Fixed Asset Disposal Study
In addition to the Cost Segregation Study, we offer the Fixed Asset Disposal Study (“Disposal Study”). Like the traditional engineered Cost Segregation Study, this study allocates the depreciable cost of a building to its individual components. However, the objective of a Disposal Study is different. The goal of a traditional cost segregation study is to determine the appropriate asset classifications for tax depreciation purposes to accelerate depreciation expense deductions. For a Disposal Study, the objective is to determine the depreciable cost of component assets that will be or have been disposed of. Using this information, your tax return preparer can easily calculate the amount of your deduction related to the disposal.
In order to take the deduction for disposed of assets, the regulations require taxpayers to use certain methods for calculating the remaining cost that has not been depreciated. An engineered cost segregation study is cited as an example of an acceptable method. It is widely accepted that a study that meets the IRS’ quality requirements is the soundest and most defensible method. Without a reliable method for calculating the disposal loss, taxpayers can potentially miss out on significant savings.
What is a Fixed Asset Disposal Study?
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In addition to the Cost Segregation Study, we offer the Fixed Asset Disposal Study (“Disposal Study”). Like the traditional engineered Cost Segregation Study, this study allocates the depreciable cost of a building to its individual components. However, the objective of a Disposal Study is different. The goal of a traditional cost segregation study is to determine the appropriate asset classifications for tax depreciation purposes to accelerate depreciation expense deductions. For a Disposal Study, the objective is to determine the depreciable cost of component assets that will be or have been disposed of. Using this information, your tax return preparer can easily calculate the amount of your deduction related to the disposal.
In order to take the deduction for disposed of assets, the regulations require taxpayers to use certain methods for calculating the remaining cost that has not been depreciated. An engineered cost segregation study is cited as an example of an acceptable method. It is widely accepted that a study that meets the IRS’ quality requirements is the soundest and most defensible method. Without a reliable method for calculating the disposal loss, taxpayers can potentially miss out on significant savings.
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Disposal studies are worth considering if you have recently renovated or remodeled a building that is being depreciated on your tax return, and the project involved the removal of significant parts of the building – such as walls, flooring, roofing, windows, etc. These should also be considered if you made or plan to make significant replacements of components of major building systems like electrical, plumbing, and HVAC.
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Doing a major renovation or remodeling an existing commercial property? A Fixed Asset Disposal Study can save you thousands in deductions by determining the depreciable costs of component assets that will be or have been disposed of. In addition to the IRS rules for capitalization and expensing of repair and maintenance items, they also provide rules for the treatment of disposal of depreciable assets. Under prior rules, taxpayers could not take losses for the partial disposal of building assets. However, the new rules allow for recognition of losses when certain assets are disposed of, such as during a renovation or remodel of a building. This opens up new opportunities for taxpayers to utilize engineered cost segregation studies to their benefit.