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Expensing Costs of Qualified Real Property Improvements

Expensing costs of qualified real property improvements. For tax years that begin in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 or 2014, you may elect to treat depreciable “qualified real property” that you purchased during the year as Section 179 property. Under this election, you may expense up to $250,000 of the cost. The $250,000 counts toward the $500,000 annual dollar limitation for all Section 179 property for the year. Qualified real property generally consists of qualified leasehold improvements, qualified retail improvement property, and qualified restaurant improvement property. Generally, this type of property is considered Section 1250 property and depreciable over 39 years. Therefore, without this temporary tax benefit, it would not be considered Section 179 property.

Qualifying property. The property must fall within one of these three types of qualified real property:

Special dollar limitation. In 2014, you can expense up to $500,000 of the costs of business property you purchase and start to use in those years. However, the amount of qualified real property purchases that can be expensed (deducted) is limited $250,000. This means that, if all the requirements are met, you can expense up to $250,000 of expenses that fall within the limitation of Qualified Real Property and still expense other purchases, up to the $500,000 limitation.

For 2014, few small businesses will need to worry about the phase-out of the maximum dollar amount because of the cost of the assets purchased: the temporarily increaseddollar-for-dollar phase-out threshold is$2,000,000.

Example

Example

During 2014, Anne, a restaurant owner, purchased Code Sec. 179-eligible equipment costing $100,000. She also completely refurbished the dining area of the restaurant, which cost $300,000. These were her only asset purchases, and the taxable income limitation (discussed below) does not apply. The maximum Section 179 deduction she can claim for 2014 is $350,000 ($100,000 with respect to the equipment and $250,000 with respect to the qualifying leasehold improvements).

Special carryover rules. There is a stricter rule on carryovers for amounts claimed for qualified real property: They can only be carried to a year for which they could be claimed. That means an expense that cannot be fully used up in 2014 (including any amounts carried over from 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013), will be lost as an expense deduction. The cost-basis of the property is adjusted to include the unused amount, which is deducted over time through depreciation.

Example

Example

In 2013, Joe, a store owner, renovated his entire store. The cost of the renovation was $150,000, and all of the expenses qualify for the deduction. Joe's total taxable income was $50,000. As a result, Joe can only deduct $50,000 of the expenses on his 2013 tax return; the remaining $100,000 is carried to 2014. In 2014, his taxable income was $125,000. The remaining amount is deductible on Joe's 2014 tax return. However, if his income was only $75,000, then $25,000 of the cost of the renovation would need to be deducted via depreciation.


warning

Warning

If, in any year after the year you claimed the Section 179 expense deduction, you either sell the property or stop using it more than 50 percent in your business, you may have to recapture or "give back" part of the tax benefits that you previously claimed.


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