Repairs to tangible property, such as buildings, machinery,
equipment or vehicles, can provide businesses a valuable current tax deduction
— as long as the so-called repairs weren’t actually “improvements.” The costs
of incidental repairs and maintenance can be immediately expensed and deducted
on the current year’s income tax return. But costs incurred to improve tangible property
must be depreciated over a period of years.
So the size of your 2017 deduction depends on whether the
expense was a repair or an improvement.
Betterment, restoration or adaptation
In general, a cost that results in an improvement to a building
structure or any of its building systems (for example, the plumbing or
electrical system) or to other tangible property must be depreciated. An
improvement occurs if there was a betterment, restoration or adaptation of the
unit of property.
Under the “betterment test,” you generally must depreciate
amounts paid for work that is reasonably expected to materially increase the
productivity, efficiency, strength, quality or output of a unit of property or
that is a material addition to a unit of property.
Under the “restoration test,” you generally must depreciate
amounts paid to replace a part (or combination of parts) that is a major
component or a significant portion of the physical structure of a unit of
property.
Under the “adaptation test,” you generally must depreciate
amounts paid to adapt a unit of property to a new or different use — one that
isn’t consistent with your ordinary use of the unit of property at the time you
originally placed it in service.
Seeking safety
Distinguishing between repairs and improvements can be
difficult, but a couple of IRS safe harbors can help:
1. Routine maintenance safe harbor. Recurring
activities dedicated to keeping property in efficient operating condition can
be expensed. These are activities that your business reasonably expects to
perform more than once during the property’s “class life,” as defined by the
IRS.
Amounts incurred for activities outside the safe harbor don’t
necessarily have to be depreciated, though. These amounts are subject to
analysis under the general rules for improvements.
2. Small business safe harbor. For
buildings that initially cost $1 million or less, qualified small businesses
may elect to deduct the lesser of $10,000 or 2% of the unadjusted basis of the
property for repairs, maintenance, improvements and similar activities each
year. A qualified small business is generally one with gross receipts of $10
million or less.
There is also a de
minimis safe harbor as well as an exemption for materials and
supplies up to a certain threshold. To learn more about these safe harbors and
exemptions and other ways to maximize your tangible property deductions,
contact us.
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