Repairs versus Improvements: New Business Rules for Deductibility
The IRS and Treasury have issued long-awaited, comprehensive regulations on the capitalization of amounts paid to acquire, produce or improve tangible property. The regulations, released at the end of 2011 and effective immediately for most taxpayers, provide the standards that businesses must now apply to determine whether expenditures can be deducted as repairs or must be capitalized and then recovered over a period of years.
The regulations are broad and far-reaching – they apply to every business taxpayer that uses tangible property, whether owned or leased, regardless of the form of entity that operates the business, and regardless of the entity’s foreign or domestic status. They apply to manufacturers, wholesalers, distributors, and retailers.
The new regulations have taken effect and steps must be taken to comply with them. They generally apply to amounts paid or incurred in tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. Thus, for calendar year taxpayers, the rules already apply. Some of the rules build upon rules already in place; other requirements, however, are completely new. The IRS will take comments and consider further changes, so any plans set forth to respond to these new regulations must themselves be ready for fine tuning. In the meantime, however, the new regulations must be followed precisely or the loss of tax benefits and imposition of penalties can ensue.
The regulations are generally beneficial to most businesses, but they also add complexity. They provide a more defined framework for determining capital expenditures, along with some clarifications of the law and some simplifying conventions. The regulations make significant and substantial changes to previous regulations issued by the government in 2008. In many cases, the tax treatment of an expenditure will vary from its treatment for book purposes, putting an additional burden on taxpayers to apply new tax accounting systems to track and collect data.
The regulations will require many decisions by taxpayers in determining the appropriate tax treatment. In some cases, taxpayers are given an explicit election to decide what type of tax treatment to follow, creating new opportunities as well as challenges. In other cases, taxpayers must make a de facto election. In either case, once the taxpayer adopts a particular method of accounting for particular assets, that business must continue to follow that method of accounting, and will not be able to change it without the IRS’s permission.
There will be more guidance from the IRS. Most taxpayers must now change their method of accounting for certain covered items to comply with the new regulations. The IRS has issued revenue procedures that provide transition rules for taxpayers changing their method of accounting. When changing accounting methods, however, the regulations require that taxpayers make so-called Code Section 481(a) adjustments to prevent duplicated or omitted tax benefits. Because of this requirement, taxpayers will in effect have to apply the new rules to costs incurred prior to the effective date of the regulations. As a result, some taxpayers may have to capitalize amounts they previously deducted, and recognize income based on the difference in treatment. Conversely, other taxpayers may be able to deduct amounts previously capitalized, and take a deduction for the difference. The retroactive impact of these changes can be significant for many businesses.
Frank’s Tax and Business Service
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Franklin Katz, ATP, PA, PB,
Providing Professional Accounting, Bookkeeping, Payroll and Income Tax Preparation Services
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Reproduced with permission from CCH’s Client Letter, published and copyrighted by CCH Incorporated, 2700 Lake Cook Road, Riverwoods, IL60015.
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