Repair Regulations Are Finally Issued
The IRS issued long-awaited final and proposed regulations regarding the treatment of expenditures incurred in acquiring, producing, or improving tangible assets.
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The IRS issued long-awaited final and proposed regulations regarding the treatment of expenditures incurred in acquiring, producing, or improving tangible assets.
For purposes of the UNICAP costing rules under Sec. 263A, a sale is considered “on-site” only when the retail customer is physically present at the sales facility at some point during the sales transaction.
Accounting method changes adopted under the repair regulations will, in certain cases, affect the computation of other deductions or credits allowed under the Internal Revenue Code.
The late reinstatement of the R&D credit has a key effect on the U.S. GAAP treatment of the credit on businesses’ 2012 financial statements.
The American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 contains many provisions that are favorable to businesses, particularly in the fixed-asset area.
Temporary regulations on expenditures to acquire, improve, and maintain tangible property significantly modify previous guidance and earlier proposed regulations.
The IRS released technical amendments that delay the effective date of the temporary regulations it issued in December 2011 governing whether tangible property expenses could be deducted or had to be capitalized.
The IRS announced it is delaying the effective date of the temporary regulations it issued in Dec. 2011 governing whether tangible property expenses could be deducted or had to be capitalized.
Owners of real estate should consider the implications of the new regulations regarding tangible property and repair costs when engaging firms to perform cost-segregation studies.
An accrual-basis taxpayer could not deduct the California business privilege tax in the year it was paid, even though California treated the tax as being incurred in that year.
The AICPA recommended various changes and simplifications to the regulations regarding the treatment of expenditures incurred in selling, acquiring, producing, or improving tangible assets.
The IRS recently released the long-awaited tangible property regulations, commonly referred to as the “repair” regulations.
The IRS issued long-awaited regulations regarding the treatment of expenditures incurred in selling, acquiring, producing, or improving tangible assets, including rules on determining whether costs related to tangible property are deductible repairs or capital improvements.
In a change of position, the IRS ruled that accrual-method employers in certain circumstances can currently deduct accrued bonuses paid within 2½ months of year-end despite a contingency in the bonus plan that the employee be still employed on the date the bonus is paid.
The IRS issued long-awaited regulations regarding the treatment of expenditures incurred in selling, acquiring, producing, or improving tangible assets, including rules on determining whether costs related to tangible property are deductible repairs or capital improvements.
Do not forget to consider the tax accounting method rules (for accrued income or expense items) when dealing with Sec. 382.
When a taxpayer incurs success-based fees, the determination of whether the fees are currently deductible, as opposed to capitalizable, depends on whether the taxpayer can establish contemporaneously that all or a portion of the fees are allocable to activities that do not facilitate the transaction.
Treasury issued proposed regulations under Secs. 162 and 263(a) providing guidance on the capitalization and deduction of costs relating to tangible property. Included in these regulations are the “repair regulations,” a comprehensive set of rules for determining whether costs incurred for tangible property are deductible repairs or capital improvements.
The IRS recently re-proposed regulations under Sec. 263(a) regarding the treatment of amounts paid to acquire, produce, or improve tangible property.
Proposed regulations under Sec. 263(a) clarify the treatment of expenditures incurred in selling, acquiring, producing, or improving tangible assets.
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