Is it a repair or an improvement? Maximize real estate assets

Set of tools on a plank of wood.

If your business completes minor repairs by year-end, you can deduct those costs on your tax return. But different tax rules apply to improvements. As opposed to repairs, improvements are capital expenditures that must be written off over time.

Tax safe harbors

How can you tell whether work on your building constitutes a repair or an improvement? It can be tricky. Fixing a broken windowpane is clearly a repair, while adding an indoor parking facility is obviously an improvement to maximize real estate assets. But many expenses fall in between those two examples. Fortunately, IRS tangible property regulations offer more clarity.

Notably, the final regulations provide a safe-harbor rule under which you can currently deduct for federal tax purposes amounts paid for tangible property if you deduct those amounts for financial accounting purposes or in keeping your books and records. However, a dollar limit applies:

  • $5,000 if you have an “applicable financial statement,” generally meaning one that’s audited by a CPA, or
  • $2,500 if you don’t have an applicable financial statement.

Additional rules apply that may limit or eliminate your current deduction for a particular expense.

There is also a small businesses safe harbor under which businesses with $10 million or less in average gross receipts can elect to currently deduct improvements to a building with an unadjusted basis of $1 million or less. However, the total amount paid for repairs, maintenance and improvements to the building can’t exceed the lesser of $10,000 or 2% of the unadjusted basis.

See further IRS guidance

Routine maintenance costs generally are deductible in the year in which they’re incurred. An activity is “routine” if the business reasonably expects to perform it more than once during the property’s useful life (more than once over a 10-year period for buildings). Note: A business may capitalize these costs if this is consistent with its financial statements.

In addition, the traditional rule that improvements are capitalized and depreciated over time remains in place. But the regulations authorize a business to deduct some improvements (for example, an HVAC unit) if they are properly segregated.

Avoid this potential IRS tax trap

If your business makes repairs and improvements at the same time, be aware that the IRS may lump the costs together as a general plan of betterment, causing you to forfeit a current deduction for repairs. All else being equal, arrange repair work separately at another time — preferably before year-end if you want to reduce your tax liability.

If you have questions about how to maximize real estate assets or business tax planning, contact our tax services team at LvHJ.

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Source: Checkpoint Marketing

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