Publication 527
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219071Most business and investment property placed in service after
1986 is depreciated using MACRS.
This section explains how to determine which MACRS depreciation
system applies to your property. It also discusses other information you need to
know before you can figure depreciation under MACRS. This information includes
the property's:
- Recovery class,
- Applicable recovery period,
- Convention,
- Placed-in-service date,
- Basis for depreciation, and
- Depreciation method.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219072MACRS consists of two systems that determine how you depreciate
your property—the General Depreciation System (GDS) and the Alternative
Depreciation System (ADS). You must use GDS unless your are specifically
required by law to use ADS or you elect to use ADS.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219073You cannot use MACRS for certain personal property (such as furniture
or appliances) placed in service in your rental property in 2010 if it had been
previously placed in service before 1987 when MACRS became effective.
Generally, personal property is excluded from MACRS if you (or
a person related to you) owned or used it in 1986 or if your tenant is a person
(or someone related to the person) who owned or used it in 1986. However, the
property is not excluded if your 2010 deduction under MACRS (using a half-year
convention) is less than the deduction you would have under ACRS. For more
information, see
What Method Can You Use To Depreciate Your Property? in Publication 946, chapter 1.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219074If you choose, you can use the ADS method for most property.
Under ADS, you use the straight line method of depreciation.
The election of ADS for one item in a class of property generally
applies to all property in that class that is placed in service during the tax
year of the election. However, the election applies on a property-by-property
basis for residential rental property and nonresidential real property.
If you choose to use ADS for your residential rental property,
the election must be made in the first year the property is placed in service.
Once you make this election, you can never revoke it.
For property placed in service during 2010, you make the election
to use ADS by entering the depreciation on Form 4562, Part III, Section C, line
20c.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219075Each item of property that can be depreciated under MACRS is
assigned to a property class, determined by its class life. The property class
generally determines the depreciation method, recovery period, and convention.
The property classes under GDS are:
- 3-year property,
- 5-year property,
- 7-year property,
- 10-year property,
- 15-year property,
- 20-year property,
- Nonresidential real property, and
- Residential rental property.
Under MACRS, property that you placed in service during 2010
in your rental activities generally falls into one of the following classes.
- 5-year property.
This class includes computers and peripheral equipment, office
machinery (typewriters, calculators, copiers, etc.), automobiles, and light
trucks.
This class also includes appliances, carpeting, furniture,
etc., used in a residential rental real estate activity.
Depreciation on automobiles, other property used for transportation,
computers and related peripheral equipment, and property of a type generally
used for entertainment, recreation, or amusement is limited. See chapter 5 of
Publication 946.
- 7-year property.
This class includes office furniture and equipment (desks,
file cabinets, etc.). This class also includes any property that does not have a
class life and that has not been designated by law as being in any other class.
- 15-year property.
This class includes roads, fences, and shrubbery (if depreciable).
- Residential rental property.
This class includes any real property that is a rental building or structure
(including a mobile home) for which 80% or more of the gross rental income for
the tax year is from dwelling units. It does not include a unit in a hotel,
motel, inn, or other establishment where more than half of the units are used on
a transient basis. If you live in any part of the building or structure, the
gross rental income includes the fair rental value of the part you live in.
 | The other property classes do not generally apply to property
used in rental activities. These classes are not discussed in this publication.
See Publication 946 for more information. |
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219077The recovery period of property is the number of years over which
you recover its cost or other basis. The recovery periods are generally longer
under ADS than GDS.
The recovery period of property depends on its property class.
Under GDS, the recovery period of an asset is generally the same as its property
class.
Class lives and recovery periods for most assets are listed in
Appendix B
of Publication 946. See Table 2-1 for recovery periods of property commonly used
in residential rental activities.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000256191Shorter recovery periods are provided under MACRS for qualified
Indian reservation property placed in service on Indian reservations. For more
information, see chapter 4 of Publication 946.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219079Treat additions or improvements you make to your depreciable
rental property as separate property items for depreciation purposes.
The property class and recovery period of the addition or improvement
is the one that would apply to the original property if you had placed it in
service at the same time as the addition or improvement.
The recovery period for an addition or improvement to property
begins on the later of:
- The date the addition or improvement is placed in service,
or
- The date the property to which the addition or improvement
was made is placed in service.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219080You own a residential rental house that you have been renting
since 1986 and depreciating under ACRS. You built an addition onto the house and
placed it in service in 2010. You must use MACRS for the addition. Under GDS,
the addition is depreciated as residential rental property over 27.5 years.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219255 | Table 2-1. MACRS Recovery Periods for Property Used
in Rental Activities | | MACRS Recovery Period
| | | Type of Property | General Depreciation System | Alternative Depreciation System
| | | Computers and their peripheral equipment | 5 years | 5 years | | Office machinery, such as: Typewriters Calculators Copiers
| 5 years | 6 years | | | Automobiles | 5 years | 5 years | | | Light trucks | 5 years | 5 years | | Appliances, such as: Stoves Refrigerators
| 5 years | 9 years | | | Carpets | 5 years | 9 years | | | Furniture used in rental property | 5 years | 9 years | | Office furniture and equipment, such as: Desks Files
| 7 years | 10 years | | Any property that does not have a class life and that
has not been designated by law as
being in any other class
| 7 years | 12 years | | | Roads | 15 years | 20 years | | | Shrubbery | 15 years | 20 years | | | Fences | 15 years | 20 years | | Residential rental property (buildings or structures) and structural components
such as furnaces, waterpipes, venting, etc.
| 27.5 years | 40 years | | | Additions and improvements, such as a new roof | The same recovery period as that of the property to which
the addition or improvement is made, determined as if the property were placed
in service at the same time as the addition or improvement.
| |
|
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219083A convention is a method established under MACRS to set the beginning
and end of the recovery period. The convention you use determines the number of
months for which you can claim depreciation in the year you place property in
service and in the year you dispose of the property.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219084
A mid-month convention is used for all residential rental property and
nonresidential real property. Under this convention, you treat all property
placed in service, or disposed of, during any month as placed in service, or
disposed of, at the midpoint of that month.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219085A mid-quarter convention must be used if the mid-month convention
does not apply and the total depreciable basis of MACRS property placed in
service in the last 3 months of a tax year (excluding nonresidential real
property, residential rental property, and property placed in service and
disposed of in the same year) is more than 40% of the total basis of all such
property you place in service during the year.
Under this convention, you treat all property placed in service,
or disposed of, during any quarter of a tax year as placed in service, or
disposed of, at the midpoint of the quarter.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219086During the tax year, Tom Martin purchased the following items
to use in his rental property. He elects not to claim the special depreciation
allowance discussed earlier.
- A dishwasher for $400 that he placed in service in January.
- Used furniture for $100 that he placed in service in September.
- A refrigerator for $800 that he placed in service in October.
Tom uses the calendar year as his tax year. The total basis
of all property placed in service that year is $1,300. The $800 basis of the
refrigerator placed in service during the last 3 months of his tax year exceeds
$520 (40% × $1,300). Tom must use the mid-quarter convention instead of the
half-year convention for all three items.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219087
The half-year convention is used if neither the mid-quarter convention nor the
mid-month convention applies. Under this convention, you treat all property
placed in service, or disposed of, during a tax year as placed in service, or
disposed of, at the midpoint of that tax year.
If this convention applies, you deduct a half year of depreciation
for the first year and the last year that you depreciate the property. You
deduct a full year of depreciation for any other year during the recovery
period.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219088You can figure your MACRS depreciation deduction in one of two
ways. The deduction is substantially the same both ways. You can either:
- Actually compute the deduction using the depreciation method
and convention that apply over the recovery period of the property, or
- Use the percentage from the MACRS percentage tables, shown
later.
In this publication we will use the percentage tables. For instructions
on how to compute the deduction, see chapter 4 of Publication 946.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219089You must use the straight line method and a mid-month convention
for residential rental property. In the first year that you claim depreciation
for residential rental property, you can claim depreciation only for the number
of months the property is in use, and you must use the mid-month convention
(explained under
Conventions, earlier on this page).
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219090For property in the 5- or 7-year class, use the 200% declining
balance method and a half-year convention. However, in limited cases you must
use the mid-quarter convention, if it applies. For property in the 15-year
class, use the 150% declining balance method and a half-year convention.
You can also choose to use the 150% declining balance method
for property in the 5- or 7-year class. The choice to use the 150% method for
one item in a class of property applies to all property in that class that is
placed in service during the tax year of the election. You make this election on
Form 4562. In Part III, column (f), enter "150 DB." Once you make this election,
you cannot change to another method.
If you use either the 200% or 150% declining balance method,
you figure your deduction using the straight line method in the first tax year
that the straight line method gives you an equal or larger deduction.
You can also choose to use the straight line method with a half-year
or mid-quarter convention for 5-, 7-, or 15-year property. The choice to use the
straight line method for one item in a class of property applies to all property
in that class that is placed in service during the tax year of the election. You
elect the straight line method on Form 4562. In Part III, column (f), enter
"S/L." Once you make this election, you cannot change to another method.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219091You can use the percentages in Table 2-2 (on the next page) to
compute annual depreciation under MACRS. The tables show the percentages for the
first few years or until the change to the straight line method is made. See
Appendix A
of Publication 946 for complete tables. The percentages in Tables 2-2a, 2-2b,
and 2-2c make the change from declining balance to straight line in the year
that straight line will give a larger deduction.
If you elect to use the straight line method for 5-, 7-, or 15-year
property, or the 150% declining balance method for 5- or 7-year property, use
the tables in
Appendix A of Publication 946.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219092You must apply the table rates to your property's unadjusted
basis (defined below) each year of the recovery period.
Once you begin using a percentage table to figure depreciation,
you must continue to use it for the entire recovery period unless there is an
adjustment to the basis of your property for a reason other than:
- Depreciation allowed or allowable, or
- An addition or improvement that is depreciated as a separate
item of property.
If there is an adjustment for any reason other than (1) or (2),
for example, because of a deductible casualty loss, you can no longer use the
table. For the year of the adjustment and for the remaining recovery period,
figure depreciation using the property's adjusted basis at the end of the year
and the appropriate depreciation method, as explained earlier on this page under
Figuring Your Depreciation Deduction. See
Figuring the Deduction Without Using the Tables in Publication 946, chapter 4.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219093This is the same basis you would use to figure gain on a sale
(see
Basis of Depreciable Property
earlier), but without reducing your original basis by any MACRS depreciation
taken in earlier years.
However, you do reduce your original basis by other amounts claimed
on the property, including:
- Any amortization,
- Any section 179 deduction, and
- Any special depreciation allowance.
For more information, see Publication 946, chapter 4.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219096The percentages in these tables take into account the half-year
and mid-quarter conventions. Use Table 2-2a for 5-year property, Table 2-2b for
7-year property, and Table 2-2c for 15-year property. Use the percentage in the
second column (half-year convention) unless you are required to use the
mid-quarter convention
(explained earlier). If you must use the mid-quarter convention, use the column
that corresponds to the calendar year quarter in which you placed the property
in service.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219097You purchased a stove and refrigerator and placed them in service
in June. Your basis in the stove is $600 and your basis in the refrigerator is
$1,000. Both are 5-year property. Using the half-year convention column in Table
2-2a, the depreciation percentage for Year 1 is 20%. For that year your
depreciation deduction is $120 ($600 × .20) for the stove and $200
($1,000 × .20) for the refrigerator.
For Year 2, the depreciation percentage is 32%. That year's depreciation
deduction will be $192 ($600 × .32) for the stove and $320 ($1,000 ×
.32) for the refrigerator.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219098Assume the same facts as in
Example 1, except you buy the refrigerator in October instead of June.
Since the refrigerator was placed in service in the last 3 months of the tax
year, and its basis ($1,000) is more than 40% of the total basis of all property
placed in service during the year ($1,600 × .40 = $640), you are required
to use the mid-quarter convention to figure depreciation on both the stove and
refrigerator.
Because you placed the refrigerator in service in October, you
use the fourth quarter column of Table 2-2a and find the depreciation percentage
for Year 1 is 5%. Your depreciation deduction for the refrigerator is $50
($1,000 × .05).
Because you placed the stove in service in June, you use the
second quarter column of Table 2-2a and find the depreciation percentage for
Year 1 is 25%. For that year, your depreciation deduction for the stove is $150
($600 × .25).
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219099
Use this table when you are using the GDS 27.5 year option for residential
rental property. Find the row for the month that you placed the property in
service. Use the percentages listed for that month to figure your depreciation
deduction. The mid-month convention is taken into account in the percentages
shown in the table. Continue to use the same row (month) under the column for
the appropriate year.
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219100You purchased a single family rental house for $185,000 and placed
it in service on February 8. The sales contract showed that the building cost
$160,000 and the land cost $25,000. Your basis for depreciation is its original
cost, $160,000. This is the first year of service for your residential rental
property and you decide to use GDS which has a recovery period of 27.5 years.
Using Table 2-2d, you find that the percentage for property placed in service in
February of Year 1 is 3.182%. That year's depreciation deduction is $5,091
($160,000 × .03182).
taxmap/pubs/p527-005.htm#en_us_publink1000219101Table 2-1, earlier, shows the ADS recovery periods for property
used in rental activities.
See
Appendix B
in Publication 946 for other property. If your property is not listed in
Appendix B, it is considered to have no class life. Under ADS, personal
property with no class life is depreciated using a recovery period of 12 years.
Use the mid-month convention for residential rental property
and nonresidential real property. For all other property, use the half-year or
mid-quarter convention, as appropriate.
See Publication 946 for ADS depreciation tables.