IRS Publishes Final Regs on Deduction and Capitalization of Tangible Assets
T.D. 9636; 78 F.R. 57685-57747
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- Tax Analysts Electronic CitationTD 9636
Guidance Regarding Deduction and Capitalization of Expenditures Related to Tangible Property
[4830-01-p]
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Parts 1 and 602
Treasury Decision 9636
RIN 1545-BE18
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Final regulations and removal of temporary regulations.
SUMMARY: This document contains final regulations that provide guidance on the application of sections 162(a) and 263(a) of the Internal Revenue Code (Code) to amounts paid to acquire, produce, or improve tangible property. The final regulations clarify and expand the standards in the current regulations under sections 162(a) and 263(a). These final regulations replace and remove temporary regulations under sections 162(a) and 263(a) and withdraw proposed regulations that cross referenced the text of those temporary regulations. This document also contains final regulations under section 167 regarding accounting for and retirement of depreciable property and final regulations under section 168 regarding accounting for property under the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS) other than general asset accounts. The final regulations will affect all taxpayers that acquire, produce, or improve tangible property. These final regulations do not finalize or remove the 2011 temporary regulations under section 168 regarding general asset accounts and disposition of property subject to section 168, which are addressed in the notice of proposed rulemaking on this subject in the Proposed Rules section in this issue of the Federal Register.
DATES: Effective Date: These regulations are effective on September 19, 2013
Applicability Dates: In general, these final regulations apply to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. However, certain rules apply only to amounts paid or incurred in taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. For dates of applicability of the final regulations, see §§ 1.162-3(j), 1.162-4(c), 1.162-11(b)(2), 1.165-2(d), 1.167(a)-4(b), 1.167(a)-7(f), 1.167(a)-8(h), 1.168(i)-7(e), 1.263(a)-1(h), 1.263(a)-2(j), 1.263(a)-3(r), 1.263(a)-6(c), 1.263A-1(l), and 1.1016-3(j).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning §§ 1.162-3, 1.162-4, 1.162-11, 1.263(a)-1, 1.263(a)-2, 1.263(a)-3, and 1.263(a)-6, Merrill D. Feldstein or Alan S. Williams, Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Income Tax and Accounting), (202) 622-4950 (not a toll-free call); Concerning §§ 1.165-2, 1.167(a)-4, 1.167(a)-7, 1.167(a)-8, 1.168(i)-7, 1.263A-1, and 1.1016-3, Kathleen Reed or Patrick Clinton, Office Associate Chief Counsel (Income Tax and Accounting), (202) 622-4930 (not a toll-free call).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Paperwork Reduction Act
The collection of information contained in this final regulation has been reviewed and approved by the Office of Management and Budget in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) under control number 1545-2248. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless the collection of information displays a valid control number assigned by the Office of Management and Budget.
The collection of information in this regulation is in §§ 1.263(a)-1(f)(5), 1.263(a)-3(h)(6), and 1.263(a)-3(n)(2). This information is required in order for a taxpayer to elect to use the de minimis safe harbor, to elect to use the safe harbor for small taxpayers, and to elect to capitalize repair and maintenance costs. This information will inform the IRS that the taxpayer is electing to use these provisions, which allows taxpayers to obtain beneficial treatment for the amounts that qualify for these elections. The collection of information is voluntary to obtain a benefit under the final regulations. The likely respondents are business or other for-profit institutions, and small businesses or organizations.
Estimated total annual reporting burden: 1,100,000 hours.
Estimated annual burden hours per respondent varies from .25 hours to .5 hours, depending on individual circumstances, with an estimated average of .275 hours.
Estimated number of respondents: 4,000,000.
Estimated frequency of responses: Annually.
Books or records relating to a collection of information must be retained as long as their contents may become material in the administration of any internal revenue law. Generally, tax returns and tax return information are confidential, as required by section 6103.
Background
Section 263(a) provides that no deduction is allowed for (1) any amount paid out for new buildings or permanent improvements or betterments made to increase the value of any property or estate, or (2) any amount expended in restoring property or in making good the exhaustion thereof for which an allowance has been made. Final regulations previously issued under section 263(a) provided that capital expenditures included amounts paid or incurred to (1) add to the value, or substantially prolong the useful life, of property owned by the taxpayer, or (2) adapt the property to a new or different use. However, those regulations also provided that amounts paid or incurred for incidental repairs and maintenance of property within the meaning of section 162 and § 1.162-4 of the Income Tax Regulations are not capital expenditures under § 1.263(a)-1.
The determination of whether an expense may be deducted as a repair or must be capitalized generally requires an examination of all of a taxpayer's particular facts and circumstances. Moreover, the subjective nature of the existing standards described above has resulted in considerable controversy between taxpayers and the IRS over many years.
In 2006, in an effort to reduce the controversy in this area, the IRS and the Treasury Department published in the Federal Register August 21, 2006 (71 FR 48590) proposed amendments to the regulations under section 263(a) relating to amounts paid to acquire, produce, or improve tangible property. The IRS and the Treasury Department received numerous written comments in response to these proposed regulations. After considering these comments and the statements at the public hearing, in 2008 the IRS and the Treasury Department withdrew the 2006 proposed regulations and proposed new regulations in the Federal Register March 10, 2008 (73 FR 12838). The IRS and the Treasury Department also received many written comments and held a public hearing on the 2008 proposed regulations. On December 27, 2011, the IRS and the Treasury Department published temporary regulations in the Federal Register regarding the deduction and capitalization of expenditures related to tangible property (TD 9564; 76 FR 81060), withdrew the 2008 proposed regulations, and published new proposed regulations that cross referenced the text of the 2011 temporary regulations. The 2011 temporary regulations initially applied to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. The IRS and the Treasury Department received numerous written comments in response to the 2011 temporary and proposed regulations and held a public hearing on May 9, 2012. After considering these comments and the statements at the public hearing, the IRS and the Treasury Department published Notice 2012-73 (2012-51 IRB 713), on November 20, 2012, announcing that, to assist taxpayers in their transitions to the 2011 temporary regulations and final regulations, the IRS and the Treasury Department would change the applicability date of the 2011 temporary regulations to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014, while permitting taxpayers to choose to apply the 2011 temporary regulations to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and before the applicability date of the final regulations. The Notice also alerted taxpayers that the IRS and the Treasury Department intended to publish final regulations in 2013 and expected the final regulations to apply to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014, but that the final regulations would permit taxpayers to apply its provisions to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. On December 17, 2012, the Treasury Department and the IRS published technical amendments to TD 9564, which amended the applicability date of the 2011 temporary regulations to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014, while permitting taxpayers to choose to apply the 2011 temporary regulations to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and before the applicability date of the final regulations. See Federal Register (77 FR 74583).
After considering all of the comments and the statements made at the public hearing on the 2011 temporary and proposed regulations, the IRS and the Treasury Department are removing the 2011 temporary regulations under sections 162, 165, 167, 263(a), 263A, 1016, and § 1.168(i)-7 and are issuing final regulations. The IRS and the Treasury Department are also removing the 2011 proposed regulations and are issuing new proposed regulations regarding the disposition of property subject to section 168. The proposed regulations are set forth in the notice of proposed rulemaking on this subject in the Proposed Rules section in this issue of the Federal Register.
Explanation of Provisions
I. Overview
Section 263(a) generally requires the capitalization of amounts paid to acquire, produce, or improve tangible property. Section 162 allows a deduction for all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business, including the costs of certain supplies, repairs, and maintenance. These final regulations provide a general framework for distinguishing capital expenditures from supplies, repairs, maintenance, and other deductible business expenses. The final regulations retain many of the provisions of the 2011 temporary and proposed regulations (2011 temporary regulations), which in many instances incorporated standards from case law and other existing authorities under sections 162 and 263(a). The final regulations also modify several sections of the 2011 temporary regulations in response to comments received and to clarify and simplify the rules while achieving results that are consistent with the case law. The final regulations adopt the same general format as the 2011 temporary regulations, where § 1.162-3 provides rules for materials and supplies, § 1.162-4 addresses repairs and maintenance, § 1.263(a)-1 provides general rules for capital expenditures, § 1.263(a)-2 provides rules for amounts paid for the acquisition or production of tangible property, and § 1.263(a)-3 provides rules for amounts paid for the improvement of tangible property. However, the final regulations refine and simplify some of the rules contained in the 2011 temporary regulations and create a number of new safe harbors. For example, the final regulations adopt a revised and simplified de minimis safe harbor under § 1.263(a)-1(f) and extend the safe harbor for routine maintenance under § 1.263(a)-3(i) to buildings. The final regulations also add a safe harbor for small taxpayers to the rules governing improvements to tangible property under § 1.263(a)-3. In addition, the final regulations refine several of the criteria for defining betterments and restorations to tangible property.
In addition, these regulations finalize certain temporary regulations under section 167 regarding accounting for and retirement of depreciable property and section 168 regarding accounting for MACRS property, other than general asset accounts. However, these regulations do not finalize the rules under § 1.168(i)-1T or § 1.168(i)-8T addressing the definition of disposition for property subject to section 168. Instead, to address significant changes in this area, revised regulations under section 168 are being proposed concurrently with these final regulations (and appear in the Proposed Rules section of this issue of the Federal Register).
II. Materials and Supplies Under § 1.162-3
Responding to generally favorable comments on the treatment of materials and supplies in the 2011 temporary regulations, the final regulations retain the framework and many of the rules set forth in the 2011 temporary regulations. In response to comments, however, the final regulations expand the definition of materials and supplies to include property that has an acquisition or production cost of $200 or less (increased from $100 or less), clarify application of the optional method of accounting for rotable and temporary spare parts, and simplify the application of the de minimis safe harbor of § 1.263(a)-1(f) to materials and supplies. The final regulations also define standby emergency spare parts and limit the application of the election to capitalize materials and supplies to only rotable, temporary, and standby emergency spare parts.
A. Definition of materials and supplies
Commenters requested that the dollar threshold for characterizing a unit of property as a material or supply be increased from property with an acquisition cost of $100 or less to property with an acquisition cost of $500 or $1,000. Specifically, commenters were concerned that the low $100 threshold would not capture many common supplies such as calculators and coffee makers. Balancing concerns over distortions to income that could result from increasing the acquisition cost to $500 (or more) with the need to include the typical materials and supplies ordinarily used by many taxpayers, the final regulations increase the $100 threshold to $200. In addition, the final regulations retain the language providing the IRS and the Treasury Department with the authority to change the amount of this threshold through published guidance.
Commenters also continued to question the effect of the 2011 temporary regulations on the treatment of standby emergency spare parts under Rev. Rul. 81-185 (1981-2 CB 59). To resolve questions in this area, the final regulations generally incorporate the definition of standby emergency spare parts provided in Rev. Rul. 81-185 into the definition of materials and supplies and provide that these parts are eligible for the optional election to capitalize certain materials and supplies provided in § 1.162-3(d).
B. Election to capitalize certain materials and supplies
The 2011 temporary regulations retained the rule from the 2008 proposed regulations permitting a taxpayer to elect to capitalize and depreciate amounts paid for certain materials and supplies. Several comments noted that the requirement to elect to capitalize certain material and supply costs continued to be inconsistent with prior IRS pronouncements that distinguished certain depreciable property from materials and supplies. See, for example, Rev. Rul. 2003-37 (2003-1 CB 717) (permitting taxpayers to treat certain rotable spare parts used in a service business as depreciable assets); Rev. Rul. 81-185 (1981-2 CB 59) (concluding that major standby emergency spare parts are depreciable property); Rev. Rul. 69-201 (1969-1 CB 60) (holding that standby replacement parts used in pit mining business are items for which depreciation is allowable); Rev. Rul. 69-200 (1969-1 CB 60) (holding that flight equipment rotable spare parts and assemblies are tangible property for which depreciation is allowable while expendable flight equipment spare parts are materials and supplies); Rev. Proc. 2007-48 (2007-2 CB 110) (providing a safe harbor method of accounting to treat certain rotable spare parts as depreciable assets). In addition, several comments noted that the rule under the 2011 temporary regulations could lead to problematic results, such as permitting a component acquired to improve a unit of tangible property owned by the taxpayer to be treated as an asset and depreciated over a recovery period different from the unit of tangible property intended to be improved.
To address these concerns, the final regulations retain the rule permitting a taxpayer to elect to capitalize and depreciate amounts paid for certain materials and supplies but provide that this rule is only applicable to rotable, temporary, or standby emergency spare parts. By limiting the application of the rule to rotable, temporary, or standby emergency spare parts, the final regulations resolve the potentially problematic results arising in the 2011 temporary regulations. And while the final rule modifies Rev. Rul. 2003-37, Rev. Rul. 81-185, Rev. Rul. 69-200, and Rev. Rul. 69-201 to the extent that the regulations characterize certain tangible properties addressed in these rulings as materials and supplies, the treatment is consistent with the holdings of the revenue rulings, which permit taxpayers to treat rotable, temporary, or standby emergency spare parts as assets subject to the allowance for depreciation.
The final regulations also clarify the procedure for a taxpayer that wants to revoke the election to capitalize and depreciate certain materials and supplies. The taxpayer may revoke this election by filing a request for a letter ruling and obtaining the consent of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to revoke this election. The Commissioner may grant a request to revoke this election if the taxpayer acted reasonably and in good faith, and the revocation will not prejudice the interests of the Government. In deciding whether to grant such a request, the Commissioner anticipates applying standards similar to the standards under § 301.9100-3 of this chapter for granting extensions of time for making regulatory elections.
Finally, one commenter requested that the rules governing materials and supplies be modified to address the cost of acquiring or producing rotable spare parts that a taxpayer leases to customers in the ordinary course of the taxpayer's leasing business. This commenter requested that the final regulations clarify that these leased rotable spare parts are included in the definition of rotable and temporary spare parts and that a taxpayer may elect to capitalize and depreciate these leased rotable spare parts under the materials and supplies rules. Under the 2011 temporary regulations, the definition of rotable and temporary spare parts includes only components acquired to maintain, repair, or improve a unit of property owned, leased, or serviced by the taxpayer. This definition of rotable and temporary spare parts does not include components that the taxpayer leases to its customers and that are unrelated to other property owned, leased to other parties, or serviced by the taxpayer. The final regulations do not expand the definition of rotable and temporary spare parts to include leased rotable spare parts. The IRS and the Treasury Department believe that these parts are outside the scope of regulations governing materials and supplies.
C. Optional method for rotable and temporary spare parts
One commenter requested that the final regulations remove the requirement that the optional method for rotable and temporary spare parts, if elected, be used for all of a taxpayer's rotable and temporary spare parts in the same trade or business. Recognizing that taxpayers may have pools of rotable or temporary parts that are treated differently for financial statement purposes, the final regulations modify this rule. The final regulations provide that a taxpayer that uses the optional method for rotable and temporary spare parts for Federal tax purposes must use the optional method for all of the pools of rotable and temporary spare parts used in the same trade or business for which the optional method is used for the taxpayer's books and records. Thus, a taxpayer generally is not required to use the optional method for those pools of rotable or temporary spare parts for which it does not use the optional method in its books and records for the trade or business. However, if a taxpayer chooses to use the optional method for any pool of rotable or temporary spare parts for which the taxpayer does not use the optional method in its books and records for the trade or business, then the taxpayer must use the optional method for all its pools of rotable and temporary spare parts in that trade or business.
Commenters also requested that the optional method for rotable and temporary spare parts be treated as the default method of accounting for rotable and temporary spare parts, instead of treating rotable and temporary spare parts as used and consumed in the taxable year when disposed. Many taxpayers do not use the optional method of accounting for rotable and temporary spare parts, and that method requires a degree of record keeping that would be overly burdensome for all taxpayers. Therefore, the final regulations do not adopt this suggestion and continue to generally treat rotable and temporary spare parts as materials and supplies that are used and consumed in the taxable year when disposed of by the taxpayer, unless the taxpayer chooses a different treatment under § 1.162-3.
D. Materials and supplies under the de minimis safe harbor
There were numerous comments on the application of the de minimis rule provided in the 2011 temporary regulations to materials and supplies under §§ 1.162-3T(f) (election to apply de minimis rule to materials and supplies) and 1.263(a)-2T(g) (general de minimis rule) and the interaction between the two sections. In response to these comments, the final regulations more clearly coordinate the two provisions as addressed below in the discussion of the de minimis safe harbor.
E. Property treated as materials and supplies in published guidance
Several commenters questioned the effect of the 2011 temporary regulations on prior published guidance that permits taxpayers to treat certain property as materials and supplies. For example, Rev. Proc. 2002-12 (2002-1 CB 374) allows a taxpayer to treat smallwares as materials and supplies that are not incidental under § 1.162-3. Similarly, Rev. Proc. 2002-28 (2002-1 CB 815) allows a qualifying small business taxpayer to treat certain inventoriable items in the same manner as materials and supplies that are not incidental under § 1.162-3. The final regulations do not supersede, obsolete, or replace these revenue procedures to the extent they deem certain property to constitute materials and supplies under § 1.162-3. This designated property continues to qualify as materials and supplies under the final regulations, because the definition of material and supplies includes property that is identified as materials and supplies in published guidance.
III. Repairs Under § 1.162-4
The 2011 temporary regulations provided that amounts paid for repairs and maintenance to tangible property are deductible if the amounts paid are not required to be capitalized under § 1.263(a)-3. The IRS and the Treasury Department received no comments on this regulation. The final regulations retain the rule from the 2011 temporary regulations. In addition, the final regulations add a cross reference to § 1.263(a)-3(n), the new election to capitalize amounts paid for repair and maintenance consistent with the taxpayer's books and records, discussed later in this preamble.
IV. De Minimis Safe Harbor Under §§ 1.263(a)-1(f) and 1.162-3(f)
A. De minimis safe harbor ceiling
The 2011 temporary regulations required a taxpayer to capitalize amounts paid to acquire or produce a unit of real or personal property, including the related transaction costs. However, § 1.263(a)-2T(g) provided a de minimis exception permitting a taxpayer to deduct certain amounts paid for tangible property if the taxpayer had an applicable financial statement, had written accounting procedures for expensing amounts paid for such property under specified dollar amounts, and treated such amounts as expenses on its applicable financial statement. Under § 1.263(a)-2T(g)(1)(iv), a taxpayer's de minimis deduction for the taxable year was limited to a ceiling: the greater of (1) 0.1 percent of the taxpayer's gross receipts for the taxable year as determined for Federal income tax purposes, or (2) 2 percent of the taxpayer's total depreciation and amortization expense for the taxable year as determined on the taxpayer's applicable financial statement.
The IRS and the Treasury Department received a significant number of comments addressing the de minimis safe harbor provided in § 1.263(a)-2T(g). Nearly all comments raised concerns about the administrative burden the ceiling would place on taxpayers, noting that taxpayers would be required to keep detailed accounts of amounts that they generally do not track because such amounts are expensed under their financial accounting capitalization policies. Thus, while the ceiling itself could be calculated relatively simply, the financial accounting systems employed by most taxpayers would not allow them to easily determine which costs the de minimis rule applied to and, therefore, whether or not applicable costs exceeded the ceiling. Commenters also pointed out that the operation of the ceiling requirement did not allow taxpayers to anticipate when they had reached the gross receipts or depreciation limitation or to identify assets that would be excluded under the de minimis rule during a taxable year, because the ceiling amount could only be calculated after the end of a taxable year. Commenters also highlighted the complexities inherent in the application of the ceiling requirement for consolidated groups. In many cases, commenters suggested that the administrative burden imposed would outweigh any potential tax benefit. Many commenters suggested that this problem be resolved by removing the ceiling altogether and permitting taxpayers to deduct for Federal income tax purposes amounts properly expensed under their financial accounting policies.
The final regulations adopt commenters' suggestions that the ceiling in the de minimis rule in the 2011 temporary regulations be eliminated and that amounts properly expensed under a taxpayer's financial accounting policies be deductible for tax purposes. To both address taxpayers' concerns and ensure that the de minimis safe harbor in the final regulations requires taxpayers to use a reasonable, consistent methodology that clearly reflects income for Federal income tax purposes, the ceiling in § 1.263(a)-2T(g)(1)(iv) has been replaced with a new safe harbor determined at the invoice or item level and based on the policies that the taxpayer utilizes for its financial accounting books and records. A taxpayer with an applicable financial statement may rely on the de minimis safe harbor under § 1.263(a)-1(f) of the final regulations only if the amount paid for property does not exceed $5,000 per invoice, or per item as substantiated by the invoice. The final regulations provide the IRS and the Treasury Department with the authority to change the safe harbor amount through published guidance.
Commenters also asked that the de minimis safe harbor be expanded to include not only amounts paid for property costing less than a certain dollar amount but also amounts paid for property having a useful life less than a certain period of time. The final regulations adopt this suggestion and provide that the de minimis safe harbor also applies to a financial accounting procedure that expenses amounts paid for property with an economic useful life of 12 months or less as long as the amount per invoice (or item) does not exceed $5,000. Such amounts are deductible under the de minims rule whether this financial accounting procedure applies in isolation or in combination with a financial accounting procedure for expensing amounts paid for property that does not exceed a specified dollar amount. Under either procedure, if the cost exceeds $5,000 per invoice (or item), then the amounts paid for the property will not fall within the de minimis safe harbor. In addition, an anti-abuse rule is provided to aggregate costs that are improperly split among multiple invoices.
B. Taxpayers without an applicable financial statement
The 2011 temporary regulations did not provide a de minimis safe harbor for taxpayers without an applicable financial statement, but the preamble requested comments addressing alternatives that would provide the IRS and the Treasury Department with assurance that a taxpayer is using a reasonable, consistent methodology that clearly reflects income. One commenter suggested that the definition of applicable financial statement be expanded to include financial statements subject to a compliance review under the rules of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants' (AICPA) Statement of Standards for Accounting and Review Services. Numerous comments also requested that the de minimis rule be generally expanded to taxpayers without an applicable financial statement.
The final regulations include a de minimis rule for taxpayers without an applicable financial statement. While careful consideration was given to the suggestion of relying on reviewed financial statements as defined in the AICPA's Statement of Standards for Accounting and Review Services, the final regulations do not adopt this standard. While the AICPA standard for reviewed financial statements ensures that the taxpayer's policies comply with the applicable financial accounting framework, the standard does not contemplate a review of the taxpayer's internal control, fraud risk, or accounting records. Thus, the standard does not provide sufficient assurance to the IRS that such policies are being followed and, accordingly, that the taxpayer is using a reasonable, consistent methodology that clearly reflects its income. However, the final regulations do provide a de minimis safe harbor for taxpayers without an applicable financial statement if accounting procedures are in place to deduct amounts paid for property costing less than a specified dollar amount or amounts paid for property with an economic useful life of 12 months or less. The de minimis safe harbor for taxpayers without an applicable financial statement provides a reduced per invoice (or item) threshold because there is less assurance that the accounting procedures clearly reflect income. A taxpayer without an applicable financial statement may rely on the de minimis safe harbor only if the amount paid for property does not exceed $500 per invoice, or per item as substantiated by the invoice. If the cost exceeds $500 per invoice (or item), then no portion of the cost of the property will fall within the de minimis safe harbor. Similar to the safe harbor for a taxpayer with an applicable financial statement, this provision provides the IRS and the Treasury Department with the authority to change the safe harbor amount through published guidance. In addition, an anti-abuse rule is provided to aggregate costs that are improperly split among multiple invoices.
Finally, for both taxpayers with applicable financial statements and taxpayers without applicable financial statements, the de minimis safe harbor is not intended to prevent a taxpayer from reaching an agreement with its IRS examining agents that, as an administrative matter, based on risk analysis or materiality, the IRS examining agents will not review certain items. It is not intended that examining agents must now revise their materiality thresholds in accordance with the de minimis safe harbor limitations provided in the final regulation. Thus, if examining agents and a taxpayer agree that certain amounts in excess of the de minimis safe harbor limitations are not material or otherwise should not be subject to review, that agreement should be respected, notwithstanding the requirements of the de minimis safe harbor. However, a taxpayer that seeks a deduction for amounts in excess of the amount allowed by the safe harbor has the burden of showing that such treatment clearly reflects income.
C. Safe harbor election
Commenters asked whether the de minimis rule in the 2011 temporary regulations was mandatory or elective and, if mandatory, requested a change to make the safe harbor elective. The final regulations adopt these suggestions and provide that the de minimis rule is a safe harbor, elected annually by including a statement on the taxpayer's timely filed original Federal tax return for the year elected. The final regulations provide that, if elected, the de minimis safe harbor must be applied to all amounts paid in the taxable year for tangible property that meet the requirements of the de minimis safe harbor, including amounts paid for materials and supplies that meet the requirements. In addition, the final regulations provide that a taxpayer may not revoke an election to use the de minimis safe harbor. An election to use the de minimis safe harbor may not be made through the filing of an application for change in accounting method.
D. Written accounting procedures
The 2011 temporary regulations required that to utilize the de minimis safe harbor, a taxpayer must have written accounting procedures in place at the beginning of the taxable year treating the amounts paid for property costing less than a certain dollar amount as an expense for financial accounting purposes. Commenters suggested that transition guidance be issued for taxpayers that did not have written accounting procedures in place at the beginning of 2012. Alternatively, one commenter suggested that taxpayers be allowed to make the drafting of a written accounting procedure retroactive to the beginning of 2012.
The final regulations do not adopt these suggestions for transition relief. Although the publication of the 2011 temporary regulations late in the calendar year (December 27, 2011) likely prevented taxpayers without written accounting procedures at that time from implementing such procedures prior to the beginning of the 2012 taxable year, the provisions of the 2011 temporary regulations are elective for taxable years beginning prior to January 1, 2014. In addition, the final regulations are not applicable until taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. Therefore, taxpayers without written accounting procedures that choose to elect the de minimis safe harbor for their 2014 taxable years should have sufficient time to consider and draft appropriate procedures prior to the applicability date of the final regulations. Moreover, the de minimis safe harbor is intended to provide recordkeeping simplicity to taxpayers by allowing them to follow an established financial accounting policy for federal tax purposes, and allowing retroactive application is inconsistent with such purpose.
E. Application to consolidated group members
Several comments noted that the rule for use of a consolidated group's applicable financial statement failed to consider situations in which taxpayers are included on a consolidated applicable financial statement but are not members in an underlying consolidated group for Federal income tax purposes. Comments requested that taxpayers in this situation be permitted to rely on the financial policies of the group that apply to them as well as the group's consolidated applicable financial statement to satisfy the requirements of the de minimis rule. The final regulations adopt this suggestion and provide that if a taxpayer's financial results are reported on the applicable financial statement for a group of entities, then the group's applicable financial statement may be treated as the applicable financial statement of the taxpayer. Furthermore, in this situation, the written accounting procedures provided for the group and utilized for the group's applicable financial statement may be treated as the written accounting procedures of the taxpayer.
F. Transaction and other additional costs
The preamble to the 2011 temporary regulations provided that the de minimis rule did not apply to amounts paid for labor and overhead incurred in repairing or improving property. Commenters pointed out that the preamble did not provide any policy reason for excluding labor and overhead costs from the de minimis rule and that the exclusion would require rules to allocate additional invoice costs, such as freight and installation costs, between tangible property costs and labor and overhead costs, requiring additional recordkeeping by taxpayers. Additionally, one commenter pointed out that the de minimis rule in the 2011 temporary regulations did not expressly provide for an exclusion of labor and overhead costs. Commenters requested that additional costs included on an invoice for tangible property be included within the scope of the de minimis rule.
The final regulations adopt the commenters' suggestions, in part, and clarify the treatment under the de minimis safe harbor of transaction costs and other additional costs of acquiring and producing property subject to the safe harbor. To simplify the application of the de minimis rule to tangible property, the final regulations provide that a taxpayer electing to apply the de minimis safe harbor is not required to include in the cost of the tangible property the additional costs of acquiring or producing such property if these costs are not included in the same invoice as the tangible property. However, the final regulations also provide that a taxpayer electing to apply the de minimis safe harbor must include in the cost of such property all additional costs (for example, delivery fees, installation services, or similar costs) of acquiring or producing such property if these costs are included on the same invoice with the tangible property. If an invoice includes amounts paid for multiple tangible properties and the invoice includes additional invoice costs related to the multiple properties, then the taxpayer must allocate the additional invoice costs to each property using a reasonable method. The final regulations specify that a reasonable allocation method includes, but is not limited to, specific identification, a pro rata allocation, or a weighted average method based on each property's relative cost. The final regulations also clarify that additional costs consist of the transaction costs (that is, the facilitative costs under § 1.263(a)-2(f)) of acquiring or producing the property and the costs under § 1.263(a)-2(d) for work performed prior to the date that the unit of tangible property is placed in service.
G. Materials and supplies
The IRS and Treasury Department received numerous comments on the application of the de minimis rule to materials and supplies under § 1.162-3T of the 2011 temporary regulations. Under the 2011 temporary regulations, taxpayers were permitted to select materials and supplies to be expensed under the de minimis rule provided that these materials and supplies satisfied all requirements of the de minimis rule, including the ceiling. Many comments raised concerns about the administrative burdens associated with identifying and allocating materials and supplies between the de minimis rule and the general rules for materials and supplies in a manner that would not exceed the de minimis rule ceiling. In many cases, commenters suggested that the administrative burden imposed would outweigh any potential tax benefit. Thus, commenters requested revisions to the de minimis rule to reduce taxpayers' administrative burden of complying with the 2011 temporary regulations.
To simplify application of the de minimis safe harbor, the final regulations require that the de minimis safe harbor be applied to all eligible materials and supplies (other than rotable, temporary, and standby emergency spare parts subject to the election to capitalize or rotable and temporary spare parts subject to the optional method of accounting for such parts) if the taxpayer elects the de minimis safe harbor under § 1.263(a)-1(f). Unlike the 2011 temporary regulations rule permitting taxpayers to select materials and supplies for application of the de minimis safe harbor, the requirement in the final regulations to apply the de minimis safe harbor, if elected, to all eligible materials and supplies simplifies the application of the de minimis rule and reduces the administrative burden on the IRS. Taxpayers that do not elect the de minimis safe harbor provided in the final regulations for the taxable year must treat their amounts paid for materials and supplies in accordance with the rules provided in § 1.162-3.
H. Coordination with section 263A
Commenters asked for clarification on the interaction of the de minimis rule with section 263A. Several comments asked whether the application of the de minimis rule resulted in property with an unadjusted basis of zero, which would then be subject to section 263A, or, alternatively, whether section 263A required taxpayers to capitalize the cost of property subject to section 263A, regardless of whether the de minimis rule applied.
The final regulations clarify the interaction between the two provisions. The final regulations provide that amounts paid for tangible property eligible for the de minimis safe harbor may, nonetheless, be subject to capitalization under section 263A if the amounts paid for this tangible property comprise the direct or allocable indirect costs of other property produced by the taxpayer or property acquired for resale.
In general, under section 263A, if property is held for future production, taxpayers must capitalize direct and indirect costs allocable to such property (for example, purchasing, storage, and handling costs), even though production has not begun. If property is not held for production, indirect costs incurred prior to the beginning of the production period must be allocated to the property and capitalized if, at the time the costs are incurred, it is reasonably likely that production will occur at some future date. Thus, for example, a manufacturer must capitalize the costs of storing and handling raw materials before the raw materials are committed to production. In addition, § 1.263A-1T(e)(2)(i) provides that indirect material costs include the cost of materials that are not an integral part of specific property produced and the cost of materials that are consumed in the ordinary course of performing production or resale activities that cannot be identified or associated with particular units of property.
Therefore, if tangible property is acquired with the expectation of being used in the production of other property, and it is reasonably likely that production will occur at some future date, section 263A may apply to capitalize the cost of the property acquired. Thus, for example, if a taxpayer acquires a component part, the cost of which is otherwise eligible for the de minimis safe harbor, but the component part is installed, or expected to be installed in the future, in the taxpayer's manufacturing equipment used to produce property for sale, under section 263A, the cost of the component part must be capitalized as an indirect cost of property produced by the taxpayer. On the other hand, if property is acquired without the expectation of being used in the production of property and the taxpayer elects and properly applies the de minimis rule to the amount paid for property in the taxable year, if expectations change in a subsequent taxable year and the property is actually used in production, then section 263A will not require capitalization of the cost of the property at the time the expectation changes or when the property is used in production.
I. Change in accounting procedures not change in method of accounting
Several commenters questioned whether a change in a taxpayer's financial accounting procedures (for example, its financial accounting capitalization policy) is a change in method of accounting for de minimis expenses to which the provisions of sections 446 and 481 and the accompanying regulations apply. The final regulations provide that the use of the de minimis safe harbor is a taxable year election and may not be made by the filing of an application for a change in method of accounting. Thus, if a taxpayer meets the requirements for the safe harbor, which requires, in part, having written accounting procedures in place at the beginning of the taxable year and treating amounts paid for property as an expense in accordance with those procedures, then a change in the procedures, by itself, is not a change in accounting method. For example, if a taxpayer's written financial accounting capitalization policy at the beginning of 2014 states that amounts paid for property costing less than $200 will be treated as an expense, and the taxpayer changes its written policy as of the beginning of 2015 to treat amounts paid for property costing less that $500 as an expense, the taxpayer is not required to file an application for its 2015 taxable year to change its method of accounting for applying the de minimis safe harbor or determining amounts paid to acquire or produce tangible property under § 1.263(a)-1(f).
V. Amounts Paid to Acquire or Produce Tangible Property Under § 1.263(a)-2
Section 1.263(a)-2T of the 2011 temporary regulations provided rules for applying section 263(a) to amounts paid to acquire or produce a unit of real or personal property. In general, the final regulations retain the rules from the 2011 temporary regulations, including general requirements to capitalize amounts paid to acquire or produce a unit of real or personal property, requirements to capitalize amounts paid to defend or perfect title to real or personal property, and rules for determining the extent to which taxpayers must capitalize transaction costs related to the acquisition of property. In the final regulations, the de minimis safe harbor has been moved to § 1.263(a)-1(f) to reflect its broader application to amounts paid for tangible property, including amounts paid for improvements and materials and supplies, except as otherwise provided under section 263A.
The 2011 temporary regulations provided that a taxpayer must, in general, capitalize amounts paid to facilitate the acquisition or production of real or personal property. To alleviate controversy between taxpayers and the IRS, the 2011 temporary regulations included a list of inherently facilitative amounts. In addition, the 2011 temporary regulations provided that costs relating to activities performed in the process of determining whether to acquire real property and which real property to acquire generally are deductible pre-decisional costs unless they are described in the regulations as inherently facilitative costs. The 2011 temporary regulations also provided that inherently facilitative amounts allocable to real or personal property are capital expenditures related to such property, even if such property is not eventually acquired or produced.
Commenters requested that the requirement to capitalize facilitative costs be removed as overbroad. Commenters also stated that it was inappropriate to provide a special rule that depends on the nature of the property acquired (real property or personal property) and inappropriate to require capitalization of inherently facilitative amounts allocable to property not acquired. Other commenters recommended that the list describing inherently facilitative amounts be revised to exclude activities that are dependent on the type of service provider (for example, a broker), rather than being based on a specific activity (for example, securing an appraisal). One commenter asked for clarification regarding the treatment of a broker's commission if the commission was contingent on the buyer's successful acquisition of real property but a portion of the broker's activities were performed in investigating the acquisition.
The final regulations generally retain the 2011 temporary regulation rules addressing facilitative amounts. As in the 2011 temporary regulations, the final regulations include the special rule for the acquisition of real property providing that, except for amounts specifically identified as inherently facilitative, an amount paid by a taxpayer in the process of investigating or otherwise pursuing the acquisition of real property does not facilitate the acquisition if it relates to activities performed in the process of determining whether to acquire real property and which real property to acquire. The final regulations do not expand the deduction of such pre-decisional, investigatory costs to personal property because, unlike real property acquisitions, personal property acquisitions do not typically raise issues of whether the transaction costs should be characterized as deductible business expansion costs rather than costs to acquire a specific property. In addition, personal property acquisitions do not typically provide clear evidence establishing the timing of decisions. Thus, such a rule could generate significant controversy over unduly small amounts.
Moreover, the final regulations retain the list of inherently facilitative costs that generally must be capitalized as transaction costs. However, in response to comments, the final regulations clarify the meaning of finders' fees and brokers' commissions and provide a definition of contingency fees. The final regulations provide that for purposes of § 1.263(a)-2, a contingency fee is an amount paid that is contingent on the successful closing of the acquisition of real or personal property. The final regulations also clarify that contingency fees facilitate the acquisition of the property ultimately acquired and are not allocable to real or personal property not acquired. Therefore, if a real estate broker's commission is contingent on the successful closing of the acquisition of real property, the amount paid as the broker's commission inherently facilitates the acquisition of the property acquired and, therefore, must be capitalized as part of the basis of such property. However, no portion of the broker's contingency fee is allocable to real property that the taxpayer did not acquire. In addition, the final regulations retain the rule that inherently facilitative amounts allocable to real or personal property are capital expenditures related to such property, even if such property is not eventually acquired or produced. As discussed in the preamble to the 2008 proposed regulations, the IRS and the Treasury Department believe that this rule is consistent with established authorities. See, for example, Sibley, Lindsay & Curr Co. v. Commissioner, 15 T.C. 106 (1950), acq., 1951-1 CB 3. The final regulations also clarify that, except for contingency fees as discussed above, inherently facilitative amounts allocable to property not acquired may be allocated to those properties and recovered in accordance with the applicable provisions of the Code, including sections 165, 167, and 168.
VI. Amounts Paid to Improve Property Under § 1.263(a)-3
A. Overview
Comments received with respect to the rules under the 2011 temporary regulations for determining whether an amount improves, betters, or restores property largely focused on the application of the rules to building property, the lack of a safe harbor for routine maintenance for building property, the standards to be applied in determining whether a betterment has occurred, the treatment of post-casualty expenditures under the restoration standards, and the standards to be applied in determining whether a replacement of a major component or substantial structural part has occurred.
The final regulations generally retain the rules of the 2011 temporary regulations for determining the unit of property and for determining whether there is an improvement to a unit of property. The final regulations also retain the simplifying conventions set out in the 2011 temporary regulations, including the routine maintenance safe harbor and the optional regulatory accounting method. In addition, in response to the comments, the final regulations modify the 2011 temporary regulations in several areas. The concerns raised by commenters and the relevant changes to the 2011 temporary regulations are discussed in this preamble.
B. Determining the unit of property
The 2011 temporary regulations generally defined the unit of property as consisting of all the components of property that are functionally interdependent, but provided special rules for determining the unit of property for buildings, plant property, and network assets. The 2011 temporary regulations also provided special rules for determining the units of property for condominiums, cooperatives, and leased property, and for the treatment of improvements (including leasehold improvements). The final regulations retain the unit of property rules contained in the 2011 temporary regulations.
The 2011 temporary regulations generally defined a building as a unit of property, but required the application of the improvement standards to the building structure and the enumerated building systems. A number of comments objected to the requirement that the taxpayer perform the improvement analysis at the building structure and system level. The comments stated that such treatment is inconsistent with the treatment of other complex property under the 2011 temporary regulations, is inconsistent with the treatment of building property under depreciation rules, and fails to take into account the relative importance of the various building systems. Several comments requested that the building, including its structural components, should be treated as the unit of property for applying the improvement rules to buildings. Other commenters pointed out that a functional interdependence standard, used in the 2011 temporary regulations for non-building property and applied by the courts and the IRS for determining when components of a single property are placed in service for cost recovery purposes, may be a more consistent general standard for identifying the relevant property upon which to apply the improvement analysis.
Like plant property, buildings are complex properties composed of numerous component parts that perform discrete and major functions or operations. Unlike plant property, however, where the discrete and major functions or operations are not consistent from plant to plant, the discrete and major functions or operations performed from building to building are frequently similar. The building system definitions set forth in the 2011 temporary regulations are based on well understood costing standards that have been routinely applied to buildings for many years for valuations, cost accounting, and financial reporting. To help ensure that the improvement standards are applied equitably and consistently across building property, the final regulations continue to apply the improvement rules to both the building structure and the defined building systems. To the extent the particular facts and circumstances of a subset of buildings used in one or more industries present unique challenges to application of the building structure or building system definitions, taxpayers are encouraged to request guidance under the Industry Issue Resolution (IIR) procedures.
C. Unit of property for leasehold improvements
The 2011 temporary regulations provide rules for determining the unit of property for leased property and for determining the unit of property for leasehold improvements. The IRS and the Treasury Department received no written comments on these rules, and the final regulations retain the rules from the 2011 temporary regulations, with some clarifications. Under the rule in the 2011 temporary regulations, a question could arise regarding the property to be analyzed for determining whether an improvement to a lessee improvement constitutes an improvement to the lessee's property. In this context, the 2011 temporary regulations suggested that the taxpayer must determine whether there has been an improvement to the lessee improvement by itself, rather than by applying the improvement standards to the general unit of property rules for leased buildings or for leased property other than buildings. The final regulations clarify that for purposes of determining whether an amount paid by a lessee constitutes a leasehold improvement, the unit of property and the improvement rules are applied in accordance with the rules for leased buildings (or leased portions of building) under § 1.263(a)-3(e)(2)(v) or for leased property other than buildings under § 1.263(a)-3(e)(3)(iv). Thus, for example, if a lessee pays an amount for work on an addition that it previously made to a leased building, the taxpayer determines whether the work performed constitutes an improvement to the entire leased building structure, not merely to the addition. The final regulations also clarify that when a lessee or lessor improvement is comprised of a building erected on leased property, then the unit of property for the building and the application of the improvement rules are determined under the provisions for buildings, rather than under the provisions for leased buildings.
D. Special rules for determining improvement costs
1. Costs incurred during an improvement
The 2011 temporary regulations did not prescribe rules related to the "plan of rehabilitation" doctrine as traditionally described in the case law. The judicially-created plan of rehabilitation doctrine provides that a taxpayer must capitalize otherwise deductible repair or maintenance costs if they are incurred as part of a general plan of rehabilitation, modernization, and improvement to the property. See, for example, Moss v. Commissioner, 831 F.2d 833 (9th Cir. 1987); United States v. Wehrli, 400 F.2d 686 (10th Cir. 1968); Norwest Corp. v. Commissioner, 108 T.C. 265 (1997). The 2011 temporary regulations did not restate the plan of rehabilitation doctrine but, rather, used the language of the section 263A rule providing that a taxpayer must capitalize both the direct costs of an improvement as well as the indirect costs that directly benefit or are incurred by reason of the improvement. The 2011 temporary regulations also included an exception to this provision for an individual residence, which permitted an individual taxpayer to capitalize repair and maintenance costs incurred at the time of a substantial residential remodel.
The final regulations retain the rules from the 2011 temporary regulations and continue to provide that indirect costs, such as repair and maintenance costs, that do not directly benefit and that are not incurred by reason of an improvement are not required to be capitalized under section 263(a), regardless of whether they are incurred at the same time as an improvement. In addition, in response to comments requesting examples of the application of this standard, the final regulations add this analysis to several examples. By providing a standard based on the section 263A language, the final regulations set out a clear rule for determining when otherwise deductible indirect costs must be capitalized as part of an improvement to property and obsolete the plan of rehabilitation doctrine to the extent that the court-created doctrine provides different standards.
2. Removal Costs
The 2011 temporary regulations did not provide a separate rule for the treatment of removal costs. Rather, the 2011 temporary regulations addressed component removal costs as an example of a type of indirect cost that must be capitalized if the removal costs directly benefit or are incurred by reason of an improvement. The preamble to the 2011 temporary regulations stated that the costs of removing a component of a unit of property should be analyzed in the same manner as any other indirect cost (such as a repair cost) incurred during a repair or an improvement to property. Therefore, the preamble concluded, if the cost of removing a component of a unit of property directly benefitted or was incurred by reason of an improvement to the unit of property, the cost must be capitalized. The preamble to the 2011 temporary regulations also noted that the 2011 temporary regulations were not intended to affect the holding of Rev. Rul. 2000-7 (2000-1 CB 712) as it applied to the cost of removing an entire unit of property. Under Rev. Rul. 2000-7, a taxpayer is not required to capitalize the cost of removing a retired depreciable asset under section 263(a) or section 263A, even when the retirement and removal occur in connection with the installation of a replacement asset. Rev. Rul. 2000-7 reasoned that the costs of removing a depreciable asset generally have been allocable to the removed asset and, thus, generally have been deductible when the asset is retired. See §§ 1.165-3(b); 1.167(a)-1(c); 1.167(a)-11(d)(3)(x); Rev. Rul. 74-455 (1974-2 CB 63); Rev. Rul. 75-150 (1975-1 CB 73).
Commenters acknowledged the preamble language but observed that the 2011 temporary regulations did not explicitly state that the costs incurred to remove an entire unit of property are not required to be capitalized, even when incurred in connection with the installation of a replacement asset. Commenters requested that the final regulations include this explicit conclusion. Commenters also asked whether the principles of Rev. Rul. 2000-7 would apply to allow the deduction of removal costs when the taxpayer disposes of a component of a unit of property and the taxpayer takes into account the adjusted basis of the component in realizing loss. Commenters also questioned whether a taxpayer would be required to capitalize component removal costs if these costs were an indirect cost of a restoration (for example, the replacement of a component when the taxpayer has properly deducted a loss for that component) rather than a betterment to the underlying unit of property.
The final regulations provide a specific rule clarifying the treatment of removal costs in these contexts. The final regulations state that if a taxpayer disposes of a depreciable asset (including a partial disposition under Prop. Reg. § 1.168(i)-1(e)(2)(ix) (September 19, 2013), or Prop. Reg. § 1.168(i)-8(d) September 19, 2013) for Federal tax purposes and has taken into account the adjusted basis of the asset or component of the asset in realizing gain or loss, the costs of removing the asset or component are not required to be capitalized under section 263(a). The final regulations also provide that if a taxpayer disposes of a component of a unit of property and the disposal is not a disposition for Federal tax purposes, then the taxpayer must deduct or capitalize the costs of removing the component based on whether the removal costs directly benefit or are incurred by reason of a repair to the unit of property or an improvement to the unit of property. In addition, the final regulations provide several examples illustrating these principles.
E. Safe harbor for small taxpayers
The 2011 temporary regulations did not provide any special rules for small taxpayers to assist them in applying the general rules for improvements to buildings. One commenter stated that small taxpayers generally do not have the administrative means or sufficient documentation or information to apply the improvement rules to their building structures and systems as required under the 2011 temporary regulations. Therefore, the commenter requested that an annual dollar threshold, such as $10,000, be established for buildings with an initial cost of $1,000,000 or less and that taxpayers be permitted to deduct annual amounts spent on the building if they did not exceed the threshold amount. In response to this request, the final regulations include a safe harbor election for building property held by taxpayers with gross receipts of $10,000,000 or less ("a qualifying small taxpayer"). The final regulations permit a qualifying small taxpayer to elect to not apply the improvement rules to an eligible building property if the total amount paid during the taxable year for repairs, maintenance, improvements, and similar activities performed on the eligible building does not exceed the lesser of $10,000 or 2 percent of the unadjusted basis of the building. Eligible building property includes a building unit of property that is owned or leased by the qualifying taxpayer, provided the unadjusted basis of the building unit of property is $1,000,000 or less. The final regulations provide the IRS and the Treasury Department with the authority to adjust the amounts of the safe harbor and gross receipts limitations through published guidance. The final regulations provide simple rules for determining the unadjusted basis of both owned and leased building units of property. In this situation, the final regulations also eliminate the need to separately analyze the building structure and the building systems, as required elsewhere in the improvement rules in the final regulations.
Under the safe harbor for small taxpayers, a taxpayer includes amounts not capitalized under the de minimis safe harbor election of § 1.263(a)-1(f) and under the routine maintenance safe harbor for buildings (discussed later in this preamble) to determine the annual amount paid for repairs, maintenance, improvements, and similar activities performed on the building. If the amount paid for repairs, maintenance, improvements, and similar activities performed on a building unit of property exceeds the safe harbor threshold for a taxable year, then the safe harbor is not applicable to any amounts spent during the taxable year. In that case, the taxpayer must apply the general rules for determining improvements, including the routine maintenance safe harbor for buildings. The taxpayer may also elect to apply the de minimis safe harbor under § 1.263(a)-1(f) to amounts qualifying under the de minimis safe harbor, regardless of the application of the safe harbor for small taxpayers.
The safe harbor for building property held small taxpayers may be elected annually on a building-by-building basis by including a statement on the taxpayer's timely filed original Federal tax return, including extensions, for the year the costs are incurred for the building. Amounts paid by the taxpayer to which the taxpayer properly applies and elects the safe harbor are not treated as improvements to the building under § 1.263(a)-3 and may be deducted under § 1.162-1 or § 1.212-1, as applicable, in the taxable year that the amounts are paid or incurred, provided the amounts otherwise qualify for deduction under those sections. A taxpayer may not revoke an election to apply the safe harbor for small taxpayers.
F. Safe harbor for routine maintenance
1. Buildings
The 2011 temporary regulations provided that the costs of performing certain routine maintenance activities for property other than a building or the structural components of a building are not required to be capitalized as an improvement. Under the routine maintenance safe harbor, an amount paid was deemed not to improve a unit of property if it was for the recurring activities that a taxpayer (or a lessor) expected to perform as a result of the taxpayer's (or the lessee's) use of the unit of property to keep the unit of property in its ordinarily efficient operating condition. The 2011 temporary regulations provided that the activities are routine only if, at the time the unit of property was placed in service, the taxpayer reasonably expected to perform the activities more than once during the period prescribed under sections 168(g)(2) and 168(g)(3) (the Alternative Depreciation System class life), regardless of whether the property was depreciated under the Alternative Depreciation System. The preamble to the 2011 temporary regulations explained that the routine maintenance safe harbor did not apply to building property, because the long class life for such property (40 years under section 168(g)(2)) arguably could allow major remodeling or restoration projects to be deducted under the safe harbor, regardless of the nature or extent of the work involved, and that deducting such costs would be inconsistent with case law. The 2011 temporary regulations provided several factors for taxpayers to consider in determining whether a taxpayer is performing routine maintenance, including the recurring nature of the activity, industry practice, manufacturers' recommendations, the taxpayer's experience, and the taxpayer's treatment of the activity on its applicable financial statement.
Comments on the routine maintenance safe harbor generally requested that the safe harbor be extended to building property. One commenter stated that because the improvement standards under the 2011 temporary regulations must now be applied to the building structure and each building system separately, these components are more analogous to section 1245 property, which qualifies for the routine maintenance safe harbor. Commenters suggested that using a period shorter than a building's class life, such as 20 years, could alleviate the IRS and the Treasury Department's concern that the cost of true improvements would not be properly capitalized if the safe harbor were extended to buildings. Another commenter argued that the distinction between building property and non-building property for purposes of the safe harbor is arbitrary because, in many respects, retail buildings are similar to other complex property, such as aircraft, which are not excluded from the safe harbor.
In response to these comments, the final regulations contain a safe harbor for routine maintenance for buildings. The inclusion of a routine maintenance safe harbor for buildings is expected to alleviate some of the difficulties that could arise in applying the improvement standards for certain restorations to building structures and building systems. To balance commenters' suggestions of using a shorter period, such as 20 years, with the concerns expressed in the preamble to the 2011 temporary regulations, the final regulations use 10 years as the period of time in which a taxpayer must reasonably expect to perform the relevant activities more than once. While periods longer than 10 years were considered, the use of a period much longer than 10 years would, contrary to current authority, permit the costs of many major remodeling and restoration projects to be deducted under the safe harbor, regardless of the nature or extent of the work involved.
2. Other Changes
The final regulations make several additional changes and clarifications to the safe harbor for routine maintenance, which are applicable to both buildings and other property. First, the regulations confirm that routine maintenance can be performed any time during the life of the property provided that the activities qualify as routine under the regulation. Second, for purposes of determining whether a taxpayer is performing routine maintenance, the final regulations remove the taxpayer's treatment of the activity on its applicable financial statement from the factors to be considered. Taxpayers may have several different reasons for capitalizing maintenance activities on their applicable financial statements, and such treatment may not be indicative of whether the activities are routine. Third, the final regulations clarify the applicability of the routine maintenance safe harbor by adding three items to the list of exceptions from the routine maintenance safe harbor: (1) amounts paid for a betterment to a unit of property, (2) amounts paid to adapt a unit of property to a new or different use, and (3) amounts paid for repairs, maintenance, or improvement of network assets. The first two exceptions were included in the general rule for the safe harbor in the 2011 temporary regulations, but were not clearly stated as exceptions. The exception for network assets was added because of the difficulty in defining the unit of property for network assets and the preference for resolving issues involving network assets through the IIR program. Finally, the exception relating to amounts paid for property for which a taxpayer has taken a basis adjustment resulting from a casualty loss is slightly modified to be consistent with the revised casualty loss restoration rule, which is discussed in this preamble.
3. Reasonable Expectation that Activities Will be Performed More than Once
A taxpayer's reasonable expectation of whether it will perform qualifying maintenance activities more than once during the relevant period will be determined at the time the unit of property (or building structure or system, as applicable) is placed in service. The final regulations modify the safe harbor for routine maintenance by adding that a taxpayer's expectation will not be deemed unreasonable merely because the taxpayer does not actually perform the maintenance a second time during the relevant period, provided that the taxpayer can otherwise substantiate that its expectation was reasonable at the time the property was placed in service. Thus, for a unit of property previously placed in service, whether the maintenance is actually performed more than once during the relevant period is not controlling for assessing the reasonableness of a taxpayer's original expectation. However, if a similar or identical unit of property is placed in service in a future tax year, the taxpayer's experience with the original property may be taken into account as a factor in assessing whether the taxpayer reasonably expects to perform the activities more than once during the relevant period for the similar or identical unit of property. The taxpayer's actual experience, therefore, may be used in assessing the reasonableness of the taxpayer's expectation of the frequency of restoration or replacement at the time a new unit of property is placed in service, but hindsight should not be used to invalidate a taxpayer's reasonable expectation as established at the time the unit of property was first placed in service when subsequent events do not conform to the taxpayer's reasonable expectation.
4. Amounts Not Qualifying for the Routine Maintenance Safe Harbor
The final regulations clarify that amounts incurred for activities falling outside the routine maintenance safe harbor are not necessarily expenditures required to be capitalized under § 1.263(a)-3. Amounts incurred for activities that do not meet the routine maintenance safe harbor are subject to analysis under the general rules for improvements.
G. Betterments
1. Overview
The 2011 temporary regulations provided that an amount paid results in a betterment, and accordingly, an improvement, if it (1) ameliorates a material condition or defect that existed prior to the acquisition of the property or arose during the production of the property; (2) results in a material addition to the unit of property (including a physical enlargement, expansion, or extension); or (3) results in a material increase in the capacity, productivity, efficiency, strength, or quality of the unit of property or its output. As applied to buildings, an amount results in a betterment to the building if it results in a betterment to the building structure or any of the building systems.
The final regulations retain the provisions of the 2011 temporary regulations related to betterments with several refinements. Specifically, the final regulations reorganize and clarify the types of activities that constitute betterments to property. Also, the final regulations no longer phrase the betterment test in terms of amounts that result in a betterment. Rather, the final regulations provide that a taxpayer must capitalize amounts that are reasonably expected to materially increase the productivity, efficiency, strength, quality, or output of a unit of property or that are for a material addition to a unit of property. Elimination of the "results in" standard should reduce controversy for expenditures that span more than one tax year or when the outcome of the expenditure is uncertain when the expenditure is made.
2. Amelioration of Material Condition or Defect
Commenters requested that certain examples be clarified to distinguish more clearly between circumstances that require capitalization of amounts paid to ameliorate a material condition or defect and circumstances that do not require capitalization. One commenter requested that the final regulations include a rule that would provide for an allocation of expenditures between pre- and post-acquisition periods based on facts and circumstances if an expenditure both ameliorates a pre-existing condition and ameliorates normal wear and tear that results from the taxpayer's use of the property. With respect to whether amounts paid to ameliorate conditions are betterments, other comments reiterated suggestions provided in response to the 2008 proposed regulations, as described in the preamble to the 2011 temporary regulations.
The final regulations do not adopt the comments with respect to expenditures to ameliorate pre-existing conditions or defects. The facts and circumstances rule provided in the final regulations is consistent with established case law and represents an administrable standard for determining whether an improvement has occurred.
3. Material Addition or Increase in Productivity, Efficiency, Strength, Quality, or Output
Many commenters requested that the final regulations provide explanations and quantitative bright lines for determining the materiality of an addition to a unit of property or an increase in capacity, productivity, efficiency, strength, quality, or output of a unit of property. Additionally, commenters requested more explanation of terms such as productivity, quality, and output, and how such standards should be applied across a variety of different types of tangible property.
These suggestions were extensively considered, but the final regulations do not adopt the suggestions to establish quantitative bright lines. Quantitative bright lines, although objective, would produce inconsistent results given the broad array of factual settings where the betterment rules apply. Instead, the final regulations continue to rely on qualitative factors to provide fair and equitable treatment for all taxpayers in determining whether a particular cost constitutes a betterment.
The final regulations clarify, however, that not every single quantitative or qualitative factor listed in the betterment standard applies to every type of property. Whether any single factor applies to a particular unit of property depends on the nature of the property. For example, while amounts paid for work performed on an office building or a retail building may clearly comprise a physical enlargement or increase the capacity, efficiency, strength, or quality of such building under certain facts, it is unclear how to measure whether work performed on an office building or retail building increases the productivity or output of such buildings, as those terms are generally understood. Thus, the productivity and output factors would not generally apply to buildings. On the other hand, it is appropriate to evaluate many items of manufacturing equipment in terms of output or productivity as well as size, capacity, efficiency, strength, and quality. Accordingly, the final regulations clarify that the applicability of each quantitative and qualitative factor depends on the nature of the unit of property, and if an addition or increase in a particular factor cannot be measured in the context of a specific type of property, then the factor is not relevant in determining whether there has been a betterment to the property.
4. Application of Betterment Rule
Several commenters questioned the betterment rule in the 2011 temporary regulations that requires consideration of all facts and circumstances, including the treatment of the expenditures on a taxpayer's applicable financial statement. One commenter questioned whether the treatment of an expenditure on a taxpayer's applicable financial statement should be relevant in determining whether an amount paid results in a betterment and suggested removal of this factor from the facts and circumstances test provided in the 2011 temporary regulations. The IRS and the Treasury Department recognize that taxpayers may apply different standards for capitalizing amounts on their applicable financial statements and such standards may not be controlling for whether the activities are betterments for Federal tax purposes. Thus, the final regulations remove the taxpayer's treatment of the expenditure on its financial statement as a factor to be considered in performing a betterment analysis under the final regulations. In addition, the final regulations omit the reference to the taxpayer's facts and circumstances in determining whether amounts are paid for a betterment to the taxpayer's property. The IRS and the Treasury Department believe that an analysis of a taxpayer's particular facts and circumstances is implicit in the application of all the final regulations governing improvements and need not be specifically provided in the application of the betterment rules.
The 2011 temporary regulations provided that, when an expenditure is necessitated by a particular event, the determination of whether an expenditure is for the betterment of a unit of property is made by comparing the condition of the property immediately after the expenditure with the condition of the property immediately prior to the event necessitating the expenditure. The IRS and the Treasury Department received comments requesting that the final regulations clarify the application of the appropriate comparison rule for determining whether an expenditure is for a betterment of a unit of property. The final regulations retain this general rule but clarify that the rule applies when the event necessitating the expenditure is either normal wear and tear or damage to the unit of property during the taxpayer's use of the property. Thus, the final regulations clarify that the appropriate comparison rule focuses on events affecting the condition of the property and not on business decisions made by taxpayers. In addition, the final regulations confirm that the rule does not apply to wear, tear, or damage that occurs prior to the taxpayer's acquisition or use of the property. In these situations, the amelioration of a material condition or defect rule may apply.
5. Retail Store Refresh or Remodels
A substantial number of comments were received with respect to the betterment examples in the 2011 temporary regulations that address retail store refresh or remodel projects, requesting the addition of quantitative bright lines and the inclusion of additional detail in the examples.
As discussed previously in this preamble, the final regulations do not adopt the suggestions to provide quantitative bright lines in applying the betterment rules. However, the final regulations include additional detail in a number of the examples, including the examples related to building refresh or remodels, illustrating distinctions between betterments and maintenance activities when a taxpayer undertakes multiple simultaneous activities on a building. To the extent the rules in the final regulations present situations that might be addressed through the IIR program, taxpayers may pursue additional guidance through the IIR process.
H. Restorations
1. Overview
The 2011 temporary regulations provided that an amount is paid to restore, and therefore improve, a unit of property if it meets one of six tests: (1) it is for the replacement of a component of a unit of property and the taxpayer has properly deducted a loss for that component (other than a casualty loss under § 1.165-7); (2) it is for the replacement of a component of a unit of property and the taxpayer has properly taken into account the adjusted basis of the component in realizing gain or loss resulting from the sale or exchange of the component; (3) it is for the repair of damage to a unit of property for which the taxpayer has properly taken a basis adjustment as a result of a casualty loss under section 165, or relating to a casualty event described in section 165 ("casualty loss rule"); (4) it returns the unit of property to its ordinarily efficient operating condition if the property has deteriorated to a state of disrepair and is no longer functional for its intended use; (5) it results in the rebuilding of the unit of property to a like-new condition after the end of its class life; or (6) it is for the replacement of a major component or a substantial structural part of the unit of property ("major component rule").
The IRS and the Treasury Department received a number of comments regarding the 2011 temporary regulations restoration rules. The final regulations generally retain the restoration standards set forth in the 2011 temporary regulations but revise both the major component rule and the casualty loss rule in response to comments.
2. Replacement of a Major Component or Substantial Structural Part
a. Definition of major component and substantial structural part
The 2011 temporary regulations provided that an amount paid for the replacement of a major component or substantial structural part of a unit of property is an amount paid to restore (and, therefore, improve) the unit of property. The determination of whether a component or part was "major" or "substantial" depended on the facts and circumstances, including both qualitative and quantitative factors.
Commenters expressed concern that the lack of a bright-line test or additional definitions would result in uncertainty and disputes in applying the restoration rules contained in the 2011 temporary regulations. Several commenters stated that the standards provided in the 2011 temporary regulations were too subjective, and numerous commenters requested that the final regulations reintroduce a bright-line definition of what constitutes a major component or substantial structural part for purposes of applying the restoration standards, particularly with regard to buildings. Several commenters suggested that a fixed percentage of a building should be defined as the major component. In addition, commenters asked for clarifying guidance or more examples, arguing that the major component test of the 2011 temporary regulations uses broad, undefined, and subjective terms.
The final regulations retain the substantive rules of the 2011 temporary regulations, but clarify the definition of major component, and, more significantly, add a new definition for major components and substantial structural parts of buildings. Although the IRS and the Treasury Department considered several bright-line tests, none were found to fairly, equitably, and in a readily implementable manner distinguish between expenditures that constitute restorations and expenditures that constitute deductible repairs or maintenance consistent with the case law and administrative rulings in the area.
In many cases, particularly with regard to buildings, establishing a clear threshold, such as 30 percent of a defined amount, would be unworkable. Largely due to the complex nature of the property involved and the fact that units of property include assets placed in service in multiple taxable years, applying a fixed percentage to a building structure or a building system in a way that creates a consistent and equitable result proved exceedingly intricate and complex, thereby failing to achieve the simplifying objective of a bright line test. The final regulations, therefore, do not adopt any of the bright-line tests suggested.
b. General rule for major component and substantial structural part
To provide additional guidance for determining what constitutes a major component or substantial structural part, the final regulations clarify the distinction between a major component and a substantial structural part. Specifically, the final regulations separate "major component," which focuses on the function of the component in the unit of property, from "substantial structural part," which focuses on the size of the replacement component in relation to the unit of property. The final regulations define a major component as a part or combination of parts that performs a discrete and critical function in the operation of the unit of property. The final regulations define a substantial structural part as a part or combination of parts that comprises a large portion of the physical structure of the unit of property.
In response to comments, the final regulations retain, but also clarify, the exception to the major component rule. The 2011 temporary regulations provided that the replacement of a minor component, even though such component might affect the function of the unit of property, generally would not, by itself, constitute a major component. The exception was meant to apply to relatively minor components, such as a switch, which generally performs a discrete function (turning property on and off) and is critical to the operation of a unit of property (that is, property will not run without it). To provide additional clarification regarding this exception, the final regulations clarify that an incidental component of a unit of property, even though such component performs a discrete and critical function in the operation of the unit of property, generally will not, by itself, constitute a major component.
c. Major component and substantial structural part of buildings
The final regulations address the request for additional clarity regarding the definition of major component for buildings by adding a new definition for major components and substantial structural parts of buildings. In the case of buildings, the final regulations provide that an amount is for the replacement of a major component or substantial structural part if the replacement includes a part or combination of parts that (1) comprises a major component or a significant portion of a major component of the building structure or any building system, or (2) comprises a large portion of the physical structure of the building structure or any building system.
While the definition of major component for buildings introduces an additional level of analysis (a significant portion of a major component) that must be applied in determining whether an amount spent on a building constitutes a restoration, the rule provides an analytical framework and reaches conclusions that are generally consistent with the case law. Therefore, in practice this framework should be readily applicable for amounts spent on buildings. In combination with the addition of a routine maintenance safe harbor for buildings, the modifications to the section 168 disposition regulations, the safe harbor for small taxpayers, and the addition and revision of many examples, the revised definition of major component for buildings should relieve much of the controversy in determining whether the replacement of a major component or a substantial structural part of a unit of property is an amount paid to restore a building.
3. Casualty Loss Rule
The 2011 temporary regulations provided that an amount is paid to restore a unit of property if it is for the repair of damage to the unit of property for which the taxpayer has properly taken a basis adjustment as a result of a casualty loss under section 165, or relating to a casualty event described in section 165 ("casualty loss rule"). Capitalization of restoration costs is required under the casualty loss rule, even when the amounts paid for the repair exceed the adjusted basis remaining in the property and regardless of whether the amounts may otherwise qualify as repair costs. The 2011 temporary regulations recognized a taxpayer's ability to deduct a casualty loss under section 165 or, to the extent eligible, to deduct the repair expense associated with the casualty damage. But the 2011 temporary regulations did not permit a taxpayer to deduct both amounts arising from the same event in the same taxable year.
Commenters requested that the final regulations eliminate the casualty loss rule. Commenters argued that recognition of a casualty loss under section 165 is irrelevant in determining whether the costs to restore the damage resulting from a casualty should be capitalized, and the 2011 temporary regulations should not deny one tax benefit (the ability to deduct repair costs) based on a taxpayer's realization of another tax benefit (the ability to deduct a casualty loss). Similarly, commenters argued that the Code allows both a casualty loss and a repair deduction, and the IRS and the Treasury Department had not offered any justification for denying a deduction for the cost to repair damaged property only because the taxpayer has taken a casualty loss deduction. Commenters argued that the 2011 temporary regulations penalize taxpayers that have suffered a casualty as a result of property damage. Commenters suggested that the casualty loss rule in the 2011 temporary regulations results in similarly situated taxpayers being treated differently, based on whether an asset has adjusted basis at the time of a casualty event. As an alternative to eliminating the casualty loss rule, commenters requested that the final regulations allow a taxpayer to elect to forego recognizing the casualty loss and making a corresponding adjustment to basis to avoid application of the casualty loss rule.
The casualty loss rule in 2011 temporary regulations was based on the capitalization rule provided in section 263(a)(2), which states that no deduction shall be allowed for any amount expended in restoring property or in making good the exhaustion thereof for which an allowance is or has been made. When property has been damaged in a casualty and a loss for such property has been claimed, amounts paid to replace the damaged property are incurred to restore property for which an allowance has been made. Thus, under section 263(a)(2), when the basis in replaced property has been recovered by the taxpayer, capitalization of the replacement property is appropriate.
Recognizing that such a rule can provide harsh results for a taxpayer with valuable property with low adjusted basis that is destroyed in a casualty event, considerable consideration was given to the suggestion that the regulations provide an election to forgo a casualty loss deduction. Ultimately, however, it was concluded that the IRS and the Treasury Department do not have the authority to permit taxpayers to electively avoid the basis adjustment requirement imposed by section 1016(a). Section 1016(a) states that "a proper adjustment in respect of the property shall in all cases be made for . . . losses, or other items, properly chargeable to capital account. . . ." Therefore, even if a taxpayer could choose to forgo claiming a loss for property damage under section 165, section 1016 requires an adjustment to the basis of the property because a loss properly could be claimed.
In response to commenters' suggestions, the final regulations revise the casualty loss rule to permit a deduction, where otherwise permissible, for amounts spent in excess of the adjusted basis of the property damaged in a casualty event. Thus, a taxpayer is still required to capitalize amounts paid to restore damage to property for which the taxpayer has properly recorded a basis adjustment, but the costs required to be capitalized under the casualty loss rule are limited to the excess of (1) the taxpayer's basis adjustments resulting from the casualty event, over (2) the amount paid for restoration of damage to the unit of property that also constitutes a restoration under the other criteria of § 1.263(a)-3(k)(1) (excluding the casualty loss rule). Casualty-related expenditures in excess of this limitation are not treated as restoration costs under § 1.263(a)-3(k)(1)(iii) and may be properly deducted if they otherwise constitute ordinary and necessary business expenses (for example, repair and maintenance expenses) under section 162. The final regulations contain several examples illustrating the casualty loss rule, including one example that demonstrates the operation of the new limitation on amounts required to be capitalized.
4. Salvage Value Exception
Under the 2011 temporary regulations, a restoration includes amounts paid for the replacement of a component of a unit of property when the taxpayer has properly deducted a loss for that component (other than a casualty loss under § 1.165-7) and for the replacement of a component of a unit of property when the taxpayer has properly taken into account the adjusted basis of the component in realizing gain or loss resulting from the sale or exchange of the component. In response to comments, the final regulations retain these rules but provide an exception for property that cannot be depreciated to an adjusted basis of zero due to the application of salvage value (for example, property placed in service before 1981, and post-1980 assets that do not qualify for the Accelerated Cost Recovery System of former section 168 (ACRS) or MACRS). When a loss is properly deducted or the adjusted basis of the component is realized from a sale or exchange, and the amount of loss or basis adjustment is attributable only to the remaining salvage value (the amount a taxpayer is expected to receive in cash or trade-in allowance upon disposition of an asset at the end of its useful life) as computed for Federal income tax purposes, a taxpayer is not required to treat amounts paid for the replacement of the component as a restoration under § 1.263(a)-3(k)(1)(i) or (k)(1)(ii). Amounts subject to this exception must be evaluated under other provisions of the regulations to determine if the amounts are paid to improve tangible property.
5. Rebuild to Like-New Condition
The 2011 temporary regulations provided that a unit of property is rebuilt to a like-new condition if it is brought to the status of new, rebuilt, remanufactured, or similar status under the terms of any federal regulatory guideline or the manufacturer's original specifications. Commenters asked for clarification on whether comprehensive maintenance programs, conducted according to manufacturer's original specifications, constitute rebuilding a unit of property to like-new condition. The final regulations adopt the standard provided in the 2011 temporary regulations but clarify that generally a comprehensive maintenance program, even though substantial, does not return a unit of property to like-new condition.
I. Adaptation to a new or different use
The 2011 temporary regulations required a taxpayer to capitalize amounts paid to adapt a unit of property to a new or different use (that is, a use inconsistent with the taxpayer's intended ordinary use at the time the property was originally placed in service by the taxpayer). As applied to buildings, the new or different use standard is applied separately to the building structure and its building systems. Commenters requested clarification of the adaptation rules and additional examples. Commenters also asked that, for specific industries, the regulations provide that changes to facilities in response to a change in product mix, a reallocation of floor space, the need to rebrand, or the introduction of a new product line do not constitute a new or different use.
The final regulations retain the substantive rules of the 2011 temporary regulations but add additional examples to illustrate the rules. The final regulations provide that if an amount adapts the unit of property in a manner inconsistent with the taxpayer's intended ordinary use of the property when placed in service, the amount must be capitalized as an adaptation of the unit of property to a new or different use. In response to comments, two new examples address circumstances in which part of a retail building unit of property is converted to provide new services or products. However, providing tailored guidance for specific industries or specific types of property (for example, retail sales facilities) is not appropriate for broadly applicable guidance. Specific industry guidance is better addressed through the IIR program.
VII. Optional Regulatory Accounting Method
The 2011 temporary regulations provided an optional regulatory method, which permitted certain regulated taxpayers to follow the method of accounting they used for regulatory accounting purposes in determining whether an amount paid improves property. For purposes of the optional method, a taxpayer in a regulated industry is a taxpayer subject to the regulatory accounting rules of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), or the Surface Transportation Board (STB). A taxpayer that uses the regulatory accounting method does not apply the rules under sections 162, 212, or 263(a) in determining whether amounts paid to repair, maintain, or improve property are capital expenditures or deductible expenses. Section 263A continues to apply to costs required to be capitalized to property produced by the taxpayer or to property acquired for resale.
The IRS and the Treasury Department received no comments on this methodology, and the final regulations retain the rule from the 2011 temporary regulations, with one modification. The final regulations modify the description of the regulatory accounting method to clarify that, for purposes of determining whether an amount is for a capital expenditure, an eligible taxpayer must apply the method of accounting that it is required to follow by FERC, FCC, or STB (whichever is applicable).
VIII. Election to Capitalize Repair and Maintenance Costs
The 2011 temporary regulations did not contain an election for taxpayers to capitalize expenditures made with respect to tangible property that would otherwise be deductible under these regulations. Commenters requested that, to reduce uncertainty in applying subjective standards and to reduce administrative burden, the final regulations include an election to capitalize repair and maintenance expenditures as improvements if the taxpayer treats such costs as capital expenditures for financial accounting purposes. In response to these comments as well as in recognition of the significant administrative burden reduction achieved by permitting a taxpayer to follow for Federal income tax purposes the capitalization policies used for its books and records, the final regulations permit a taxpayer to elect to treat amounts paid during the taxable year for repair and maintenance to tangible property as amounts paid to improve that property and as an asset subject to the allowance for depreciation, as long as the taxpayer incurs the amounts in carrying on a trade or business and the taxpayer treats the amounts as capital expenditures on its books and records used for regularly computing income. Under the final regulations, a taxpayer that elects this treatment must apply the election to all amounts paid for repair and maintenance to tangible property that it treats as capital expenditures on its books and records in that taxable year. A taxpayer making the election must begin to depreciate the cost of such improvements when the improvements are placed in service by the taxpayer under the applicable provisions of the Code and regulations. The election is made by attaching a statement to the taxpayer's timely filed original Federal tax return (including extensions) for the taxable year in which the improvement is placed in service. Once made, the election may not be revoked.
A taxpayer that capitalizes repair and maintenance costs under the election is still eligible to apply the de minimis safe harbor, the safe harbor for small taxpayers, and the routine maintenance safe harbor to repair and maintenance costs that are not treated as capital expenditures on its books and records.
IX. Applicability Dates
The final regulations generally apply to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. However, certain provisions of the final regulations only apply to amounts paid or incurred in taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. For example, the de minimis safe harbor election under § 1.263(a)-1(f) only applies to amounts paid or incurred for tangible property after January 1, 2014, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014.
Alternatively, a taxpayer may generally choose to apply the final regulations to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. For taxpayers choosing this early application, certain provisions of the final regulations only apply to amounts paid or incurred in taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. For example, for these taxpayers, the de minimis safe harbor election only applies to amounts paid or incurred for tangible property after January 1, 2012, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012.
For taxpayers choosing to apply the final regulations to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, or where applicable, to amounts paid or incurred in taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, the final regulations provide transition relief for taxpayers that did not make the certain elections (for example, the election to apply the de minimis safe harbor or the election to apply the safe harbor for small taxpayers) on their timely filed original Federal tax return for their 2012 or 2013 taxable year (the applicable taxable year). Specifically, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and ending on or before September 19, 2013, a taxpayer is permitted to make these elections by filing an amended Federal tax return (including any applicable statements) for the applicable taxable year on or before 180 days from the due date including extensions of the taxpayer's Federal tax return for the applicable taxable year, notwithstanding that the taxpayer may not have extended the due date.
Finally, a taxpayer may also choose to apply the 2011 temporary regulations to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and before January 1, 2014. For taxpayers choosing to apply the temporary regulations to these taxable years, certain provisions of the temporary regulations only apply to amounts paid or incurred in taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and before January 1, 2014.
X. Change in Method of Accounting
The IRS and the Treasury Department received several comments regarding the procedures that a taxpayer should utilize to change its method of accounting to comply with the regulations. Several commenters favored the use of a cut-off method, primarily for reasons of administrative convenience. However, other commenters asserted that any change in method of accounting must include a section 481(a) adjustment.
The final regulations provide that, except as otherwise stated, a change to comply with the final regulations is a change in method of accounting to which the provisions of sections 446 and 481 and the accompanying regulations apply. A taxpayer seeking to change to a method of accounting permitted in the final regulations must secure the consent of the Commissioner in accordance with § 1.446-1(e) and follow the administrative procedures issued under § 1.446-1(e)(3)(ii) for obtaining the Commissioner's consent to change its accounting method. In general, a taxpayer seeking a change in method of accounting to comply with these regulations must take into account a full adjustment under section 481(a).
The imposition of a section 481(a) adjustment for a change in method of accounting to conform to the final regulations provides for a uniform and consistent rule for all taxpayers and ultimately reduces the administrative burdens on taxpayers and the IRS in enforcing the requirements of section 263(a). Although the IRS and the Treasury Department recognize that requiring a section 481(a) adjustment may place a burden on taxpayers to calculate reasonable adjustments, taxpayers have shown a willingness and ability to make these calculations in requesting method changes after the publication of the 2008 proposed regulations and after the publication of the 2011 temporary regulations. In addition, taxpayers and the IRS routinely reach agreements on calculation methodologies and amounts.
Separate procedures will be provided under which taxpayers may obtain automatic consent for a taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2012, to change to a method of accounting provided in the final regulations. Although a taxpayer seeking a change in method of accounting to comply with these regulations generally must take into account a full adjustment under section 481(a), it is anticipated that for the specific situation where a taxpayer seeks to change to a method of accounting that is applicable only to amounts paid or incurred in taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014, a limited section 481(a) adjustment will apply, taking into account only amounts paid or incurred in taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014, or at a taxpayer's option, amounts paid or incurred in taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012.
Special Analyses
It has been determined that this Treasury decision is not a significant regulatory action as defined in Executive Order 12866, as supplemented by Executive Order 13563. Therefore, a regulatory assessment is not required. It also has been determined that section 553(b) of the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 5) does not apply to these regulations.
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6), it is hereby certified that these final regulations will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. This regulation affects all small business taxpayers. While a collection of information is required by this regulation in §§ 1.263(a)-1(f)(5), 1.263(a)-2(h)(6), and 1.263(a)-3(n), this collection will not have a significant economic impact on small entities. This information is required for a taxpayer to elect to use the de minimis safe harbor, to elect a safe harbor for determining the treatment of amounts related to buildings owned or leased by small taxpayers, and to elect to capitalize certain repair and maintenance costs. These elections were provided in the regulations in response to comment letters submitted on behalf of small business taxpayers requesting that these types of provisions be added to the regulations to assist small businesses. All of these elections are voluntary, beneficial, and were designed to simplify the application of sections 162 and 263(a) to small taxpayers. The provisions require a taxpayer to file a statement with the taxpayer's timely filed original tax return to inform the IRS that the taxpayer is electing to use these provisions. The estimated time to prepare a statement should not exceed 15 minutes, and the filing of the statement allows the taxpayer to receive the beneficial treatment for the amounts that qualify for the statement. Based on these facts, a regulatory flexibility analysis under Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) is not required. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, this regulation was submitted to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for comment on its impact on small business.
Statement of Availability for IRS Documents
For copies of recently issued revenue procedures, revenue rulings, notices, and other guidance published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin or Cumulative Bulletin, please visit the IRS website at http://www.irs.gov.
Drafting Information
The principal authors of these regulations are Merrill D. Feldstein and Kathleen Reed, Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Income Tax and Accounting). Other personnel from the IRS and the Treasury Department have participated in their development.
List of Subjects
26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements
26 CFR Part 602
Record and recordkeeping requirements
Adoption of Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR parts 1 and 602 are amended as follows:
PART 1 -- INCOME TAXES
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read in part as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Par. 2. Section 1.162-3 is revised to read as follows:
§ 1.162-3 Materials and supplies.
(a) In general -- (1) Non-incidental materials and supplies. Except as provided in paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section, amounts paid to acquire or produce materials and supplies (as defined in paragraph (c) of this section) are deductible in the taxable year in which the materials and supplies are first used in the taxpayer's operations or are consumed in the taxpayer's operations.
(2) Incidental materials and supplies. Amounts paid to acquire or produce incidental materials and supplies (as defined in paragraph (c) of this section) that are carried on hand and for which no record of consumption is kept or of which physical inventories at the beginning and end of the taxable year are not taken, are deductible in the taxable year in which these amounts are paid, provided taxable income is clearly reflected.
(3) Use or consumption of rotable and temporary spare parts. Except as provided in paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section, for purposes of paragraph (a)(1) of this section, rotable and temporary spare parts (defined under paragraph (c)(2) of this section) are first used in the taxpayer's operations or are consumed in the taxpayer's operations in the taxable year in which the taxpayer disposes of the parts.
(b) Coordination with other provisions of the Internal Revenue Code. Nothing in this section changes the treatment of any amount that is specifically provided for under any provision of the Internal Revenue Code (Code) or regulations other than section 162(a) or section 212 and the regulations under those sections. For example, see § 1.263(a)-3, which requires taxpayers to capitalize amounts paid to improve tangible property and section 263A and the regulations under section 263A, which require taxpayers to capitalize the direct and allocable indirect costs, including the cost of materials and supplies, of property produced by the taxpayer and property acquired for resale. See also § 1.471-1, which requires taxpayers to include in inventory certain materials and supplies.
(c) Definitions -- (1) Materials and supplies. For purposes of this section, materials and supplies means tangible property that is used or consumed in the taxpayer's operations that is not inventory and that --
(i) Is a component acquired to maintain, repair, or improve a unit of tangible property (as determined under § 1.263(a)-3(e)) owned, leased, or serviced by the taxpayer and that is not acquired as part of any single unit of tangible property;
(ii) Consists of fuel, lubricants, water, and similar items, reasonably expected to be consumed in 12 months or less, beginning when used in the taxpayer's operations;
(iii) Is a unit of property as determined under § 1.263(a)-3(e) that has an economic useful life of 12 months or less, beginning when the property is used or consumed in the taxpayer's operations;
(iv) Is a unit of property as determined under § 1.263(a)-3(e) that has an acquisition cost or production cost (as determined under section 263A) of $200 or less (or other amount as identified in published guidance in the Federal Register or in the Internal Revenue Bulletin (see § 601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b) of this chapter); or
(v) Is identified in published guidance in the Federal Register or in the Internal Revenue Bulletin (see § 601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b) of this chapter) as materials and supplies for which treatment is permitted under this section.
(2) Rotable and temporary spare parts. For purposes of this section, rotable spare parts are materials and supplies under paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section that are acquired for installation on a unit of property, removable from that unit of property, generally repaired or improved, and either reinstalled on the same or other property or stored for later installation. Temporary spare parts are materials and supplies under paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section that are used temporarily until a new or repaired part can be installed and then are removed and stored for later installation.
(3) Standby emergency spare parts. Standby emergency spare parts are materials and supplies under paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section that are --
(i) Acquired when particular machinery or equipment is acquired (or later acquired and set aside for use in particular machinery or equipment);
(ii) Set aside for use as replacements to avoid substantial operational time loss caused by emergencies due to particular machinery or equipment failure;
(iii) Located at or near the site of the installed related machinery or equipment so as to be readily available when needed;
(iv) Directly related to the particular machinery or piece of equipment they serve;
(v) Normally expensive;
(vi) Only available on special order and not readily available from a vendor or manufacturer;
(vii) Not subject to normal periodic replacement;
(viii) Not interchangeable in other machines or equipment;
(x) Not acquired in quantity (generally only one is on hand for each piece of machinery or equipment); and
(xi) Not repaired and reused.
(4) Economic useful life -- (i) General rule. The economic useful life of a unit of property is not necessarily the useful life inherent in the property but is the period over which the property may reasonably be expected to be useful to the taxpayer or, if the taxpayer is engaged in a trade or business or an activity for the production of income, the period over which the property may reasonably be expected to be useful to the taxpayer in its trade or business or for the production of income, as applicable. See § 1.167(a)-1(b) for the factors to be considered in determining this period.
(ii) Taxpayers with an applicable financial statement. For taxpayers with an applicable financial statement (as defined in paragraph (c)(4)(iii) of this section), the economic useful life of a unit of property, solely for the purposes of applying the provisions of paragraph (c)(4)(iii) of this section, is the useful life initially used by the taxpayer for purposes of determining depreciation in its applicable financial statement, regardless of any salvage value of the property. If a taxpayer does not have an applicable financial statement for the taxable year in which a unit of property was originally acquired or produced, the economic useful life of the unit of property must be determined under paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section. Further, if a taxpayer treats amounts paid for a unit of property as an expense in its applicable financial statement on a basis other than the useful life of the property or if a taxpayer does not depreciate the unit of property on its applicable financial statement, the economic useful life of the unit of property must be determined under paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section. For example, if a taxpayer has a policy of treating as an expense on its applicable financial statement amounts paid for a unit of property costing less than a certain dollar amount, notwithstanding that the unit of property has a useful life of more than one year, the economic useful life of the unit of property must be determined under paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section.
(iii) Definition of applicable financial statement. The taxpayer's applicable financial statement is the taxpayer's financial statement listed in paragraphs (c)(4)(iii)(A) through (C) of this section that has the highest priority (including within paragraph (c)(4)(iii)(B) of this section). The financial statements are, in descending priority --
(A) A financial statement required to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) (the 10-K or the Annual Statement to Shareholders);
(B) A certified audited financial statement that is accompanied by the report of an independent certified public accountant (or in the case of a foreign entity, by the report of a similarly qualified independent professional), that is used for --
(1) Credit purposes;
(2) Reporting to shareholders, partners, or similar persons; or
(3) Any other substantial non-tax purpose; or
(C) A financial statement (other than a tax return) required to be provided to the federal or a state government or any federal or state agency (other than the SEC or the Internal Revenue Service).
(5) Amount paid. For purposes of this section, in the case of a taxpayer using an accrual method of accounting, the terms amount paid and payment mean a liability incurred (within the meaning of § 1.446-1(c)(1)(ii)). A liability may not be taken into account under this section prior to the taxable year during which the liability is incurred.
(6) Produce. For purposes of this section, produce means construct, build, install, manufacture, develop, create, raise, or grow. This definition is intended to have the same meaning as the definition used for purposes of section 263A(g)(1) and § 1.263A-2(a)(1)(i), except that improvements are excluded from the definition in this paragraph (c)(6) and are separately defined and addressed in § 1.263(a)-3. Amounts paid to produce materials and supplies are subject to section 263A.
(d) Election to capitalize and depreciate certain materials and supplies -- (1) In general. A taxpayer may elect to treat as a capital expenditure and to treat as an asset subject to the allowance for depreciation the cost of any rotable spare part, temporary spare part, or standby emergency spare part as defined in paragraph (c)(3) or (c)(4) of this section. Except as specified in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, an election made under this paragraph (d) applies to amounts paid during the taxable year to acquire or produce any rotable, temporary, or standby emergency spare part to which paragraph (a) of this section would apply (but for the election under this paragraph (d)). Any property for which this election is made shall not be treated as a material or a supply.
(2) Exceptions. A taxpayer may not elect to capitalize and depreciate under paragraph (d) of this section any amount paid to acquire or produce a rotable, temporary, or standby emergency spare part defined in paragraph (c)(3) or (c)(4) of this section Example 4. Rotable part acquired as part of a single unit of property; not material or supply. D operates a fleet of aircraft. In Year 1, D acquires a new aircraft, which includes two new aircraft engines. The aircraft costs $500,000 and has an economic useful life of more than 12 months, beginning when it is placed in service. In Year 5, after the aircraft is operated for several years in D's business, D removes the engines from the aircraft, repairs or improves the engines, and either reinstalls the engines on a similar aircraft or stores the engines for later reinstallation. Assume the aircraft purchased in Year 1, including its two engines, is a unit of property under § 1.263(a)-3(e). Because the engines were acquired as part of the aircraft, a single unit of property, the engines are not materials or supplies under paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section nor rotable or temporary spare parts under paragraph (c)(2) of this section. Accordingly, D may not apply the rules of this section to the aircraft engines upon the original acquisition of the aircraft nor after the removal of the engines from the aircraft for use in the same or similar aircraft. Rather, D must apply the rules under §§ 1.263(a)-2 and 1.263(a)-3 to the aircraft, including its engines, to determine the treatment of amounts paid to acquire, produce, or improve the unit of property. Example 5. Consumable property. E operates a fleet of aircraft that carries freight for its customers. E has several storage tanks on its premises, which hold jet fuel for its aircraft. Assume that once the jet fuel is placed in E's aircraft, the jet fuel is reasonably expected to be consumed within 12 months or less. On December 31, Year 1, E purchases a two-year supply of jet fuel. In Year 2, E uses a portion of the jet fuel purchased on December 31, Year 1, to fuel the aircraft used in its business. The jet fuel that E purchased in Year 1 is a material or supply under paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this section because it is reasonably expected to be consumed within 12 months or less from the time it is placed in E's aircraft. Under paragraph (a)(1) of this section, E may deduct in Year 2 the amounts paid for the portion of jet fuel used in the operation of E's aircraft in Year 2. Example 6. Unit of property that costs $200 or less. F operates a business that rents out a variety of small individual items to customers (rental items). F maintains a supply of rental items on hand. In Year 1, F purchases a large quantity of rental items to use in its rental business. Assume that each rental item is a unit of property under § 1.263(a)-3(e) and costs $200 or less. In Year 2, F begins using all the rental items purchased in Year 1 by providing them to customers of its rental business. F does not sell or exchange these items on established retail markets at any time after the items are used in the rental business. The rental items are materials and supplies under paragraph (c)(1)(iv) of this section. Under paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the amounts that F paid for the rental items in Year 1 are deductible in Year 2, the taxable year in which the rental items are first used in F's business. Example 7. Unit of property that costs $200 or less. G provides billing services to its customers. In Year 1, G pays amounts to purchase 50 scanners to be used by its employees. Assume each scanner is a unit of property under § 1.263(a)-3(e) and costs less than $200. In Year 1, G's employees begin using 35 of the scanners, and F stores the remaining 15 scanners for use in a later taxable year. The scanners are materials and supplies under paragraph (c)(1)(iv) of this section. Under paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the amounts G paid for 35 of the scanners are deductible in Year 1, the taxable year in which G first uses each of those scanners. The amounts that G paid for each of the remaining 15 scanners are deductible in the taxable year in which each machine is first used in G's business. Example 8. Materials and supplies that cost less than $200; de minimis safe harbor. Assume the same facts as in Example 7 except that G's scanners qualify for the de minimis safe harbor under § 1.263(a)-1(f), and G properly elects to apply the de minimis safe harbor under § 1.263(a)-1(f) to amounts paid in Year 1. G must apply the de minimis safe harbor under § 1.263(a)-1(f) to amounts paid for the scanners, rather than treat these amounts as costs of materials and supplies under this section. In accordance with § 1.263(a)-1(f)(3)(iv), G may deduct the amounts paid for all 50 scanners under § 1.162-1 in the taxable year the amounts are paid. Example 9. Unit of property that costs $200 or less; bulk purchase. H provides consulting services to its customers. In Year 1, H pays $500 to purchase one box of 10 toner cartridges to use as needed for H's printers. Assume each toner cartridge is a unit of property under § 1.263(a)-3(e). In Year 1, H's employees place 8 of the toner cartridges in printers in H's office, and store the remaining 2 cartridges for use in a later taxable year. The toner cartridges are materials and supplies under paragraph (c)(1)(iv) of this section because even though purchased in one box costing more than $200, the allocable cost of each unit of property equals $50. Therefore, under paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the $400 paid by H for 8 of the cartridges is deductible in Year 1, the taxable year in which H first uses each of those cartridges. The amounts paid by H for each of the remaining 2 cartridges ($50 each) are deductible in the taxable year in which each cartridge is first used in H's business. Example 10. Materials and supplies used in improvements; coordination with § 1.263(a)-3. J owns various machines that are used in its business. Assume that each machine is a unit of property under § 1.263(a)-3(e). In Year 1, J purchases a supply of spare parts for its machines. J acquired the parts to use in the repair or maintenance of the machines under § 1.162-4 or in the improvement of the machines under § 1.263(a)-3. The spare parts are not rotable or temporary spare parts under paragraph (c)(2) of this section. In Year 2, J uses all of these spare parts in an activity that improves a machine under § 1.263(a)-3. Under paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section, the spare parts purchased by J in Year 1 are materials and supplies. Under paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the amounts paid for the spare parts are otherwise deductible as materials and supplies in Year 2, the taxable year in which J uses those parts. However, because these materials and supplies are used to improve J's machine, J is required to capitalize the amounts paid for those spare parts under § 1.263(a)-3. Example 11. Cost of producing materials and supplies; coordination with section 263A. K is a manufacturer that produces liquid waste as part of its operations. K determines that its current liquid waste disposal process is inadequate. To remedy the problem, in Year 1, K constructs a leaching pit to provide a draining area for the liquid waste. Assume the leaching pit is a unit of property under § 1.263(a)-3(e) and has an economic useful life of 12 months or less, starting on the date that K begins to use the leaching pit as a draining area. At the end of this period, K's factory will be connected to the local sewer system. In Year 2, K starts using the leaching pit in its operations. The amounts paid to construct the leaching pit (including the direct and allocable indirect costs of property produced under section 263A) are amounts paid for a material or supply under paragraph (c)(1)(iii) of this section. However, the amounts paid to construct the leaching pit may be subject to capitalization under section 263A if these amounts comprise the direct or allocable indirect costs of property produced by K. Example 12. Costs of acquiring materials and supplies for production of property; coordination with section 263A. In Year 1, L purchases jigs, dies, molds, and patterns for use in the manufacture of L's products. Assume each jig, die, mold, and pattern is a unit of property under § 1.263(a)-3(e). The economic useful life of each jig, die, mold, and pattern is 12 months or less, beginning when each item is used in the manufacturing process. The jigs, dies, molds, and patterns are not components acquired to maintain, repair, or improve any of L's equipment under paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section. L begins using the jigs, dies, molds and patterns in Year 2 to manufacture its products. These items are materials and supplies under paragraph (c)(1)(iii) of this section. Under paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the amounts paid for the items are otherwise deductible in Year 2, the taxable year in which L first uses those items. However, the amounts paid for these materials and supplies may be subject to capitalization under section 263A if these amounts comprise the direct or allocable indirect costs of property produced by L. Example 13. Election to capitalize and depreciate. M is in the mining business. M acquires certain temporary spare parts, which it keeps on hand to avoid operational time loss in the event it must make temporary repairs to a unit of property that is subject to depreciation. These parts are not used to improve property under § 1.263(a)-3(d). These temporary spare parts are used until a new or repaired part can be installed and then are removed and stored for later temporary installation. M does not use the optional method of accounting for rotable and temporary spare parts in paragraph (e) of this section for any of its rotable or temporary spare parts. The temporary spare parts are materials and supplies under paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section. Under paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(3) of this section, the amounts paid for the temporary spare parts are deductible in the taxable year in which they are disposed of by M. However, because it is unlikely that the temporary spare parts will be disposed of in the near future, M would prefer to treat the amounts paid for the spare parts as capital expenditures subject to depreciation. M may elect under paragraph (d) of this section to treat the cost of each temporary spare part as a capital expenditure and as an asset subject to an allowance for depreciation. M makes this election by capitalizing the amounts paid for each spare part in the taxable year that M acquires the spare parts and by beginning to recover the costs of each part on its timely filed Federal tax return for the taxable year in which the part is placed in service for purposes of determining depreciation under the applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code and the Treasury Regulations. See § 1.263(a)-2(g) for the treatment of capital expenditures. Example 14. Election to apply de minimis safe harbor. (i) N provides consulting services to its customers. In Year 1, N pays amounts to purchase 50 laptop computers. Each laptop computer is a unit of property under § 1.263(a)-3(e), costs $400, and has an economic useful life of more than 12 months. Also in Year 1, N purchases 50 office chairs to be used by its employees. Each office chair is a unit of property that costs $100. N has an applicable financial statement (as defined in § 1.263(a)-1(f)(4)) and N has a written accounting policy at the beginning Year 1 to expense amounts paid for units of property costing $500 or less. N treats amounts paid for property costing $500 or less as an expense on its applicable financial statement in Year 1. (ii) The laptop computers are not materials or supplies under paragraph (c) of this section. Therefore, the amounts N pays for the computers must generally be capitalized under § 1.263(a)-2(d) as amounts paid for the acquisition of tangible property. The office chairs are materials and supplies under paragraph (c)(1)(iv) of this section. Thus, under paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the amounts paid for the office chairs are deductible in the taxable year in which they are first used in N's business. However, under paragraph (f) of this section, if N properly elects to apply the de minimis safe harbor under § 1.263(a)-1(f) to amounts paid in Year 1, then N must apply the de minimis safe harbor under § 1.263(a)-1(f) to amounts paid for the computers and the office chairs, rather than treat the office chairs as the costs of materials and supplies under § 1.162-3. Under the de minimis safe harbor, N may not capitalize the amounts paid for the computers under § 1.263(a)-2 nor treat the office chairs as materials and supplies under § 1.162-3. Instead, in accordance with § 1.263(a)-1(f)(3)(iv), under § 1.162-1, N may deduct the amounts paid for the computers and the office chairs in the taxable year paid. (i) Accounting method changes. Except as otherwise provided in this section, a change to comply with this section is a change in method of accounting to which the provisions of sections 446 and 481 and the accompanying regulations apply. A taxpayer seeking to change to a method of accounting permitted in this section must secure the consent of the Commissioner in accordance with § 1.446-1(e) and follow the administrative procedures issued under § 1.446-1(e)(3)(ii) for obtaining the Commissioner's consent to change its accounting method. (j) Effective/applicability date -- (1) In general. This section generally applies to amounts paid or incurred in taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. However, a taxpayer may apply paragraph (e) of this section (the optional method of accounting for rotable and temporary spare parts) to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. Except as provided in paragraphs (j)(2) and (j)(3) of this section, § 1.162-3 as contained in 26 CFR part 1 edition revised as of April 1, 2011, applies to taxable years beginning before January 1, 2014. (2) Early application of this section -- (i) In general. Except for paragraph (e) of this section, a taxpayer may choose to apply this section to amounts paid or incurred in taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. A taxpayer may choose to apply paragraph (e) of this section (the optional method of accounting for rotable and temporary spare parts) to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. (ii) Transition rule for election to capitalize materials and supplies on 2012 and 2013 returns. If under paragraph (j)(2)(i) of this section, a taxpayer chooses to make the election to capitalize and depreciate certain materials and supplies under paragraph (d) of this section for its taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and ending on or before September 19, 2013 (applicable taxable year), and the taxpayer did not make the election specified in paragraph (d)(3) of this section on its timely filed original Federal tax return for the applicable taxable year, the taxpayer must make the election specified in paragraph (d)(3) of this section for the applicable taxable year by filing an amended Federal tax return for the applicable taxable year on or before 180 days from the due date including extensions of the taxpayer's Federal tax return for the applicable taxable year, notwithstanding that the taxpayer may not have extended the due date. (3) Optional application of TD 9564. Except for section 1.162-3T(e), a taxpayer may choose to apply § 1.162-3T as contained in TD 9564 (76 FR 81060) December 27, 2011, to amounts paid or incurred (to acquire or produce property) in taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and before January 1, 2014. A taxpayer may choose to apply section 1.162-3T(e) (the optional method of accounting for rotable and temporary spare parts) as contained in TD 9564 (76 FR 81060) December 27, 2011, to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and before January 1, 2014. § 1.162-3T [Removed] Par. 3. Section 1.162-3T is removed. Par. 4. Section 1.162-4 is revised to read as follows: § 1.162-4 Repairs. (a) In general. A taxpayer may deduct amounts paid for repairs and maintenance to tangible property if the amounts paid are not otherwise required to be capitalized. For the election to capitalize amounts paid for repair and maintenance consistent with the taxpayer's books and records, see § 1.263(a)-3(n). (b) Accounting method changes. A change to comply with this section is a change in method of accounting to which the provisions of sections 446 and 481 and the accompanying regulations apply. A taxpayer seeking to change to a method of accounting permitted in this section must secure the consent of the Commissioner in accordance with § 1.446-1(e) and follow the administrative procedures issued under § 1.446-1(e)(3)(ii) for obtaining the Commissioner's consent to change its accounting method. (c) Effective/applicability date -- (1) In general. This section applies to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. Except as provided in paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3) of this section, § 1.162-4 as contained in 26 CFR part 1 edition revised as of April 1, 2011, applies to taxable years beginning before January 1, 2014. (2) Early application of this section. A taxpayer may choose to apply this section to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. (3) Optional application of TD 9564. A taxpayer may choose to apply § 1.162-4T as contained in TD 9564 (76 FR 81060), December 27, 2011, to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and before January 1, 2014. § 1.162-4T [Removed] Par. 5. Section 1.162-4T is removed. Par. 6. Section 1.162-11 is amended by: 1. Revising paragraph (b). 2. Removing paragraphs (c) and (d). The revision reads as follows: § 1.162-11 Rentals. * * * * * (b) Improvements by lessee on lessor's property -- (1) In general. The cost to a taxpayer of erecting buildings or making permanent improvements on property of which the taxpayer is a lessee is a capital expenditure. For the rules regarding improvements to leased property when the improvements are tangible property, see § 1.263(a)-3(f). For the rules regarding depreciation or amortization deductions for leasehold improvements, see § 1.167(a)-4. (2) Effective/applicability date -- (i) In general. This paragraph (b) applies to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. Except as provided in paragraphs (b)(2)(ii) and (b)(2)(iii) of this section, § 1.162-11(b) as contained in 26 CFR part 1 edition revised as of April 1, 2011, applies to taxable years beginning before January 1, 2014. (ii) Early application of this paragraph. A taxpayer may choose to apply this paragraph (b) to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. (iii) Optional application of TD 9564. A taxpayer may choose to apply § 1.162-11T(b) as contained in TD 9564 (76 FR 81060) December 27, 2011, to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and before January 1, 2014. § 1.162-11T [Removed] Par. 7. Section 1.162-11T is removed. Par. 8. Section 1.165-2 is amended by: 1. Revising paragraphs (c) and (d). 2. Removing paragraph (e). 3. The revisions read as follows: § 1.165-2 Obsolescence of nondepreciable property. * * * * * (c) Cross references. For the allowance under section 165(a) of losses arising from the permanent withdrawal of depreciable property from use in the trade or business or in the production of income, see § 1.167(a)-8, § 1.168(i)-1, § 1.168(i)-1T, § 1.168(i)-8T, Prop. Reg. § 1.168(i)-1 (September 19, 2013, or Prop. Reg. § 1.168(i)-8 (September 19, 2013), as applicable. For provisions respecting the obsolescence of depreciable property for which depreciation is determined under section 167 (but not under section 168, section 1400I, section 1400L(c), section 168 prior to its amendment by the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Public Law 99-514 (100 Stat. 2121 (1986)), or under an additional first year depreciation deduction provision of the Internal Revenue Code (for example, section 168(k) through (n), 1400L(b), or 1400N(d))), see § 1.167(a)-9. For the allowance of casualty losses, see § 1.165-7. (d) Effective/applicability date -- (1) In general. This section applies to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. Except as provided in paragraphs (d)(2) and (d)(3) of this section, § 1.165-2 as contained in 26 CFR part 1 edition revised as of April 1, 2011, applies to taxable years beginning before January 1, 2014. (2) Early application of § 1.165-2(c). A taxpayer may choose to apply paragraph (c) of this section to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. (3) Optional application of TD 9564. A taxpayer may choose to apply § 1.165-2T as contained in TD 9564 (76 FR 81060) December 27, 2011, to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and before January 1, 2014. § 1.165-2T [Removed] Par. 9. Section 1.165-2T is removed. Par. 10. Section 1.167(a)-4 is revised to read as follows: § 1.167(a)-4 Leased property. (a) In general. Capital expenditures made by either a lessee or lessor for the erection of a building or for other permanent improvements on leased property are recovered by the lessee or lessor under the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code (Code) applicable to the cost recovery of the building or improvements, if subject to depreciation or amortization, without regard to the period of the lease. For example, if the building or improvement is property to which section 168 applies, the lessee or lessor determines the depreciation deduction for the building or improvement under section 168. See section 168(i)(8)(A). If the improvement is property to which section 167 or section 197 applies, the lessee or lessor determines the depreciation or amortization deduction for the improvement under section 167 or section 197, as applicable. (b) Effective/applicability date -- (1) In general. Except as provided in paragraph (b)(2) or (b)(3) of this section, this section applies to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. (2) Application of this section to leasehold improvements placed in service after December 31, 1986, in taxable years beginning before January 1, 2014. For leasehold improvements placed in service after December 31, 1986, in taxable years beginning before January 1, 2014, a taxpayer may -- (i) Apply the provisions of this section; or (ii) Depreciate any leasehold improvement to which section 168 applies under the provisions of section 168 and depreciate or amortize any leasehold improvement to which section 168 does not apply under the provisions of the Code that are applicable to the cost recovery of that leasehold improvement, without regard to the period of the lease. (3) Application of this section to leasehold improvements placed in service before January 1, 1987. Section 1.167(a)-4 as contained in 26 CFR part 1 edition revised as of April 1, 2011, applies to leasehold improvements placed in service before January 1, 1987. (4) Change in method of accounting. Except as provided in § 1.446-1(e)(2)(ii)(d)(3)(i), a change to comply with this section for depreciable assets placed in service in a taxable year ending on or after December 30, 2003, is a change in method of accounting to which the provisions of section 446(e) and the regulations under section 446(e) apply. Except as provided in § 1.446-1(e)(2)(ii)(d)(3)(i), a taxpayer also may treat a change to comply with this section for depreciable assets placed in service in a taxable year ending before December 30, 2003, as a change in method of accounting to which the provisions of section 446(e) and the regulations under section 446(e) apply. § 1.167(a)-4T [Removed] Par. 11. Section 1.167(a)-4T is removed. Par. 12. Section 1.167(a)-7 is amended by: 1. Revising paragraphs (e) and (f). 2. Removing paragraph (g). The revisions read as follows: § 1.167(a)-7 Accounting for depreciable property. * * * * * (e) Applicability. Paragraphs (a), (b), and (d) of this section apply to property for which depreciation is determined under section 167 (but not under section 168, section 1400I, section 1400L(c), section 168 prior to its amendment by the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Public Law 99-514 (100 Stat. 2121 (1986)), or under an additional first year depreciation deduction provision of the Internal Revenue Code (for example, section 168(k) through (n), 1400L(b), or 1400N(d))). Paragraph (c) of this section does not apply to general asset accounts as provided by section 168(i)(4), § 1.168(i)-1, § 1.168(i)-1T and Prop. Reg. § 1.168(i)-1 (September 19, 2013). (f) Effective/applicability date -- (1) In general. This section applies to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. Except as provided in paragraphs (f)(2) and (f)(3) of this section, § 1.167(a)-7 as contained in 26 CFR part 1 edition revised as of April 1, 2011, applies to taxable years beginning before January 1, 2014. (2) Early application of § 1.167(a)-7(e). A taxpayer may choose to apply paragraph (e) of this section to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. (3) Optional application of TD 9564. A taxpayer may choose to apply § 1.167(a)-7T as contained in TD 9564 (76 FR 81060) December 27, 2011, to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and before January 1, 2014. § 1.167(a)-7T [Removed] Par. 13. Section 1.167(a)-7T is removed. Par. 14. Section 1.167(a)-8 is amended by: 1. Revising paragraphs (g) and (h). 2. Removing paragraph (i). The revisions read as follows: § 1.167(a)-8 Retirements. * * * * * (g) Applicability. This section applies to property for which depreciation is determined under section 167 (but not under section 168, section 1400I, section 1400L(c), section 168 prior to its amendment by the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Public Law 99-514 (100 Stat. 2121(1986)), or under an additional first year depreciation deduction provision of the Internal Revenue Code (for example, section 168(k) through (n), 1400L(b), or 1400N(d))). (h) Effective/applicability date -- (1) In general. This section applies to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. Except as provided in paragraphs (h)(2) and (h)(3) of this section, § 1.167(a)-8 as contained in 26 CFR part 1 edition revised as of April 1, 2011, applies to taxable years beginning before January 1, 2014. (2) Early application of § 1.167(a)-8(g). A taxpayer may choose to apply paragraph (g) of this section to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. (3) Optional application of TD 9564. A taxpayer may choose to apply § 1.167(a)-8T as contained in TD 9564 (76 FR 81060) December 27, 2011, to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and before January 1, 2014. § 1.167(a)-8T [Removed] Par. 15. Section 1.167(a)-8T is removed. Par. 16. Section 1.168(i)-7 is added to read as follows: § 1.168(i)-7 Accounting for MACRS property. (a) In general. A taxpayer may account for MACRS property (as defined in § 1.168(b)-1(a)(2)) by treating each individual asset as an account (a "single asset account" or an "item account") or by combining two or more assets in a single account (a "multiple asset account" or a "pool"). A taxpayer may establish as many accounts for MACRS property as the taxpayer wants. This section does not apply to assets included in general asset accounts. For rules applicable to general asset accounts, see § 1.168(i)-1, § 1.168(i)-1T, or Prop. Reg. § 1.168(i)-1 (September 19, 2013), as applicable. (b) Required use of single asset accounts. A taxpayer must account for an asset in a single asset account if the taxpayer uses the asset both in a trade or business (or for the production of income) and in a personal activity, or if the taxpayer places in service and disposes of the asset during the same taxable year. Also, if general asset account treatment for an asset terminates under § 1.168(i)-1T(c)(1)(ii)(A), (e)(3)(iii), (e)(3)(vii), (g), or (h)(2) or Prop. Reg. § 1.168(i)-1(c)(1)(ii)(A), (e)(3)(iii), (e)(3)(vii), (g), or (h)(2) (September 19, 2013), as applicable, the taxpayer must account for the asset in a single asset account beginning in the taxable year in which the general asset account treatment for the asset terminates. If a taxpayer accounts for an asset in a multiple asset account or a pool and the taxpayer disposes of the asset, the taxpayer must account for the asset in a single asset account beginning in the taxable year in which the disposition occurs. See § 1.168(i)-8T(g)(2)(i) or Prop. Reg. § 1.168(i)-8(h)(2)(i) (September 19, 2013), as applicable. If a taxpayer disposes of a component of a larger asset and the unadjusted depreciable basis of the disposed of component is included in the unadjusted depreciable basis of the larger asset, the taxpayer must account for the component in a single asset account beginning in the taxable year in which the disposition occurs. See Prop. Reg. § 1.168(i)-8(g)(3)(i) (September 19, 2013). (c) Establishment of multiple asset accounts or pools -- (1) Assets eligible for multiple asset accounts or pools. Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, assets that are subject to either the general depreciation system of section 168(a) or the alternative depreciation system of section 168(g) may be accounted for in one or more multiple asset accounts or pools. (2) Grouping assets in multiple asset accounts or pools -- (i) General rules. Assets that are eligible to be grouped into a single multiple asset account or pool may be divided into more than one multiple asset account or pool. Each multiple asset account or pool must include only assets that -- (A) Have the same applicable depreciation method; (B) Have the same applicable recovery period; (C) Have the same applicable convention; and (D) Are placed in service by the taxpayer in the same taxable year. (ii) Special rules. In addition to the general rules in paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section, the following rules apply when establishing multiple asset accounts or pools -- (A) Assets subject to the mid-quarter convention may only be grouped into a multiple asset account or pool with assets that are placed in service in the same quarter of the taxable year; (B) Assets subject to the mid-month convention may only be grouped into a multiple asset account or pool with assets that are placed in service in the same month of the taxable year; (C) Passenger automobiles for which the depreciation allowance is limited under section 280F(a) must be grouped into a separate multiple asset account or pool; (D) Assets not eligible for any additional first year depreciation deduction (including assets for which the taxpayer elected not to deduct the additional first year depreciation) provided by, for example, section 168(k) through (n), 1400L(b), or 1400N(d), must be grouped into a separate multiple asset account or pool; (E) Assets eligible for the additional first year depreciation deduction may only be grouped into a multiple asset account or pool with assets for which the taxpayer claimed the same percentage of the additional first year depreciation (for example, 30 percent, 50 percent, or 100 percent); (F) Except for passenger automobiles described in paragraph (c)(2)(ii)(C) of this section, listed property (as defined in section 280F(d)(4)) must be grouped into a separate multiple asset account or pool; (G) Assets for which the depreciation allowance for the placed-in-service year is not determined by using an optional depreciation table (for further guidance, see section 8 of Rev. Proc. 87-57, 1987-2 CB 687, 693 (see § 601.601(d)(2) of this chapter)) must be grouped into a separate multiple asset account or pool; and (H) Mass assets (as defined in § 1.168(i)-8T(b)(2) or Prop. Reg. § 1.168(i)-8(b)(3) (September 19, 2013), as applicable) that are or will be subject to § 1.168(i)-8T(f)(2)(iii) or Prop. Reg. § 1.168(i)-8(g)(2)(iii) (September 19, 2013), as applicable,(disposed of or converted mass asset is identified by a mortality dispersion table) must be grouped into a separate multiple asset account or pool. (d) Cross references. See § 1.167(a)-7(c) for the records to be maintained by a taxpayer for each account. In addition, see § 1.168(i)-1(l)(3) for the records to be maintained by a taxpayer for each general asset account. (e) Effective/applicability date -- (1) In general. This section applies to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. (2) Early application of this section. A taxpayer may choose to apply the provisions of this section to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012. (3) Optional application of TD 9564. A taxpayer may choose to apply § 1.168(i)-7T as contained in TD 9564 (76 FR 81060) December 27, 2011, to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2012, and before January 1, 2014. (4) Change in method of accounting. A change to comply with this section for depreciable assets placed in service in a taxable year ending on or after December 30, 2003, is a change in method of accounting to which the provisions of section 446(e) and the regulations under section 446(e) apply. A taxpayer also may treat a change to comply with this section for depreciable assets placed in service in a taxable year ending before December 30, 2003, as a change in method of accounting to which the provisions of section 446(e) and the regulations under section 446(e) apply. § 1.168(i)-7T [Removed] Par. 17. Section 1.168(i)-7T is removed. Par. 18. Section 1.263(a)-0 is amended by: 1. The table of contents introductory text is revised. § 1.263(a)-0 Outline of regulations under section 263(a). This section lists the paragraphs in §§ 1.263(a)-1 through 1.263(a)-3 and § 1.263(a)-6. § 1.263(a)-1 Capital expenditures; in general. (a) General rule for capital expenditures. (a) Overview. (a) Overview. (a) In general. Par. 19. Section 1.263(a)-0T is removed. Par. 20. Section 1.263(a)-1 is revised to read as follows: § 1.263(a)-1 Capital expenditures; in general. (a) General rule for capital expenditures. Except as provided in chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code, no deduction is allowed for -- (1) Any amount paid for new buildings or for permanent improvements or betterments made to increase the value of any property or estate; or (2) Any amount paid in restoring property or in making good the exhaustion thereof for which an allowance is or has been made. (b) Coordination with other provisions of the Internal Revenue Code. Nothing in this section changes the treatment of any amount that is specifically provided for under any provision of the Internal Revenue Code or the Treasury Regulations other than section 162(a) or section 212 and the regulations under those sections. For example, see section 263A, which requires taxpayers to capitalize the direct and allocable indirect costs to property produced by the taxpayer and property acquired for resale. See also section 195 requiring taxpayers to capitalize certain costs as start-up expenditures. (c) Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply: (1) Amount paid. In the case of a taxpayer using an accrual method of accounting, the terms amount paid and payment mean a liability incurred (within the meaning of § 1.446-1(c)(1)(ii)). A liability may not be taken into account under this section prior to the taxable year during which the liability is incurred. (2) Produce means construct, build, install, manufacture, develop, create, raise, or grow. This definition is intended to have the same meaning as the definition used for purposes of section 263A(g)(1) and § 1.263A-2(a)(1)(i), except that improvements are excluded from the definition in this paragraph (c)(2) and are separately defined and addressed in § 1.263(a)-3. (d) Examples of capital expenditures. The following amounts paid are examples of capital expenditures: (1) An amount paid to acquire or produce a unit of real or personal tangible property. See § 1.263(a)-2. (2) An amount paid to improve a unit of real or personal tangible property. See § 1.263(a)-3. (3) An amount paid to acquire or create intangibles. See § 1.263(a)-4. (4) An amount paid or incurred to facilitate an acquisition of a trade or business, a change in capital structure of a business entity, and certain other transactions. See § 1.263(a)-5. (5) An amount paid to acquire or create interests in land, such as easements, life estates, mineral interests, timber rights, zoning variances, or other interests in land. (6) An amount assessed and paid under an agreement between bondholders or shareholders of a corporation to be used in a reorganization of the corporation or voluntary contributions by shareholders to the capital of the corporation for any corporate purpose. See section 118 and § 1.118-1. (7) An amount paid by a holding company to carry out a guaranty of dividends at a specified rate on the stock of a subsidiary corporation for the purpose of securing new capital for the subsidiary and increasing the value of its stockholdings in the subsidiary. This amount must be added to the cost of the stock in the subsidiary. (e) Amounts paid to sell property -- (1) In general. Commissions and other transaction costs paid to facilitate the sale of property are not currently deductible under section 162 or 212. Instead, the amounts are capitalized costs that reduce the amount realized in the taxable year in which the sale occurs or are taken into account in the taxable year in which the sale is abandoned if a deduction is permissible. These amounts are not added to the basis of the property sold or treated as an intangible asset under § 1.263(a)-4. See § 1.263(a)-5(g) for the treatment of amounts paid to facilitate the disposition of assets that constitute a trade or business. (2) Dealer in property. In the case of a dealer in property, amounts paid to facilitate the sale of such property are treated as ordinary and necessary business expenses. (3) Examples. The following examples, which assume the sale is not an installment sale under section 453, illustrate the rules of this paragraph (e): Example 1. Sales costs of real property. A owns a parcel of real estate. A sells the real estate and pays legal fees, recording fees, and sales commissions to facilitate the sale. A must capitalize the fees and commissions and, in the taxable year of the sale, must reduce the amount realized from the sale of the real estate by the fees and commissions. Example 2. Sales costs of dealers. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that A is a dealer in real estate. The commissions and fees paid to facilitate the sale of the real estate may be deducted as ordinary and necessary business expenses under section 162. Example 3. Sales costs of personal property used in a trade or business. B owns a truck for use in B's trade or business. B decides to sell the truck on November 15, Year 1. B pays for an appraisal to determine a reasonable asking price. On February 15, Year 2, B sells the truck to C. In Year 1, B must capitalize the amount paid to appraise the truck, and in Year 2, must reduce the amount realized from the sale of the truck by the amount paid for the appraisal. Example 4. Costs of abandoned sale of personal property used in a trade or business. Assume the same facts as in Example 3, except that, instead of selling the truck on February 15, Year 2, B decides on that date not to sell the truck and takes the truck off the market. In Year 1, B must capitalize the amount paid to appraise the truck. However, B may recognize the amount paid to appraise the truck as a loss under section 165 in Year 2, the taxable year when the sale is abandoned. Example 5. Sales costs of personal property not used in a trade or business. Assume the same facts as in Example 3, except that B does not use the truck in B's trade or business but instead uses it for personal purposes. In Year 1, B must capitalize the amount paid to appraise the truck, and in Year 2, must reduce the amount realized from the sale of the truck by the amount paid for the appraisal. Example 6. Costs of abandoned sale of personal property not used in a trade or business. Assume the same facts as in Example 5, except that, instead of selling the truck on February 15, Year 2, B decides on that date not to sell the truck and takes the truck off the market. In Year 1, B must capitalize the amount paid to appraise the truck. Although B abandons the sale in Year 2, B may not treat the amount paid to appraise the truck as a loss under section 165 because the truck was not used in B's trade or business or in a transaction entered into for profit. (f) De minimis safe harbor election -- (1) In general. Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (f)(2) of this section, a taxpayer electing to apply the de minimis safe harbor under this paragraph (f) may not capitalize under § 1.263(a)-2(d)(1) or § 1.263(a)-3(d) any amount paid in the taxable year for the acquisition or production of a unit of tangible property nor treat as a material or supply under § 1.162-3(a) any amount paid in the taxable year for tangible property if the amount specified under this paragraph (f)(1) meets the requirements of paragraph (f)(1)(i) or (f)(1)(ii) of this section. But see section 263A and the regulations under section 263A, which require taxpayers to capitalize the direct and allocable indirect costs of property produced by the taxpayer (for example, property improved by the taxpayer) and property acquired for resale. (i) Taxpayer with applicable financial statement. A taxpayer electing to apply the de minimis safe harbor may not capitalize under § 1.263(a)-2(d)(1) or § 1.263(a)-3(d) nor treat as a material or supply under § 1.162-3(a) any amount paid in the taxable year for property described in paragraph (f)(1) of this section if -- (A) The taxpayer does not have an applicable financial statement (as defined in paragraph (f)(4) of this section); (B) The taxpayer has at the beginning of the taxable year accounting procedures treating as an expense for non-tax purposes-- (1) Amounts paid for property costing less than a specified dollar amount; or (2) Amounts paid for property with an economic useful life (as defined in § 1.162-3(c)(3)) of 12 months or less; (C) The taxpayer treats the amount paid for the property as an expense on its books and records in accordance with these accounting procedures; and (D) The amount paid for the property does not exceed $500 per invoice (or per item as substantiated by the invoice) or other amount as identified in published guidance in the Federal Register or in the Internal Revenue Bulletin (see § 601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b) of this chapter). (iii) Taxpayer with both an applicable financial statement and a non-qualifying financial statement. For purposes of this paragraph (f)(1), if a taxpayer has an applicable financial statement defined in paragraph (f)(4) of this section in addition to a financial statement that does not meet requirements of paragraph (f)(4) of this section, the taxpayer must meet the requirements of paragraph (f)(1)(i) of this section to qualify to elect the de minimis safe harbor under this paragraph (f). (2) Exceptions to de minimis safe harbor. The de minimis safe harbor in paragraph (f)(1) of this section does not apply to the following: (i) Amounts paid for property that is or is intended to be included in inventory property; (ii) Amounts paid for land; (iii) Amounts paid for rotable, temporary, and standby emergency spare parts that the taxpayer elects to capitalize and depreciate under § 1.162-3(d); and (iv) Amounts paid for rotable and temporary spare parts that the taxpayer accounts for under the optional method of accounting for rotable parts pursuant to § 1.162-3(e). (3) Additional rules -- (i) Transaction and other additional costs. A taxpayer electing to apply the de minimis safe harbor under paragraph (f)(1) of this section is not required to include in the cost of the tangible property the additional costs of acquiring or producing such property if these costs are not included in the same invoice as the tangible property. However, the taxpayer electing to apply the de minimis safe harbor under paragraph (f)(1) of this section must include in the cost of such property all additional costs (for example, delivery fees, installation services, or similar costs) if these additional costs are included on the same invoice with the tangible property. For purposes of this paragraph, if the invoice includes amounts paid for multiple tangible properties and such invoice includes additional invoice costs related to these multiple properties, then the taxpayer must allocate the additional invoice costs to each property using a reasonable method, and each property, including allocable labor and overhead, must meet the requirements of paragraph (f)(1)(i) or paragraph (f)(1)(ii) of this section, whichever is applicable. Reasonable allocation methods include, but are not limited to specific identification, a pro rata allocation, or a weighted average method based on the property's relative cost. For purposes of this paragraph (f)(3)(i), additional costs consist of the costs of facilitating the acquisition or production of such tangible property under § 1.263(a)-2(f) and the costs for work performed prior to the date that the tangible property is placed in service under § 1.263(a)-2(d). (ii) Materials and supplies. If a taxpayer elects to apply the de minimis safe harbor provided under this paragraph (f), then the taxpayer must also apply the de minimis safe harbor to amounts paid for all materials and supplies (as defined under § 1.162-3) that meet the requirements of § 1.263(a)-1(f). See paragraph (f)(3)(iv) of this section for treatment of materials and supplies under the de minimis safe harbor. (iii) Sale or disposition. Property to which a taxpayer applies the de minimis safe harbor contained in this paragraph (f) is not treated upon sale or other disposition as a capital asset under section 1221 or as property used in the trade or business under section 1231. (iv) Treatment of de minimis amounts. An amount paid for property to which a taxpayer properly applies the de minimis safe harbor contained in this paragraph (f) is not treated as a capital expenditure under § 1.263(a)-2(d)(1) or § 1.263(a)-3(d) or as a material and supply under § 1.162-3, and may be deducted under § 1.162-1 in the taxable year the amount is paid provided the amount otherwise constitutes an ordinary and necessary expenses incurred in carrying on a trade or business. (v) Coordination with section 263A. Amounts paid for tangible property described in paragraph (f)(1) of this section may be subject to capitalization under section 263A if the amounts paid for tangible property comprise the direct or allocable indirect costs of other property produced by the taxpayer or property acquired for resale. See, for example, § 1.263A-1(e)(3)(ii)(R) requiring taxpayers to capitalize the cost of tools and equipment allocable to property produced or property acquired for resale. (vi) Written accounting procedures for groups of entities. If the taxpayer's financial results are reported on the applicable financial statement (as defined in paragraph (f)(4) of this section) for a group of entities then, for purposes of paragraph (f)(1)(i)(A) of this section, the group's applicable financial statement may be treated as the applicable financial statement of the taxpayer, and for purposes of paragraphs (f)(1)(i)(B) and (f)(1)(i)(C) of this section, the written accounting procedures provided for the group and utilized for the group's applicable financial statement may be treated as the written accounting procedures of the taxpayer. (vii) Combined expensing accounting procedures. For purposes of paragraphs (f)(1)(i) and (f)(1)(ii) of this section, if the taxpayer has, at the beginning of the taxable year accounting procedures treating as an expense for non-tax purposes (1) amounts paid for property costing less than a specified dollar amount; and (2) amounts paid for property with an economic useful life (as defined in § 1.162-3(c)(3)) of 12 months or less, then a taxpayer electing to apply the de minimis safe harbor under this paragraph (f) must apply the provisions of this paragraph (f) to amounts qualifying under either accounting procedure. (4) Definition of applicable financial statement. For purposes of this paragraph (f), the taxpayer's applicable financial statement (AFS) is the taxpayer's financial statement listed in paragraphs (f)(4)(i) through (iii) of this section that has the highest priority (including within paragraph (f)(4)(ii) of this section). The financial statements are, in descending priority -- (i) A financial statement required to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) (the 10-K or the Annual Statement to Shareholders); (ii) A certified audited financial statement that is accompanied by the report of an independent certified public accountant (or in the case of a foreign entity, by the report of a similarly qualified independent professional) that is used for -- (A) Credit purposes; (B) Reporting to shareholders, partners, or similar persons; or (C) Any other substantial non-tax purpose; or (iii) A financial statement (other than a tax return) required to be provided to the federal or a state government or any federal or state agency (other than the SEC or the Internal Revenue Service). (5) Time and manner of election. A taxpayer that makes the election under this paragraph (f) must make the election for all amounts paid during the taxable year for property described in paragraph (f)(1) of this section and meeting the requirements of paragraph (f)(1)(i) or paragraph (f)(1)(ii) of this section, as applicable. A taxpayer makes the election by attaching a statement to the taxpayer's timely filed original Federal tax return (including extensions) for the taxable year in which these amounts are paid. See §§ 301.9100-1 through 301.9100-3 of this chapter for the provisions governing extensions of time to make regulatory elections. The statement must be titled "Section 1.263(a)-1(f) de minimis safe harbor election" and include the taxpayer's name, address, taxpayer identification number, and a statement that the taxpayer is making the de minimis safe harbor election under § 1.263(a)-1(f). In the case of a consolidated group filing a consolidated income tax return, the election is made for each member of the consolidated group by the common parent, and the statement must also include the names and taxpayer identification numbers of each member for which the election is made. In the case of an S corporation or a partnership, the election is made by the S corporation or the partnership and not by the shareholders or partners. An election may not be made through the filing of an application for change in accounting method or, before obtaining the Commissioner's consent to make a late election, by filing an amended Federal tax return. A taxpayer may not revoke an election made under this paragraph (f). The manner of electing the de minimis safe harbor under this paragraph (f) may be modified through guidance of general applicability (see §§ 601.601(d)(2) and 601.602 of this chapter).
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