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- A Special Report from
Gerber & Co.
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- Over $3 bn of CostSeg work successfully completed
- Our unique Double Guarantee assures your satisfaction
- You know before you commit, what the minimum tax savings will be.
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- Cost segregation is the process of separating the costs of tangible
personal property, other tangible property, indirect costs and land
improvements from building and improvement costs.
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- Current tax law dictates utilizing depreciable lives of
39 years for
commercial real estate and 27 ½ years
for residential real
estate.
- A cost segregation study allows
taxpayers to pull out
different components
of total building cost which will
enable them to utilize
much shorter depreciable lives as
follows:
- Land Improvements 15 yr
- Furniture and Fixtures
7 yr
- Machinery & Equipment 5 yr
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- No. A Cost Segregation study could be performed on a building acquired
after 1986 which is when the Tax Reform Act of 1986 changed depreciable
lives on real property
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- The correction of depreciation qualifies as a change in accounting
method for IRS purposes. In
addition to changing the depreciation on a go forward basis, on the next
tax return filed, you can take the deduction for prior years in 1 year.
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- A coordination of effort with the client, the general contractor and the
architect.
- Plans and blueprints are reviewed to highlight specific areas for
considerations.
- Cost budget sheets are reviewed and
reconciled to actual amounts spent.
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- A physical walk through of the property during construction helps
document specific items to be considered.
- Cost allocation of indirect costs such as labor and general conditions.
- CLIENT
- CPA GENERAL CONTRACTOR
ARCHITECT
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- In this 1997 case, the Tax Court concluded:
- Certain assets in the hospital facilities could be considered
personal property and depreciated over a 5-year period
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- Action on Decision (September 3, 1999) “We acquiesce in this decision….The
issue as to whether the various disputed items are structural components
or tangible personal property is a factual question.”
- Memorandum (April 1, 1999) “…the
use of cost segregation studies must be specifically applied by the
taxpayer.”
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- Type of Property Depreciation
Rate
- Commercial 39 years
- Residential 27.5 years
- Land Improvements 15 years
- Tangible Personal 5 or 7 years
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- Commercial properties (offices, retail, warehouses) or apartment
buildings with construction cost or purchase price over 1 million
- New construction Remodels/rehabilitations after 1986 Purchase of
existing facility after 1986
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- Warehouses
- Grocery Stores
- Retail
- Banks
- Restaurants
- Apartments
- Offices
- Hospitals
- Manufacturing
- Sports/Recreation
- Hotels
- Leaseholds
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- Cost segregation studies enable owners to:
- Increase cash flow through a reduction in federal
income tax liability
- Justify accelerated depreciation of certain
improvements
- Write off the amount of allowable past accelerated depreciation over 1
year by filing Form 3115
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- Representative recent studies:
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Cumulative
- Facility Cost Present Value
- Office Building $ 5.1
million $ 150,000
- Retail Center $18.0 million $1,200,000
- Art Gallery $ 3.0 million $ 90,829
- The average return is approximately $11 for every $1 invested in a
study.
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- 50% of the cost of qualifying assets purchased after May 6, 2003 and
placed in service before 2005 can be depreciated in the first year. 30%
of the cost of qualifying assets placed in service between September 10,
2001 and May 5, 2003 can be depreciated in the first year. Qualifying
assets are generally assets with a depreciable life of 20 years or
less. Bonus depreciation applies
only to original use of the asset.
- Watch out for used equipment!
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- Walls partitions, floors, ceilings
- Windows and doors
- Central air conditioning and heating units
- Plumbing and plumbing fixtures
- Electrical wiring and fixtures
- Chimneys
- Stairs, escalators, and elevators
- Sprinkler systems, fire escapes
- Other components relating to building maintenance
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- Is the property capable of being moved, and has it in fact been moved?
- Is the property designed or constructed to remain permanently in place?
- Are there circumstances which tend to show that the property may or will
have to be moved?
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- How substantial a job is removal of the
property and how time consuming is it?
- How much damage will the property sustain
upon its removal? What is
the manner of affixation of the
property to the land?
- Source: Hospital
Corporation of America v. Commissioner
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- Architectural millwork
- Carpeting and padding
- Electrical wiring to personal property
- Plumbing service to personal property
- Moveable partitions
- Security systems
- Exhaust equipment
- Decorative lighting
- Emergency generators
- Land improvements
- Signage
- Wall coverings and window treatments
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- In its memorandum of April 1, 1999 regarding the HCA case, the IRS
notes: “An accurate cost
segregation study may not be based on non-contemporaneous records,
reconstructed data, or taxpayer’s estimates or
assumptions that have no supporting records.
- Thus cost segregation studies
should be
closely scrutinized by the field.”
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- The cost segregation study preparer must:
- Understand applicable Internal Revenue Code,
Tax Court rulings, IRS Actions on Decisions,
Chief Counsel’s Advisories, Technical Action
Memoranda, and other documents relating to
depreciation of personal and real property
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- Understand the procedures necessary to develop a report that can
withstand IRS scrutiny
- Understand architectural documents
- Understand construction methods and materials
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- Properties that will be sold within two years
- Properties with construction cost or purchase
price below $1 million
- Properties owned by entities that do not have
taxable income
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- If the beneficial owner that holds the property generates a passive
loss, this loss may not be deductible in the current year unless there
is also passive income. A loss is considered passive if the taxpayer
does not meet “material participation” standards. The passive activity
loss may be carried forward indefinitely to offset passive income
generated in future years.
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- The difference between the net loss and the owner’s basis will be
non-deductible if a loss generated for the current year exceeds the
owner’s basis in the company. Example:
A loss creates a negative capital account in a partnership or
LLC, and the partner has no basis in underlying debt on the property.
The at-risk loss may be carried forward indefinitely to offset future
income in the property.
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- Our firm's accounting professionals - working closely with our
specially trained engineers - have reviewed over $5 billion worth of
property for Cost Segregation.
- Our client base includes a broad spectrum of industries that can
benefit and have obtained benefits from these studies
- We have personnel who understand construction methods and documents.
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