1 / 13

Chapter 7

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

gil
Download Presentation

Chapter 7

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 7 Accounting Periods & Methods & Depreciation Income Tax Fundamentals 2007 Gerald E. Whittenburg & Martha Altus-Buller

  2. 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

  3. 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]

  4. 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

  5. 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

  6. 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

  7. 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

  8. 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

  9. 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)

  10. 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]

  11. 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

  12. 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

  13. 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

More Related