March 1 deadline looms for farmers & fishermen

Attention farmers and fishermen: If you didn’t make quarterly estimated payments in 2016, the IRS reminds you that you have until March 1, 2017, to file your 2016 Form 1040 return, or face being subject to a penalty. These special rules allow farmers and fishermen to forgo making estimated tax payments. Those who don’t file their tax returns by March 1 should have made the estimated payment by January 17, 2017, to avoid the penalty. Contact us immediately to file a return.

Father not responsible for steep tax penalty

A restaurant didn’t send payroll taxes it collected from employees to the IRS. The U.S. Tax Court has concluded that the father of the co-manager wasn’t a “responsible person” for purposes of the tax code’s trust fund recovery penalty just because he signed a few checks. The father lacked sufficient control over the business; wasn’t an owner, director or employee; and wasn’t an official signatory of the company’s bank accounts. The penalty would have been equal to the amount of tax that wasn’t paid. (TC Memo 2017-35)

Report explains Tariff and Border Tax Differences

A Congressional Research Service (CRS) report explains key differences between an import tariff and a border tax. One of the main components of congressional Republicans’ “A Better Way” tax reform blueprint is a border adjustment tax. But President Trump has generally supported an import tariff and has proposed imposing it in several ways, ranging from an increased tariff on all imported goods to a high tariff on the imports of companies that move their factories outside of the United States. Go to http://bit.ly/2lMgmP7 to read the report.

Tangible property safe harbors help maximize deductions

If last year your business made repairs to tangible property, such as buildings, machinery, equipment or vehicles, you may be eligible for a valuable deduction on your 2016 income tax return. But you must make sure they were truly “repairs,” and not actually “improvements.”

Why? Costs incurred to improve tangible property must be depreciated over a period of years. But costs incurred on incidental repairs and maintenance can be expensed and immediately deducted.

What’s an “improvement”?

In general, a cost that results in an improvement to a building structure or any of its building systems (for example, the plumbing or electrical system) or to other tangible property must be capitalized. An improvement occurs if there was a betterment, restoration or adaptation of the unit of property.

Under the “betterment test,” you generally must capitalize amounts paid for work that is reasonably expected to materially increase the productivity, efficiency, strength, quality or output of a unit of property or that is a material addition to a unit of property.

Under the “restoration test,” you generally must capitalize amounts paid to replace a part (or combination of parts) that is a major component or a significant portion of the physical structure of a unit of property.

Under the “adaptation test,” you generally must capitalize amounts paid to adapt a unit of property to a new or different use — one that isn’t consistent with your ordinary use of the unit of property at the time you originally placed it in service.

2 safe harbors

Distinguishing between repairs and improvements can be difficult, but a couple of IRS safe harbors can help:

1. Routine maintenance safe harbor. Recurring activities dedicated to keeping property in efficient operating condition can be expensed. These are activities that your business reasonably expects to perform more than once during the property’s “class life,” as defined by the IRS.

Amounts incurred for activities outside the safe harbor don’t necessarily have to be capitalized, though. These amounts are subject to analysis under the general rules for improvements.

2. Small business safe harbor. For buildings that initially cost $1 million or less, qualified small businesses may elect to deduct the lesser of $10,000 or 2% of the unadjusted basis of the property for repairs, maintenance, improvements and similar activities each year. A qualified small business is generally one with gross receipts of $10 million or less.

There is also a de minimis safe harbor as well as an exemption for materials and supplies up to a certain threshold. Contact us for details on these safe harbors and exemptions and other ways to maximize your tangible property deductions.