will be with you at every turn. We have offices in every state, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. Although TAS is independent within the IRS, our advocates know how to work with the IRS to get your problems resolved. And our services are always free. As a taxpayer, you have rights that the IRS must abide by in its dealings with you. Our tax toolkit at www.TaxpayerAdvocate.irs.gov can help you understand these rights. If you think TAS might be able to help you, call your local advocate, whose number is in your phone book and on our website at www.irs. gov/advocate. You can also call our toll-free number at 1-877-777-4778 or TTY/TDD 1-800-829-4059. TAS also handles large-scale or systemic problems that affect many taxpayers. If you know of one of these broad issues, please report it to us through our Systemic Advocacy Management System at www.irs.gov/advocate. Low Income Taxpayer Clinics (LITCs). Low Income Taxpayer Clinics (LITCs) are independent from the IRS. Some clinics serve individuals whose income is below a certain level and who need to resolve a tax problem. These clinics provide professional representation before the IRS or in court on audits, appeals, tax collection disputes, and other issues for free or for a small fee. Some clinics can provide information about taxpayer rights and responsibilities in many different languages for individuals who speak English as a second language. For more information and to find a clinic near you, see the LITC page on www.irs.gov/advocate or IRS Publication 4134, Low Income Taxpayer Clinic List. This publication is also available by calling 1-800-829-3676 or at your local IRS office. Free tax services. Publication 910, IRS Guide to Free Tax Services, is your guide to IRS services and resources. Learn about free tax information from the IRS, including publications, services, and education and assistance programs. The publication also has an index of over 100 TeleTax topics (recorded tax information) you can listen to on the telephone. The majority of the information and services listed in this publication are available to you free of charge. If there is a fee associated with a resource or service, it is listed in the publication. Accessible versions of IRS published products are available on request in a variety of alternative formats for people with disabilities. Free help with your return. Free help in preparing your return is available nationwide from
IRS-certified volunteers. The Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program is designed to help low-income taxpayers and the Tax Counseling for the Elderly (TCE) program is designed to assist taxpayers age 60 and older with their tax returns. Most VITA and TCE sites offer free electronic filing and all volunteers will let you know about credits and deductions you may be entitled to claim. To find the nearest VITA or TCE site, visit IRS.gov or call 1-800-906-9887 or 1-800-829-1040. As part of the TCE program, AARP offers the Tax-Aide counseling program. To find the nearest AARP Tax-Aide site, call 1-888-227-7669 or visit AARPs website at www.aarp.org/money/taxaide. For more information on these programs, go to IRS.gov and enter keyword VITA in the upper right-hand corner. Internet. You can access the IRS website at IRS.gov 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to:
prior-year forms and instructions. You should receive your order within 10 days.
face-to-face help solving tax problems every business day in IRS Taxpayer Assistance Centers. An employee can explain IRS letters, request adjustments to your account, or help you set up a payment plan. Call your local Taxpayer Assistance Center for an appointment. To find the number, go to www.irs.gov/localcontacts or look in the phone book under United States Government, Internal Revenue Service. to TTY/TDD equipment, call 1-800-829-4059 to ask tax questions or to order forms and publications. ten to pre-recorded messages covering various tax topics.
E-file your return. Find out about commercial tax preparation and e-file services available free to eligible taxpayers.
TeleTax topics. Call 1-800-829-4477 to lis Refund information. To check the status of
your 2011 refund, call 1-800-829-1954 or 1-800-829-4477 (automated refund information 24 hours a day, 7 days a week). Wait at least 72 hours after the IRS acknowledges receipt of your e-filed return, or 3 to 4 weeks after mailing a paper return. If you filed Form 8379 with your return, wait 14 weeks (11 weeks if you filed electronically). Have your 2011 tax return available so you can provide your social security number, your filing status, and the exact whole dollar amount of your refund. If you check the status of your refund and are not given the date it will be issued, please wait until the next week before checking back. status of a prior year refund or amended return refund, call 1-800-829-1040.
to IRS.gov and click on Wheres My Refund. Wait at least 72 hours after the IRS acknowledges receipt of your e-filed return, or 3 to 4 weeks after mailing a paper return. If you filed Form 8379 with your return, wait 14 weeks (11 weeks if you filed electronically). Have your 2011 tax return available so you can provide your social security number, your filing status, and the exact whole dollar amount of your refund. forms, instructions, and publications.
Download forms, including talking tax Order IRS products online. Research your tax questions online. Search publications online by topic or
keyword.
View Internal Revenue Bulletins (IRBs) Figure your withholding allowances using
the withholding calculator online at www.irs.gov/individuals.
using our Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) Assistant available online at www.irs.gov/ individuals. news by email.
Evaluating the quality of our telephone services. To ensure IRS representatives give accurate, courteous, and professional answers, we use several methods to evaluate the quality of our telephone services. One method is for a second IRS representative to listen in on or record random telephone calls. Another is to ask some callers to complete a short survey at the end of the call. Walk-in. Many products and services are available on a walk-in basis.
Sign up to receive local and national tax Get information on starting and operating
a small business.
Ordering forms, instructions, and publications. Call 1-800-TAX-FORM (1-800-829-3676) to order current-year forms, instructions, and publications, and
offices, libraries, and IRS offices to pick up certain forms, instructions, and publications. Some IRS offices, libraries, grocery stores, copy centers, city and county government offices, credit unions, and office supply stores have a collection of products available to print from a CD or photocopy from reproducible proofs. Also, some IRS offices and libraries have the Internal Revenue Code, regulations, Internal Revenue Bulletins, and Cumulative Bulletins available for research purposes. How To Get Tax Help Page 47
Chapter 12
Taxpayer Assistance Center every business day for personal, face-to-face tax help. An employee can explain IRS letters, request adjustments to your tax account, or help you set up a payment plan. If you need to resolve a tax problem, have questions about how the tax law applies to your individual tax return, or you are more comfortable talking with someone in person, visit your local Taxpayer Assistance Center where you can spread out your records and talk with an IRS representative face-to-face. No appointment is necessary just walk in. If you prefer, you can call your local Center and leave a message requesting an appointment to resolve a tax account issue. A representative will call you back within 2 business days to schedule an in-person appointment at your convenience. If you have an ongoing, complex tax account problem or a special need, such as a disability, an appointment can be requested. All other issues will be handled without an appointment. To find the number of your local office, go to www.irs.gov/localcontacts or
look in the phone book under United States Government, Internal Revenue Service. Mail. You can send your order for forms, instructions, and publications to the address below. You should receive a response within 10 days after your request is received. Internal Revenue Service 1201 N. Mitsubishi Motorway Bloomington, IL 61705-6613 DVD for tax products. You can order Publication 1796, IRS Tax Products DVD, and obtain:
Tax Topics from the IRS telephone response system. U.S. Code.
Internal Revenue Code Title 26 of the Links to other Internet based Tax Research Materials. forms.
Fill-in, print, and save features for most tax Internal Revenue Bulletins. Toll-free and email technical support. Two releases during the year.
The first release will ship the beginning of January 2012. The final release will ship the beginning of March 2012.
Prior-year forms, instructions, and publica Tax Map: an electronic research tool and
finding aid.
Purchase the DVD from National Technical Information Service (NTIS) at www.irs.gov/ cdorders for $30 (no handling fee) or call 1-877-233-6767 toll free to buy the DVD for $30 (plus a $6 handling fee).
Page 48
Chapter 12
Index
To help us develop a more useful index, please let us know if you have ideas for index entries. See Comments and Suggestions in the Introduction for the ways you can reach us.
A
Advertising . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Amortization: Anti-abuse rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Anti-churning rules . . . . . . . . . 29 Atmospheric pollution control facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Corporate organization costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Dispositions of section 197 intangibles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Experimental costs . . . . . . . . . 32 Geological and geophysical costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 How to deduct . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Incorrect amount deducted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Partnership organization costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Pollution control facilities . . . . 32 Reforestation costs . . . . . . . . . 31 Reforestation expenses . . . . . 24 Related person . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Research costs . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Section 197 intangibles defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Starting a business costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Start-up costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Anticipated liabilities . . . . . . . . 43 Assessments, local . . . . . . . . . 16 Assistance (See Tax help) At-risk limits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Attorney fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6, 7
Circulation costs, newspapers and periodicals . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Cleanup costs, environmental . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Club dues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Comments on publication . . . . 1 Commitment fees . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Computer software . . . . . . . . . . 29 Constant-yield method, OID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Contested liability . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Contributions: Charitable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Political . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Copyrights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Cost depletion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Cost of getting lease . . . . . . 9, 28 Cost of goods sold . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Cost recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Covenant not to compete . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Credit card convenience fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
F
Fees: Commitment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Legal and professional . . . . . . 44 Regulatory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Tax return preparation . . . . . . 45 Fines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Forgone interest . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Form: 3115 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16, 30 4562 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 5213 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 8826 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 8885 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Franchise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29, 44 Franchise taxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Free tax services . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Fringe benefits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Fuel taxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Below-market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Business expense for . . . . . . . Capitalized . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Carrying charge . . . . . . . . . . . . Deductible . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Forgone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Life insurance policies . . . . . . Not deductible . . . . . . . . . . . . . Refunds of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . When to deduct . . . . . . . . . . . . Internet-related expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Interview expenses . . . . . . . . . .
14 10 13 21 12 14 13 13 14 14 44 44
K
Key person . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Kickbacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
L
Leases: Canceling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Cost of getting . . . . . . . . . . . 9, 28 Improvements by lessee . . . . 10 Leveraged . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Mineral . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Oil and gas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Sales distinguished . . . . . . . . . . 8 Taxes on . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Legal and professional fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Licenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28, 45 Life insurance coverage . . . . . . 7 Limit on deductions . . . . . . . . . . 5 Line of credit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Loans: Below-market interest rate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Discounted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Loans or Advances . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Lobbying expenses . . . . . . . . . 45 Long-term care insurance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Losses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4, 5 At-risk limits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Net operating . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Passive activities . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
D
De minimis OID . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Debt-financed distributions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Definitions: Business bad debt . . . . . . . . . . 38 Necessary expense . . . . . . . . . 2 Ordinary expense . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Section 197 intangibles . . . . . 28 Demolition expenses . . . . . . . . 44 Depletion: Mineral property . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Oil and gas wells . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Percentage table . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Timber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Who can claim . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Depreciation (See Cost recovery) Development costs, miners . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Disabled, improvements for . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Drilling and development costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Dues, membership . . . . . . . . . . 44
G
Gas wells . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Geological and geophysical costs: Development, oil and gas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Exploration, oil and gas . . . . . 32 Geothermal wells . . . . . . . . 22, 36 Gifts, nominal value . . . . . . . . . . 7 Going into business . . . . . . . 3, 26 Goodwill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
B
Bad debts: Defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 How to treat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Types of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 When worthless . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Bonuses: Employee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Royalties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Bribes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Brownfields (See Environmental cleanup costs) Business: Assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Books and records . . . . . . . . . 28 Meal expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Use of car . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4, 43 Use of home . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
H
Health insurance, deduction for self-employed . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Heating equipment . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Help (See Tax help)
I
Impairment-related expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Improvements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 By lessee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 For disabled and elderly . . . . 24 Income taxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Incorrect amount of amortization deducted . . . . 30 Insurance: Capitalized premiums . . . . . . . 20 Deductible premiums . . . . . . . 17 Nondeductible premiums . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Self-employed individuals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Intangible drilling costs . . . . . 22 Intangibles, amortization . . . . 28 Interest: Allocation of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
M
Machinery parts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Meals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Meals and entertainment . . . . 42 Meals and lodging . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Methods of accounting . . . . . . . 4 Mining: Depletion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Development costs . . . . . . . . . 23 Exploration costs . . . . . . . . . . . 22 More information (See Tax help) Mortgage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Moving expenses, machinery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
E
Economic interest . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Economic performance . . . . . . 4 Education expenses . . . . . . . 7, 44 Elderly, improvements for . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Employee benefit programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Employment taxes . . . . . . . . . . 16 Entertainment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Environmental cleanup (remediation) costs . . . . . . . 23 Excise taxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
C
Campaign contribution . . . . . . 45 Capital expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Capitalization of interest . . . . 13 Car allowance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Car and truck expenses . . . . . 43 Carrying charges . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Charitable contributions . . . . . 44 Publication 535 (2011)
N
Natural gas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Page 49
O
Office in home . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Oil and gas wells: Depletion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Drilling costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Partnerships . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 S corporations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Optional write-off method: Circulation costs . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Experimental costs . . . . . . . . . 33 Intangible drilling and development costs . . . . . . . 33 Mining exploration and development costs . . . . . . . 33 Research costs . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Organization costs: Corporate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Partnership . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Organizational costs . . . . . . . . 24 Original issue discount . . . . . . 12 Outplacement services . . . . . . 45
Percentage depletion . . . . . . . . 34 Personal property tax . . . . . . . 17 Political contributions . . . . . . . 45 Pollution control facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Prepaid expense . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Extends useful life . . . . . . . . . . 20 Interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Rent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Prepayment penalty . . . . . . . . . 12 Presumption of profit . . . . . . . . . 5 Publications (See Tax help)
Removal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Rent expense, capitalizing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Repairs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Repayments (claim of right) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Research costs . . . . . . . . . 21, 32
S
Sales taxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Section 179 expense deduction (See Cost recovery) Self-employed health insurance deduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Self-employment tax . . . . . . . . 17 Self-insurance, reserve for . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Sick pay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Standard meal allowance . . . . 42 Standard mileage rate . . . . . . . 42 Standby charges . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Start-up costs . . . . . . . . . . . 24, 26 Subscriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Suggestions for publication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Supplies and materials . . . . . . 46
R
Real estate taxes . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Recapture: Exploration expenses . . . . . . . 22 Timber property . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Recordkeeping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Recovery of amount deducted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Refiners who cannot claim percentage depletion . . . . . . 34 Reforestation costs . . . . . 24, 31 Regulatory fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Reimbursements . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Business expenses . . . . . . . . . . 8 Mileage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Nonaccountable plan . . . . . . . 43 Per diem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Related persons: Anti-churning rules . . . . . . . . . 30 Coal or iron ore . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Payments to . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5, 14 Refiners . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Unreasonable rent . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Fuel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Leased property . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Personal property . . . . . . . . . . 17 Real estate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Unemployment fund . . . . . . . . 17 Taxpayer Advocate . . . . . . . . . . 46 Telephone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Timber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31, 37 Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Trademark, trade name . . . . . 29, 44 Travel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 TTY/TDD information . . . . . . . . 46
U
Unemployment fund taxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Unpaid expenses, related person . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Utilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
V
Vacation pay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
P
Passive activities . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Payments in kind . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Penalties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Deductible . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Nondeductible . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Prepayment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Per diem and car allowances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
T
Tax help . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Tax preparation fees . . . . . . . . 45 Taxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Carrying charge . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Employment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Excise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Franchise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
W
Wages: Property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Tests for deducting pay . . . . . . 6 Welfare benefit funds . . . . . . . . . 7
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