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Chapter 7. Accounting Periods & Methods & Depreciation Income Tax Fundamentals 2007 Gerald E. Whittenburg & Martha Altus-Buller. Accounting Periods. Problem when taxpayer’s tax year differs from calendar year Partnerships don’t pay tax as an entity
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Chapter 7 Accounting Periods & Methods & Depreciation Income Tax Fundamentals 2007 Gerald E. Whittenburg & Martha Altus-Buller
Accounting Periods • Problem when taxpayer’s tax year differs from calendar year • Partnerships don’t pay tax as an entity • Tax year must be the same tax year as 50% of partners • If majority of partners’ tax years are different, use tax year of principal partners • Principal partner is partner with at least 5% share in profits or capital • If principal partners have different tax years • Use accounting period with the least aggregated deferral
Tax Year for Personal Service Corporation • A Personal Service Corporation (PSC) is a corporation with shareholder-employees whom provide a personal service • For example, an architect or dentist • Generally must adopt calendar year • Can adopt a fiscal year if • Can prove business purpose or • Fiscal year results in a deferral period of less than 3 months and shareholders’ salaries for deferral period are proportionate to salaries received during rest of the period and corporation limits its deduction [see next slide]
Short Period Taxable Income • If taxpayer has a short year [other than first/last year of operation], tax calculated based on following example: • Example: In 2006, Fed-Mex changes from a calendar year to tax year ending 9/30. For the short period 1/1/06 – 9/30/06, Fed-Mex’s TI = $20,000. • Calculate tax for the short period • Annualize TI 20,000 x 12/9 = 26,667 • Tax on annualized TI 26,667 x 15% = 4,000 • Allocate tax to short period 4,000 x 9/12 = $3,000 • Individual taxpayers rarely change tax years
Accounting Methods • Cash receipts/disbursements method • Recognize income when cash actually/constructively received • Recognize deduction in year of payment - exception: can’t deduct prepaid rent or interest • This method most common for individuals for overall accounting method • Can’t use cash basis if taxpayer is a • C corporation, or • Partnership with a corporation as a partner, or • Trust with UBI (unrelated business income) • Above regulations don’t apply to certain organizations
Accounting Methods [continued] • Accrual method • Recognize income when earned and can be reasonably estimated • Recognize deduction when incurred and can be reasonably estimated • Hybrid method • An example of a hybrid taxpayer, is one that utilizes cash method for receipts/disbursements but accrual for cost of products sold
Depreciation [Form 4562] • Depreciation is a process of allocating and deducting the cost of assets over their useful lives • Does not mean devaluation of asset • Land is not depreciated • Maintenance vs. depreciation • Maintenance expenses are incurred to keep asset in good operating order • Depreciation refers to deducting part of the original cost of the asset
Personal Property Recover Periods • Each asset is depreciated according to an IRS-specified recovery period • 3 year • 5 year Computer, cars and light trucks, R&D equipment, certain energy property & certain equipment • 7 year Mostly business furniture and equipment and property with no ADR life • 10 year Trees and vines • 15 year Treatment plants • 20 year Sewers
Personal Property • Depreciation is determined using IRS tables (Table 2 on p. 7-9 in text) • Salvage value not used in MACRS • Tables based on half-year convention • 1/2 year depreciation taken in year of acquisition • 1/2 year depreciation taken in final year • May elect to use tables based on straight line instead (Table 3 on p. 7-10 in text)
Mid-Quarter Convention • Mid-quarter convention is required if taxpayer purchases 40% or more of total assets (except real estate) in last quarter of tax year • Then must apply this convention to every asset purchased in the year • Excluding real property and §179 property • Must use special mid-quarter tables • Found at major tax service such as Commerce Clearing House [CCH] or Research Institute of America [RIA]
Real Estate • Real assets depreciated based on a recovery period depending on use • Real assets are depreciated using the straight-line method with a mid-month convention (Table 4); for real estate acquired after 1986 use • 27.5 years: Residential rental • 39 years: Nonresidential • Treats all acquisitions/dispositions as occurring mid-month [mid-month convention] • No mid-quarter convention for real estate
Election to Expense - §179 • §179 allows immediate expensing of qualifying property • For 2006, the annual amount allowed is $108,000 • Qualifying property is tangible personal property used in a business • But not real estate or off-the-shelf computer software • §179 election to expense limited • If cost of qualifying property placed in service in a year > $430,000, then reduce §179 expense $ for $ • For example, if assets purchased in current year = $500,000, then $70,000 reduction in §179 capability so limited to $108,000 – 70,000 = $38,000 election to expense and the remaining 462,000 is depreciated over assets’ useful lives. • Cannot take §179 expense in excess of taxable income - may carry forward any unused amount
Election to Expense - §179 • When using with regular MACRS • Take §179 first, then reduce basis • MACRS depreciation calculated on reduced basis • For example • In 2006, a seven-year piece of property placed in service costing $125,000; taxable income = $1.25 million. What is total depreciation including election to expense? • First – claim $108,000 deduction under §179, reduce basis to $17,000, then multiply by 14.29% MACRS rate • [108,000] + [17,000 x 14.29%] = $110,429 total