Publication 946
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107616Words you may need to know (see Glossary)
- Adjusted basis
- Amortization
- Amount realized
- Basis
- Convention
- Disposition
- Exchange
- Placed in service
- Recovery period
- Section 1245 property
- Unadjusted basis
To make it easier to figure MACRS depreciation, you can group
separate properties into one or more general asset accounts (GAAs). You then can
depreciate all the properties in each account as a single item of property.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107617You cannot include property in a GAA if you use it in both a
personal activity and a trade or business (or for the production of income) in
the year in which you first place it in service. If property you included in a
GAA is later used in a personal activity, see
Terminating GAA Treatment, later.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107618For information on the GAA treatment of property that generates
foreign source income, see sections 1.168(i)-1(f) of the regulations.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107619Special rules apply to figuring depreciation for property in
a GAA for which the use changes during the tax year. Examples include a change
in use resulting in a shorter recovery period and/or more accelerated
depreciation method or a change in use resulting in a longer recovery period
and/or a less accelerated depreciation method. See sections 1.168(i)-1(h) and
1.168(i)-4 of the regulations.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107620Each GAA must include only property you placed in service in
the same year and that has the following in common.
- Asset class, if any.
- Recovery period.
- Depreciation method.
- Convention.
The following rules also apply when you establish a GAA.
- No asset class.
Properties without an asset class, but with the same depreciation
method, recovery period, and convention, can be grouped into the same GAA.
- Mid-quarter convention.
Property subject to the mid-quarter convention can only be
grouped into a GAA with property placed in service in the same quarter of the
tax year.
- Mid-month convention.
Property subject to the mid-month convention can only be grouped
into a GAA with property placed in service in the same month of the tax year.
- Passenger automobiles.
Passenger automobiles subject to the limits on passenger automobile
depreciation must be grouped into a separate GAA.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107621After you have set up a GAA, you generally figure the MACRS depreciation
for it by using the applicable depreciation method, recovery period, and
convention for the property in the GAA. For each GAA, record the depreciation
allowance in a separate depreciation reserve account.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107622Make & Sell, a calendar-year corporation, set up a GAA for
ten machines. The machines cost a total of $10,000 and were placed in service in
June 2010. One of the machines cost $8,200 and the rest cost a total of $1,800.
This GAA is depreciated under the 200% declining balance method with a 5-year
recovery period and a half-year convention. Make & Sell did not claim the
section 179 deduction on the machines and the machines did not qualify for a
special depreciation allowance. The depreciation allowance for 2010 is $2,000
[($10,000 × 40%) ÷ 2]. As of January 1, 2011, the depreciation reserve
account is $2,000.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107623To figure depreciation on passenger automobiles in a GAA, apply
the deduction limits discussed in chapter 5 under
Do the Passenger Automobile Limits Apply. Multiply the amount determined using these limits by the number
of automobiles originally included in the account, reduced by the total number
of automobiles removed from the GAA as discussed in
Terminating GAA Treatment, later.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107624When you dispose of property included in a GAA, the following
rules generally apply.
- Neither the unadjusted depreciable basis (defined later) nor
the depreciation reserve account of the GAA is affected. You continue to
depreciate the account as if the disposition had not occurred.
- The property is treated as having an adjusted basis of zero,
so you cannot realize a loss on the disposition. If the property is transferred
to a supplies, scrap, or similar account, its basis in that account is zero.
- Any amount realized on the disposition is treated as ordinary
income, up to the limit discussed later under
Treatment of amount realized.
However, these rules do not apply to any disposition described
later under
Terminating GAA Treatment.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107625Property in a GAA is considered disposed of when you do any of
the following.
- Permanently withdraw it from use in your trade or business
or from the production of income.
- Transfer it to a supplies, scrap, or similar account.
- Sell, exchange, retire, physically abandon, or destroy it.
The retirement of a structural component of real property is
not a disposition.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107626When you dispose of property in a GAA, you must recognize any
amount realized from the disposition as ordinary income, up to a limit. The
limit is:
- The unadjusted depreciable basis of the GAA
plus
- Any expensed costs for property in the GAA that are subject
to recapture as depreciation (not including any expensed costs for property that
you removed from the GAA under the rules discussed later under
Terminating GAA Treatment),
minus
- Any amount previously recognized as ordinary income upon the
disposition of other property from the GAA.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107627The unadjusted depreciable basis of a GAA is the total of the
unadjusted depreciable bases of all the property in the GAA. The unadjusted
depreciable basis of an item of property in a GAA is the amount you would use to
figure gain or loss on its sale, but figured without reducing your original
basis by any depreciation allowed or allowable in earlier years. However, you do
reduce your original basis by other amounts, including any amortization
deduction, section 179 deduction, special depreciation allowance, and electric
vehicle credit.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107628Expensed costs that are subject to recapture as depreciation
include the following.
- The section 179 deduction.
- Amortization deductions for the following.
- Pollution control facilities.
- Removal of barriers for the elderly and disabled.
- Tertiary injectants.
- Reforestation expenses.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107629The facts are the same as in the example under
Figuring Depreciation for a GAA,
earlier. In February 2011, Make & Sell sells the machine
that cost $8,200 to an unrelated person for $9,000. The machine is treated as
having an adjusted basis of zero.
On its 2011 tax return, Make & Sell recognizes the $9,000
amount realized as ordinary income because it is not more than the GAA's
unadjusted depreciable basis ($10,000) plus any expensed cost (for example, the
section 179 deduction) for property in the GAA ($0), minus any amounts
previously recognized as ordinary income because of dispositions of other
property from the GAA ($0).
The unadjusted depreciable basis and depreciation reserve of
the GAA are not affected by the sale of the machine. The depreciation allowance
for the GAA in 2011 is $3,200 [($10,000 − $2,000) × 40%].
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107630Assume the same facts as in
Example 1. In June 2012, Make & Sell sells seven machines to an unrelated
person for a total of $1,100. These machines are treated as having an adjusted
basis of zero.
On its 2012 tax return, Make & Sell recognizes $1,000 as
ordinary income. This is the GAA's unadjusted depreciable basis ($10,000) plus
the expensed costs ($0), minus the amount previously recognized as ordinary
income ($9,000). The remaining amount realized of $100 ($1,100 − $1,000)
is section 1231 gain (discussed in chapter 3 of Publication 544).
The unadjusted depreciable basis and depreciation reserve of
the GAA are not affected by the disposition of the machines. The depreciation
allowance for the GAA in 2012 is $1,920 [($10,000 − $5,200) × 40%].
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107631You must remove the following property from a GAA.
- Property you dispose of in a nonrecognition transaction or
an abusive transaction.
- Property you dispose of in a qualifying disposition or in
a disposition of all the property in the GAA, if you choose to terminate GAA
treatment.
- Property you dispose of in a like-kind exchange or an involuntary
conversion.
- Property you change to personal use.
- Property for which you must recapture any allowable credit
or deduction, such as the investment credit, the credit for qualified electric
vehicles, the section 179 deduction, or the deduction for clean-fuel vehicles
and clean-fuel vehicle refueling property placed in service before January 1,
2006.
If you remove property from a GAA, you must make the following
adjustments.
- Reduce the unadjusted depreciable basis of the GAA by the
unadjusted depreciable basis of the property as of the first day of the tax year
in which the disposition, change in use, or recapture event occurs. You can use
any reasonable method that is consistently applied to determine the unadjusted
depreciable basis of the property you remove from a GAA.
- Reduce the depreciation reserve account by the depreciation
allowed or allowable for the property (computed in the same way as computed for
the GAA) as of the end of the tax year immediately preceding the year in which
the disposition, change in use, or recapture event occurs.
These adjustments have no effect on the recognition and character
of prior dispositions subject to the rules discussed earlier under
Disposing of GAA Property.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107632If you dispose of GAA property in a nonrecognition transaction,
you must remove it from the GAA. The following are nonrecognition transactions.
- The receipt by one corporation of property distributed in
complete liquidation of another corporation.
- The transfer of property to a corporation solely in exchange
for stock in that corporation if the transferor is in control of the corporation
immediately after the exchange.
- The transfer of property by a corporation that is a party
to a reorganization in exchange solely for stock and securities in another
corporation that is also a party to the reorganization.
- The contribution of property to a partnership in exchange
for an interest in the partnership.
- The distribution of property (including money) from a partnership
to a partner.
- Any transaction between members of the same affiliated group
during any year for which the group makes a consolidated return.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107633The recipient of the property (the person to whom it is transferred)
must include your (the transferor's) adjusted basis in the property in a GAA. If
you transferred either all of the property or the last item of property in a
GAA, the recipient's basis in the property is the result of the following.
- The adjusted depreciable basis of the GAA as of the beginning
of your tax year in which the transaction takes place,
minus
- The depreciation allowable to you for the year of the transfer.
For this purpose, the adjusted depreciable basis of a GAA is
the unadjusted depreciable basis of the GAA minus any depreciation allowed or
allowable for the GAA.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107634If you dispose of GAA property in an abusive transaction, you
must remove it from the GAA. A disposition is an abusive transaction if it is
not a nonrecognition transaction (described earlier) or a like-kind exchange or
involuntary conversion and a main purpose for the disposition is to get a tax
benefit or a result that would not be available without the use of a GAA.
Examples of abusive transactions include the following.
- A transaction with a main purpose of shifting income or deductions
among taxpayers in a way that would not be possible without choosing to use a
GAA to take advantage of differing effective tax rates.
- A choice to use a GAA with a main purpose of disposing of
property from the GAA so that you can use an expiring net operating loss or
credit. For example, if you have a net operating loss carryover or a credit
carryover, the following transactions will be considered abusive transactions
unless there is strong evidence to the contrary.
- A transfer of GAA property to a related person.
- A transfer of GAA property under an agreement where the
property continues to be used, or is available for use, by you.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107635You must determine the gain, loss, or other deduction due to
an abusive transaction by taking into account the property's adjusted basis. The
adjusted basis of the property at the time of the disposition is the result of
the following:
- The unadjusted depreciable basis of the property,
minus
- The depreciation allowed or allowable for the property figured
by using the depreciation method, recovery period, and convention that applied
to the GAA in which the property was included.
If there is a gain, the amount subject to recapture as ordinary
income is the smaller of the following.
- The depreciation allowed or allowable for the property, including
any expensed cost (such as section 179 deductions or the additional depreciation
allowed or allowable for the property).
- The result of the following:
- The original unadjusted depreciable basis of the GAA (plus,
for section 1245 property originally included in the GAA, any expensed cost),
minus
- The total gain previously recognized as ordinary income
on the disposition of property from the GAA.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107636If you dispose of GAA property in a qualifying disposition, you
can choose to remove the property from the GAA. A qualifying disposition is one
that does not involve all the property, or the last item of property, remaining
in a GAA and that is described by any of the following.
- A disposition that is a direct result of fire, storm, shipwreck,
other casualty, or theft.
- A charitable contribution for which a deduction is allowed.
- A disposition that is a direct result of a cessation, termination,
or disposition of a business, manufacturing or other income-producing process,
operation, facility, plant, or other unit (other than by transfer to a supplies,
scrap, or similar account).
- A nontaxable transaction other than a nonrecognition transaction
(described earlier), a like-kind exchange or involuntary conversion, or a
transaction that is nontaxable only because it is a disposition from a GAA.
If you choose to remove the property from the GAA, figure your
gain, loss, or other deduction resulting from the disposition in the manner
described earlier under
Abusive transactions.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107637If you dispose of GAA property as a result of a like-kind exchange
or involuntary conversion, you must remove from the GAA the property that you
transferred. See chapter 1 of Publication 544 for information on these
transactions. Figure your gain, loss, or other deduction resulting from the
disposition in the manner described earlier under
Abusive transactions.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107638Sankofa, a calendar-year corporation, maintains one GAA for 12
machines. Each machine costs $15,000 and was placed in service in 2009. Of the
12 machines, nine cost a total of $135,000 and are used in Sankofa's New York
plant and three machines cost $45,000 and are used in Sankofa's New Jersey
plant. Assume this GAA uses the 200% declining balance depreciation method, a
5-year recovery period, and a half-year convention. Sankofa does not claim the
section 179 deduction and the machines do not qualify for a special depreciation
allowance. As of January 1, 2011, the depreciation reserve account for the GAA
is $93,600.
In May 2011, Sankofa sells its entire manufacturing plant in
New Jersey to an unrelated person. The sales proceeds allocated to each of the
three machines at the New Jersey plant is $5,000. This transaction is a
qualifying disposition, so Sankofa chooses to remove the three machines from the
GAA and figure the gain, loss, or other deduction by taking into account their
adjusted bases.
For Sankofa's 2011 return, the depreciation allowance for the
GAA is figured as follows. As of December 31, 2010, the depreciation allowed or
allowable for the three machines at the New Jersey plant is $23,400. As of
January 1, 2011, the unadjusted depreciable basis of the GAA is reduced from
$180,000 to $135,000 ($180,000 minus the $45,000 unadjusted depreciable bases of
the three machines), and the depreciation reserve account is decreased from
$93,600 to $70,200 ($93,600 minus $23,400 depreciation allowed or allowable for
the three machines as of December 31, 2010). The depreciation allowance for the
GAA in 2011 is $25,920 [($135,000 − $70,200) × 40%].
For Sankofa's 2011 return, gain or loss for each of the three
machines at the New Jersey plant is determined as follows. The depreciation
allowed or allowable in 2011 for each machine is $1,440 [(($15,000 −
$7,800) × 40%) ÷ 2]. The adjusted basis of each machine is $5,760 (the
adjusted depreciable basis of $7,200 removed from the account less the $1,440
depreciation allowed or allowable in 2011). As a result, the loss recognized in
2011 for each machine is $760 ($5,000 − $5,760). This loss is subject to
section 1231 treatment. See chapter 3 of Publication 544 for information on
section 1231 losses.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107639If you dispose of all the property, or the last item of property,
in a GAA, you can choose to end the GAA. If you make this choice, you figure the
gain or loss by comparing the adjusted depreciable basis of the GAA with the
amount realized.
If there is a gain, the amount subject to recapture as ordinary
income is limited to the result of the following.
- The depreciation allowed or allowable for the GAA, including
any expensed cost (such as section 179 deductions or the additional depreciation
allowed or allowable for the GAA),
minus
- The total gain previously recognized as ordinary income on
the disposition of property from the GAA.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107640If you dispose of all the property or the last item of property
in a GAA as a result of a like-kind exchange or involuntary conversion, the GAA
terminates. You must figure the gain or loss in the manner described above under
Disposition of all property in a GAA.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107641Duforcelf, a calendar-year corporation, maintains a GAA for 1,000
calculators that cost a total of $60,000 and were placed in service in 2008.
Assume this GAA is depreciated under the 200% declining balance method, has a
recovery period of 5 years, and uses a half-year convention. Duforcelf does not
claim the section 179 deduction and the calculators do not qualify for a special
depreciation allowance. In 2010, Duforcelf sells 200 of the calculators to an
unrelated person for $10,000. The $10,000 is recognized as ordinary income.
In March 2011, Duforcelf sells the remaining calculators in the
GAA to an unrelated person for $35,000. Duforcelf decides to end the GAA.
On the date of the disposition, the adjusted depreciable basis
of the account is $23,040 (unadjusted depreciable basis of $60,000 minus the
depreciation allowed or allowable of $36,960). In 2011, Duforcelf recognizes a
gain of $11,960. This is the amount realized of $35,000 minus the adjusted
depreciable basis of $23,040. The gain subject to recapture as ordinary income
is limited to the depreciation allowed or allowable minus the amounts previously
recognized as ordinary income ($36,960 − $10,000 = $26,960). Therefore,
the entire gain of $11,960 is recaptured as ordinary income.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107642An election to include property in a GAA is made separately by
each owner of the property. This means that an election to include property in a
GAA must be made by each member of a consolidated group and at the partnership
or S corporation level (and not by each partner or shareholder separately).
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107643Make the election by completing line 18 of Form 4562.
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107644You must make the election on a timely filed tax return (including
extensions) for the year in which you place in service the property included in
the GAA. However, if you timely filed your return for the year without making
the election, you still can make the election by filing an amended return within
6 months of the due date of the return (excluding extensions). Attach the
election to the amended return and write "Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2"
on the election statement.
 | You must maintain records that identify the property included
in each GAA, that establish the unadjusted depreciable basis and depreciation
reserve of the GAA, and that reflect the amount realized during the year upon
dispositions from each GAA. However, see chapter 2 for the recordkeeping
requirements for section 179 property.
|
taxmap/pubs/p946-027.htm#en_us_publink1000107646You can revoke an election to use a GAA only in the following
situations.
- You include in the GAA property that generates foreign source
income, both United States and foreign source income, or combined gross income
of an FSC, a DISC, or a possessions corporation and its related supplier, and
that inclusion results in a substantial distortion of income.
- You remove property from the GAA as described under
Terminating GAA Treatment, earlier.