Depreciation & How It Affects Your Business | The Hartford
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Depreciable Property
Let’s start with what the IRS considers depreciable property:- It must be owned by you or your business. But there’s also an exception: If you don’t own a property but make capital improvements to it, you can still depreciate the value of the improvements.
- You must make use of this property for your business or in an income-producing activity. If you also use the asset for personal use (say you have a home business), you can only depreciate that portion of the asset dedicated to business use.
- It must have a “determinable useful life” that is greater than one year.
What Can’t You Depreciate?
What can’t you depreciate? As discussed in the Quick Summary, you can’t depreciate property for personal use, inventory, or assets held for investment purposes. You can’t depreciate assets that don’t lose their value over time – or that you’re not currently making use of to produce income. These include:- Land
- Collectibles like art, coins, or memorabilia
- Investments like stocks and bonds
- Buildings that you aren’t actively renting for income
- Personal property, which includes clothing, and your personal residence and car
- Any property placed in service and used for less than one year
Game Plan
- For more information on what can and cannot be depreciated, you should go straight to the source: The IRS’s Publication 946 PDF, How To Depreciate Property.
- One such rule, in effect from 2010 to 2013, allowed business owners to expense certain types of property in the first year of its useful life (Section 179 of the tax code) – up to a limit of $500,000. That limit, beginning in the 2014 tax year, returned to $25,000. For 2018, changes to depreciation will take place, particularly to bonus depreciation. This change will allow businesses to deduct 100% of the cost of eligible property in the year it’s placed in service. For more information on changes to Section 168 and Section 179 refer to your tax preparer. They are probably your best resource.
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