Publication 946
taxmap/pubs/p946-029.htm#en_us_publink1000107648This chapter discusses the deduction limits and other special
rules that apply to certain listed property. Listed property includes cars and
other property used for transportation, property used for entertainment, and
certain computers.
Deductions for listed property (other than certain leased property)
are subject to the following special rules and limits.
- Deduction for employees.
If your use of the property is not for your employer's convenience or is not
required as a condition of your employment, you cannot deduct depreciation or
rent expenses for your use of the property as an employee.
- Business-use requirement.
If the property is not used predominantly (more than 50%) for qualified business
use, you cannot claim the section 179 deduction or a special depreciation
allowance. In addition, you must figure any depreciation deduction under the
Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS) using the straight line method
over the ADS recovery period. You may also have to recapture (include in income)
any excess depreciation claimed in previous years. A similar inclusion amount
applies to certain leased property.
- Passenger automobile limits and rules.
Annual limits apply to depreciation deductions (including section 179 deductions
and any special depreciation allowance) for certain passenger automobiles. You
can continue to deduct depreciation for the unrecovered basis resulting from
these limits after the end of the recovery period.
This chapter defines listed property and explains the special
rules and depreciation deduction limits that apply, including the special
inclusion amount rule for leased property. It also discusses the recordkeeping
rules for listed property and explains how to report information about the
property on your tax return.
 | At the time this publication was released for print, the
IRS was considering guidance on the 100% special depreciation allowance and the
passenger automobile limits. This guidance will be published in later Internal
Revenue Bulletins available at
www.irs.gov/irb. When this guidance is released, information will also
be available at
www.irs.gov/form4562. |
taxmap/pubs/p946-029.htm#TXMP4b8b479cUseful items
You may want to see:
Publication 463
Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses 535 Business Expenses 587
Business Use of Your Home (Including Use by Daycare Providers) Form (and Instructions) 2106 :
Employee Business Expenses 2106-EZ :
Unreimbursed Employee Business Expenses 4562 :
Depreciation and Amortization 4797 :
Sales of Business Property See chapter 6 for information about getting publications and
forms.
taxmap/pubs/p946-029.htm#en_us_publink1000107650Words you may need to know (see Glossary)
- Capitalized
- Commuting
- Improvement
- Recovery period
- Straight line method
Listed property is any of the following.
- Passenger automobiles weighing 6,000 pounds or less.
- Any other property used for transportation, unless it is an
excepted vehicle.
- Property generally used for entertainment, recreation, or
amusement (including photographic, phonographic, communication, and
video-recording equipment).
- Computers and related peripheral equipment, unless used only
at a regular business establishment and owned or leased by the person operating
the establishment. A regular business establishment includes a portion of a
dwelling unit that is used both regularly and exclusively for business as
discussed in Publication 587.
taxmap/pubs/p946-029.htm#en_us_publink1000107651An improvement made to listed property that must be capitalized
is treated as a new item of depreciable property. The recovery period and method
of depreciation that apply to the listed property as a whole also apply to the
improvement. For example, if you must depreciate the listed property using the
straight line method, you also must depreciate the improvement using the
straight line method.
taxmap/pubs/p946-029.htm#en_us_publink1000107652A passenger automobile is any four-wheeled vehicle made primarily
for use on public streets, roads, and highways and rated at 6,000 pounds or less
of unloaded gross vehicle weight (6,000 pounds or less of gross vehicle weight
for trucks and vans). It includes any part, component, or other item physically
attached to the automobile at the time of purchase or usually included in the
purchase price of an automobile.
The following vehicles are not considered passenger automobiles
for these purposes.
- An ambulance, hearse, or combination ambulance-hearse used
directly in a trade or business.
- A vehicle used directly in the trade or business of transporting
persons or property for pay or hire.
- A truck or van that is a qualified nonpersonal use vehicle.
taxmap/pubs/p946-029.htm#en_us_publink1000107653Qualified nonpersonal use vehicles are vehicles that by their
nature are not likely to be used more than a minimal amount for personal
purposes. They include the trucks and vans listed as excepted vehicles under
Other Property Used for Transportation, next. They also include trucks and vans that have been specially
modified so that they are not likely to be used more than a minimal amount for
personal purposes, such as by installation of permanent shelving and painting
the vehicle to display advertising or the company's name.
For a detailed discussion of passenger automobiles, including
leased passenger automobiles, see
Publication 463.
taxmap/pubs/p946-029.htm#en_us_publink1000107654 | Although vehicles used to transport persons or property for
pay or hire and vehicles rated at more than the 6,000-pound threshold are not
passenger automobiles, they are still "other property used for transportation"
and are subject to the special rules for listed property. |
Other property used for transportation includes trucks, buses,
boats, airplanes, motorcycles, and any other vehicles used to transport persons
or goods.
taxmap/pubs/p946-029.htm#en_us_publink1000107656Other property used for transportation does not include the following
qualified nonpersonal use vehicles (defined earlier under
Passenger Automobiles).
- Clearly marked police and fire vehicles.
- Unmarked vehicles used by law enforcement officers if the
use is officially authorized.
- Ambulances used as such and hearses used as such.
- Any vehicle with a loaded gross vehicle weight of over 14,000
pounds that is designed to carry cargo.
- Bucket trucks (cherry pickers), cement mixers, dump trucks
(including garbage trucks), flatbed trucks, and refrigerated trucks.
- Combines, cranes and derricks, and forklifts.
- Delivery trucks with seating only for the driver, or only
for the driver plus a folding jump seat.
- Qualified moving vans.
- Qualified specialized utility repair trucks.
- School buses used in transporting students and employees of
schools.
- Other buses with a capacity of at least 20 passengers that
are used as passenger buses.
- Tractors and other special purpose farm vehicles.
taxmap/pubs/p946-029.htm#en_us_publink1000107657A clearly marked police or fire vehicle is a vehicle that meets
all the following requirements.
- It is owned or leased by a governmental unit or an agency
or instrumentality of a governmental unit.
- It is required to be used for commuting by a police officer
or fire fighter who, when not on a regular shift, is on call at all times.
- It is prohibited from being used for personal use (other than
commuting) outside the limit of the police officer's arrest powers or the fire
fighter's obligation to respond to an emergency.
- It is clearly marked with painted insignia or words that make
it readily apparent that it is a police or fire vehicle. A marking on a license
plate is not a clear marking for these purposes.
taxmap/pubs/p946-029.htm#en_us_publink1000107658A qualified moving van is any truck or van used by a professional
moving company for moving household or business goods if the following
requirements are met.
- No personal use of the van is allowed other than for travel
to and from a move site or for minor personal use, such as a stop for lunch on
the way from one move site to another.
- Personal use for travel to and from a move site happens no
more than five times a month on average.
- Personal use is limited to situations in which it is more
convenient to the employer, because of the location of the employee's residence
in relation to the location of the move site, for the van not to be returned to
the employer's business location.
taxmap/pubs/p946-029.htm#en_us_publink1000107659A truck is a qualified specialized utility repair truck if it
is not a van or pickup truck and all the following apply.
- The truck was specifically designed for and is used to carry
heavy tools, testing equipment, or parts.
- Shelves, racks, or other permanent interior construction has
been installed to carry and store the tools, equipment, or parts and would make
it unlikely that the truck would be used, other than minimally, for personal
purposes.
- The employer requires the employee to drive the truck home
in order to be able to respond in emergency situations for purposes of restoring
or maintaining electricity, gas, telephone, water, sewer, or steam utility
services.
taxmap/pubs/p946-029.htm#en_us_publink1000107660A computer is a programmable, electronically activated device
capable of accepting information, applying prescribed processes to the
information, and supplying the results of those processes with or without human
intervention. It consists of a central processing unit with extensive storage,
logic, arithmetic, and control capabilities.
Related peripheral equipment is any auxiliary machine which is
designed to be controlled by the central processing unit of a computer.
The following are neither computers nor related peripheral equipment.
- Any equipment that is an integral part of other property that
is not a computer.
- Typewriters, calculators, adding and accounting machines,
copiers, duplicating equipment, and similar equipment.
- Equipment of a kind used primarily for the user's amusement
or entertainment, such as video games.