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@083 CHAP 9
┌───────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ DEPRECIATING ASSETS FOR TAX PURPOSES │
└───────────────────────────────────────────────┘
The Tax Reform Act of 1986 put an end to the highly favor-
able "ACRS" (Asset Cost Recovery System) rules that had
been enacted in 1981. Since January 1, 1987, taxpayers have
had to learn a whole new, and more complex system of deprec-
iation. Before then, virtually all assets a typical small
business acquired were written off over 5 years, a few,
like cars, over 3 years, and real estate over 19 years (or
15 or 18 years if acquired before May 9, 1985). You must
still use the ACRS tables on assets placed in service be-
tween 1981 and 1986, in general, however.
┌───────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│THE "MACRS" (MODIFIED ACCELERATED COST RECOVERY│
│ SYSTEM) DEPRECIATION SYSTEM │
└───────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Under the MACRS depreciation system, most assets are now
assigned to 3-, 5-, 7-, 10-, 15- or 20-year recovery period
categories, except for real estate, which is depreciated
over 31.5 years, or 39 years if placed in service after May
12, 1993. Residential rental property is depreciated over
a period of 27.5 years. Under the MACRS system, all per-
sonal property in the 3-, 5-, 7-, and 10-year categories is
depreciated using the old 200% declining balance method of
depreciation from pre-1981 days, and 15- and 20-year prop-
erty is depreciated under the 150% declining balance method.
Real estate may now only be depreciated on a straight-line
basis.
Assets other than real estate are mostly assigned to the
various recovery periods based on the old Asset Deprecia-
tion Range ("ADR") system "midpoint class lives" that were
published by the IRS back in the early 1970s. The "class
life" guidelines vary from industry to industry and are
quite numerous and technical. For the most part, you will
need to rely on your tax adviser to tell you what recovery
period applies to various depreciable assets you purchase
in your business. However, the MACRS system does specific-
ally assign some types of assets to recovery classes, such
as autos and light trucks, which are now 5-year property
(they were 3-year property under the former ACRS rules).
Most of the "information-handling equipment" (other than
computers) used in an office, such as calculators, typewrit-
ers, etc., are 5-year property, and computers and peripher-
als are generally 7-year property.
Generally, under MACRS, a half-year of depreciation can be
taken in the year an asset is first placed in service, re-
gardless of whether it is put in service on the first day
of the tax year or the last day (except for real estate).
However, when more than 40% of such property is put in ser-
vice in the last 3 months of the tax year, you are instead
required to use a "mid-quarter" convention, which assumes
that all the assets placed in service in each calendar
quarter were placed in service at the midpoint of such
quarter.
Under recent final MACRS tax regulations [Regs. Section
1.168(d)-1(b)()(ii) ], no depreciation is allowed at all
for property that is acquired and disposed of in the same
taxable year, regardless of which convention applies. As
such, such assets are ignored in determining whether the
40% limit has been exceeded and thus whether the mid-
quarter convention applies to other assets acquired during
the year.
For real property, all real property that is placed in
service in a particular month is assumed to have been
placed in service at the mid-point of that month.
┌───────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ DEPRECIATION LIMITS FOR LUXURY AUTOMOBILES │
└───────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Limits are placed on the amount of depreciation that can
be taken each year on so-called "luxury automobiles" used
in a business. In effect, if you buy an auto for business
use (other than for hauling, or carrying passengers for
hire), you are limited to the following maximum annual de-
preciation deductions for cars placed in service in 1993:
1st Year $2,860
2nd Year $4,600
3rd Year $2,750
Each Subsequent Year* $1,675
(* Until the entire cost is written off. This could take
several decades for a Rolls-Royce.)
The above amounts assume the car is used 100% for business.
If you use it for business, e.g., only 80% of the time, then
your maximum deduction would be 80% of the above numbers.
Similar treatment is given to leases, based on the value of
the car, except that you must include certain "phantom"
income on your return from the IRS "inclusion amount" tables,
for cars with above a certain value.
Both the above annual limits on auto depreciation and the
leased car "inclusion tables" kick in at price levels that
you or I definitely would not consider "luxury car" prices.
Congressmen apparently have a very different idea than most
of us as to what constitutes a luxury automobile. (But
then, they are accustomed to being driven around in big,
black chauffeured limousines, paid for by the taxpayers,
so how could they know how much a "luxury car" costs?)
┌───────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│EXPENSING OF EQUIPMENT IN THE YEAR OF PURCHASE │
└───────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Small businesses are allowed to expense up to $10,000
($17,500, starting in 1993) a year of equipment in the
year of purchase, rather than depreciating it. Thus, for
example, if you buy a $5,000 computer in your small bus-
iness, you can "expense" its entire cost in the year of
purchase, rather than depreciating it over a 7-year period.
This would ordinarily improve your cash flow, by giving
you a full $5,000 tax deduction right now, rather than a
few hundred dollars a year over 7 years.
This benefit phases out dollar for dollar if you acquire
more than $200,000 of eligible property during the tax
year. If your business acquires $217,500 or more of such
eligible assets in one year, it won't be able to elect to
expense ANY of it. Thus a large company, which acquires a
lot of personal property each year, like a General Motors,
is not able to take advantage of this tax break (but would
still be able to depreciate it). Eligible property is gen-
erally tangible personal property that would have qualified
for the investment tax credit under prior law. Note that
this expensing election is not allowed if it would create
a loss for the taxpayer -- it is only allowable to the ex-
tent the taxpayer has taxable income.
┌───────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ AMORTIZATION OF INTANGIBLE ASSETS │
└───────────────────────────────────────────────┘
For all practical purposes, "amortization" is essentially
another way of saying "depreciation," except that amortiza-
tion implies that the cost of an item is written off in
equal amounts over a period of years or months. This is
really the same as "straight-line" depreciation. (Other
depreciation methods, such as 200% declining balance, allow
a bigger percentage write-off in the initial years after
an asset is purchased.) Accountants like to use the term
"depreciation" when referring to the write-off of TANGIBLE
assets and "amortization" when referring to the write-off
of INTANGIBLE assets.
The Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1993 now provides for
the amortization, generally over 15 years, of most kinds
of INtangible assets, many of which, like "goodwill" value
in the purchase of a business, were not depreciable or
amortizable at all before the new law was enacted, on August
10, 1993. (And you can elect to apply the new law retro-
actively to all intangible property acquired after July 25,
1991). Certain kinds of intangible property can be amortized
over periods shorter than 15 years, like most computer soft-
ware (36 months under the new law), but certain kinds of
intangibles, like sports franchises or certain "self-
created" intangibles, are not amortizable at all.
@CODE: CA
@CODE:NF
┌───────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ CALIFORNIA DEPRECIATION DIFFERENCES │
└───────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Over the years since the ACRS depreciation system came into
being for federal tax purposes, one of the most important
differences between federal and California tax law has been
with regard to depreciation. However, in 1987 and 1988,
California finally enacted legislation to allow unincorpor-
ated businesses and S corporations to use the new MACRS
depreciation for state income tax purposes. Even so, regu-
lar corporations subject to tax in California are still
prohibited from using either the ACRS or MACRS depreciation
systems for state tax purposes (most regular corporations
are subject to the California franchise tax, rather than
income tax, on their income). Regular ("C") corporations
still must use the old pre-1981 methods that were used for
both federal and California purposes before 1981, unless
ACRS or MACRS deductions are considered "a reasonable
allowance."