Publication 225
taxmap/pubs/p225-015.htm#en_us_publink1000217966A capital expense is a payment, or a debt incurred, for the acquisition,
improvement, or restoration of an asset that is expected to last more than one
year. You include the expense in the basis of the asset. Uniform capitalization
rules also require you to capitalize or include in inventory certain other
expenses. See
chapters 2 and
6.
Capital expenses are generally not deductible, but they may be
depreciable. However, you can elect to deduct certain capital expenses, such as
the following.
Generally, the costs of the following items, including the costs
of material, hired labor, and installation, are capital expenses.
- Land and buildings.
- Additions, alterations, and improvements to buildings, etc.
- Cars and trucks.
- Equipment and machinery.
- Fences.
- Draft, breeding, sport, and dairy livestock.
- Repairs to machinery, equipment, trucks, and cars that prolong
their useful life, increase their value, or adapt them to different use.
- Water wells, including drilling and equipping costs.
- Land preparation costs, such as:
- Clearing land for farming,
- Leveling and conditioning land,
- Purchasing and planting trees,
- Building irrigation canals and ditches,
- Laying irrigation pipes,
- Installing drain tile,
- Modifying channels or streams,
- Constructing earthen, masonry, or concrete tanks, reservoirs,
or dams, and
- Building roads.
taxmap/pubs/p225-015.htm#en_us_publink1000217967For tax years beginning in 2010, you can elect to deduct up to
$10,000 of business start-up costs and $5,000 of organizational costs paid or
incurred after October 22, 2004. The $10,000 deduction is reduced by the amount
your start-up costs exceed $60,000. The $5,000 deduction is reduced by the
amount your total organizational costs exceed $50,000. Any remaining costs must
be amortized. See
chapter 7.
You elect to deduct start-up or organizational costs by claiming
the deduction on the income tax return filed by the due date (including
extensions) for the tax year in which the active trade or business begins.
However, if you timely filed your return for the year without making the
election, you can still make the election by filing an amended return within 6
months of the due date of the return (excluding extensions). Clearly indicate
the election on your amended return and write "Filed pursuant to section
301.9100-2" at the top of the amended return. File the amended return at the
same address you filed the original return. The election applies when figuring
taxable income for the current tax year and all subsequent years.
You can choose to forgo the election by clearly electing to capitalize
your start-up or organizational costs on a income tax return filed by the due
date (including extensions) for the tax year in which the active trade or
business begins. For more information about start-up and organizational costs,
see
chapter 7.
taxmap/pubs/p225-015.htm#en_us_publink1000217968The uniform capitalization rules generally require you to capitalize
expenses incurred in producing plants. However, except for certain taxpayers
required to use an accrual method of accounting, the capitalization rules do not
apply to plants with a preproductive period of 2 years or less. For more
information, see
Uniform Capitalization Rules in
chapter 6.
taxmap/pubs/p225-015.htm#en_us_publink1000217969Capitalize the cost of acquiring timber. Do not include the cost
of land in the cost of the timber. You must generally capitalize direct costs
incurred in reforestation. However, you can elect to deduct some forestation and
reforestation costs. See
Forestation and reforestation costs next. Reforestation costs include the following.
- Site preparation costs, such as:
- Girdling,
- Applying herbicide,
- Baiting rodents, and
- Clearing and controlling brush.
- The cost of seed or seedlings.
- Labor and tool expenses.
- Depreciation on equipment used in planting or seeding.
- Costs incurred in replanting to replace lost seedlings.
You can choose to capitalize certain indirect reforestation
costs.
These capitalized amounts are your basis for the timber. Recover
your basis when you sell the timber or take depletion allowances when you cut
the timber. See
Depletion in
chapter 7.
taxmap/pubs/p225-015.htm#en_us_publink1000217970You can elect to deduct up to $10,000 ($5,000 if married filing
separately; $0 for a trust) of qualifying reforestation costs paid or incurred
after October 22, 2004, for each qualified timber property. Any remaining costs
can be amortized over an 84-month period. See
chapter 7. If you make an election to deduct or amortize qualifying reforestation
costs, you should create and maintain separate timber accounts for each
qualified timber property. The accounts should include all reforestation
treatments and the dates they were applied. Any qualified timber property that
is subject to the deduction or amortization election cannot be included in any
other timber account for which depletion is allowed. The timber account should
be maintained until the timber is disposed of. For more information, see Notice
2006-47, 2006-20 I.R.B. 892, available at
www.irs.gov/irb/2006-20_IRB/ar11.html.
You elect to deduct forestation and reforestation costs by claiming
the deduction on the income tax return filed by the due date (including
extensions) for the tax year in which the expenses were paid or incurred. If you
are filing Form T (Timber), Forest Activities Schedule, also complete Form T
(Timber), Part IV. If you are not filing Form T (Timber), attach a statement to
your return with the following information.
- The unique stand identification numbers.
- The total number of acres reforested during the tax year.
- The nature of the reforestation treatments.
- The total amounts of the qualified reforestation expenditures
eligible to be amortized or deducted.
However, if you timely filed your return for the year without
making the election, you can still make the election by filing an amended return
within 6 months of the due date of the return (excluding extensions). Clearly
indicate the election on your amended return and write "Filed pursuant to
section 301.9100-2" at the top of the amended return. File the amended return at
the same address you filed the original return.
For more information about forestation and reforestation costs,
see
chapter 7.
 | For more information about timber, see Agriculture Handbook
Number 718, Forest Landowners' Guide to the Federal Income Tax. You can view
this publication on the Internet at
www.fs.fed.us/publications. |
taxmap/pubs/p225-015.htm#en_us_publink1000217972If you are in the business of planting and cultivating Christmas
trees to sell when they are more than 6 years old, capitalize expenses incurred
for planting and stump culture and add them to the basis of the standing trees.
Recover these expenses as part of your adjusted basis when you sell the standing
trees or as depletion allowances when you cut the trees. For more information,
see
Timber Depletion under
Depletion in
chapter 7.
You can deduct as business expenses the costs incurred for shearing
and basal pruning of these trees. Expenses incurred for silvicultural practices,
such as weeding or cleaning, and noncommercial thinning are also deductible as
business expenses.
Capitalize the cost of land improvements, such as road grading,
ditching, and fire breaks, that have a useful life beyond the tax year. If the
improvements do not have a determinable useful life, add their cost to the basis
of the land. The cost is recovered when you sell or otherwise dispose of it. If
the improvements have a determinable useful life, recover their cost through
depreciation. Capitalize the cost of equipment and other depreciable assets,
such as culverts and fences, to the extent you do not use them in planting
Christmas trees. Recover these costs through depreciation.