The Internal Revenue Code provides for a deduction for the consumption of the
cost of an asset through
depreciation, cost recovery, amortization, or depletion
Taxpayers may write off the cost of certain assets that are used in a trade or business
or held for the production of income. A write-off may take the form of
depreciation
(or cost recovery), depletion, or amortization
What are two types of property?
real (realty) and personal property
Realty generally includes
land and buildings permanently affixed to the land
Personalty is defined as
any asset that is not realty
Personalty includes
furniture, machinery,
equipment, and many other types of assets. Do not confuse personalty (or
personal property) with personal use property
Personal use property is
any property
(realty or personalty) that is held for personal use rather than for use in a trade or
business or an income-producing activity. Write-offs are not allowed for personal
use assets.
Assets used in a trade or business or for the production of income are eligible
for cost recovery if they are subject to
wear and tear, decay or decline from natural
causes, or obsolescence.
Assets that do not decline in value on a predictable basis
or that do not have a determinable useful life (e.g., land, stock, and antiques) are
eligible for cost recovery
False. They are not eligible
In summary, both realty and personalty can be either
business use/incomeproducing
property or personal use property.
When classifying assets, what 4 things are important.
classification of an
asset (realty or personalty) and the use to which the asset is put (business or personal)
be understood.
The key date for the commencement of depreciation is the date an asset is placed
in
service
The key date for the commencement of depreciation is the date an asset is placed
in service. This date, and not the purchase date of an asset, is the relevant date?
True
MACRS provides separate cost recovery tables for?
realty and personalty
Classification of Property. What property goes into 3 year, 5 year, or 7 year, etc is on what exhibit
exhibit 8.1
MACRS is allowed for what years.
3,5,7, and 10
150 declining balance is allowed for what ears
15 and 20
on qualified property acquired after December 31, 2007, and before January 1,
2009, and placed in service before January 1, 2009. The American Recovery and
Reinvestment Tax Act of 2009 extended additional first-year depreciation for an
additional year (qualified property acquired and placed in service before January
1, 2010). The Small Business Jobs Act of 2010 extended additional first-year depreciation
for one more year (qualified property acquired and placed in service before
January 1, 2011). The provision allows for an additional 50 percent cost recovery in
the year the asset is placed in service. The term qualified property includes most types
of new property other than buildings. The term new means original or first use of
the property. Property that is used but new to the taxpayer does not qualify.
additional first year depreciation
If more than 40 percent of the value of property other than eligible real estate (see
Realty: Recovery Periods and Methods for a discussion of eligible real estate) is placed
in service during the last quarter of the year
a mid-quarter convention applies
MACRS views property as placed in service in the middle of the first year (the
half-year convention).6 Thus, for example, the statutory recovery period for threeyear
property begins in the middle of the year an asset is placed in service and ends
three years later
If your using mid-quarter convention and the 400,000 asset was sold on november 30, how much depreciation is recognized for that asset.
4000,000 * .34 * ((3/5)/4))
Under MACRS, the cost recovery period for residential rental real estate is how many ears.
27.5
Residential rental real estate includes property where 80 percent or more of
the gross rental revenues are
from nontransient dwelling units (e.g., an apartment
building)
Would Hotels, motels, and similar establishments be considered a residential rental real estate
No