Partially Depreciable Assets
What if, for a single purchase price, you purchase an asset
that is only partly depreciable? Before you can determine the depreciable tax basis of the asset, what you need to
do is to allocate the price between the depreciable part and the non-depreciable
part.
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Example Raymond Anthony buys a property for
use in his auto repair business for $100,000. On the lot is a building
that was formerly used as a gas station. Considering the size and
location of the property, and the size and repair of the building,
a fair allocation of the price paid for the property might be $70,000
for the building and $30,000 for the land. In this example,
the $70,000 paid for the building could be recovered through depreciation,
while the $30,000 paid for the land could not, because land is not
depreciable. But wouldn't it be better to allocate as much as possible
to the building (say, $90,000), so Ray's depreciation deductions would
be larger and his tax bill would be lower? Absolutely, but
you can expect the IRS to attack your allocation if it doesn't reflect
economic reality. |
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If an IRS auditor raises objections, you may need to
bring in a real estate appraisal to support the allocation you use.
In some states, real estate tax bills will show a separate assessment
for the buildings and the land on a piece of property, which can be
useful evidence in an IRS audit. Ideally, the allocation should have
been made as part of the sales contract with which you originally
acquired the property, and you should be prepared to prove that the
allocation was a part of good faith negotiations between yourself
and the seller.
If you acquire a number of assets at the same
time (for example, you acquire a number of business assets in the
course of buying a business), you need to allocate the purchase price
among the various assets you purchased. The IRS provides special
rules for doing this consult your tax advisor for more details.
Mixed-use
property. You also need to make an allocation if you have
a single asset that is used partly for business and partly for personal
purposes; for example, if you have a home
office, or a car that you use sometimes
for work and sometimes for family driving.
You will need to
allocate the cost of the asset according to the percentage of usage
that is strictly for business. For example, if 20 percent of the
square footage of your home is used as an office, you may be able
to depreciate 20 percent of the cost of the home; if 60 percent of
the mileage you drive in your car is for business purposes, you may
be able to depreciate 60 percent of the cost of the car.
For
other business assets, the allocation would ordinarily be based on
the amount of time you used the asset for business, compared to the
amount of time you used it for personal or family purposes.
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Example Although you don't qualify for the home
office deduction, you have a computer at home on which you keep a
backup copy of your accounting records, and which you use for other
business purposes in the evenings. You also use the computer to keep
track of your investments, surf the Internet, send and receive social
E-mail, etc. Your computer time log shows that you've spent
approximately 10 hours per week on the computer for business reasons,
and approximately 5 hours per week for other purposes. Therefore,
you can depreciate 2/3 of the cost of the computer. |
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