Instructions for Schedule C (Form 1040)
taxmap/instr/i1040sc-005.htm#TXMP1f49d9dbGenerally, you can use the cash method, accrual method, or any
other method permitted by the Internal Revenue Code. In all cases, the method
used must clearly reflect income. Unless you are a qualifying taxpayer or a
qualifying small business taxpayer (see the Part III instructions on page C-8),
you must use the accrual method for sales and purchases of inventory items.
Special rules apply to long-term contracts (see section 460 for details).
If you use the cash method, show all items of taxable income
actually or constructively received during the year (in cash, property, or
services). Income is constructively received when it is credited to your account
or set aside for you to use. Also, show amounts actually paid during the year
for deductible expenses. However, if the payment of an expenditure creates an
asset having a useful life that extends substantially beyond the close of the
year, it may not be deductible or may be deductible only in part for the year of
the payment. See chapter 1 of Pub. 535.
If you use the accrual method, report income when you earn it
and deduct expenses when you incur them even if you do not pay them during the
tax year. Accrual-basis taxpayers are put on a cash basis for deducting business
expenses owed to a related cash-basis taxpayer. Other rules determine the timing
of deductions based on economic performance. See Pub. 538.
To change your accounting method, you generally must file Form
3115. You may also have to make an adjustment to prevent amounts of income or
expense from being duplicated or omitted. This is called a section 481(a)
adjustment.
You change to the cash method of accounting and choose to account
for inventoriable items in the same manner as materials and supplies that are
not incidental. You accrued sales in 2009 for which you received payment in
2010. You must report those sales in both years as a result of changing your
accounting method and must make a section 481(a) adjustment to prevent
duplication of income.
A net negative section 481(a) adjustment is taken into account
entirely in the year of the change. A net positive section 481(a) adjustment is
generally taken into account over a period of 4 years. Include any net positive
section 481(a) adjustments on line 6. If the net section 481(a) adjustment is
negative, report it in Part V.