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88 tagged with "Depreciation"

Methods and strategies for depreciating fixed assets including straight-line, MACRS, and accelerated depreciation

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Marina and Boat Slip Bookkeeping: ASC 606, Form 720, and MACRS Class Lives
·mike

Marina and Boat Slip Bookkeeping: ASC 606, Form 720, and MACRS Class Lives

A working chart of accounts and revenue-recognition playbook for marinas — straight-line seasonal slip revenue under ASC 606, point-in-time transient dockage, fuel-dock excise tax on Form 720, deposits held as liabilities, and 15-year MACRS treatment for floating docks.

bookkeeping
small-business
seasonal-business
revenue-recognition
+4
Recording Studio Bookkeeping: Session Pricing, Royalty Splits, and Section 179 on Pro Tools Rigs
·mike

Recording Studio Bookkeeping: Session Pricing, Royalty Splits, and Section 179 on Pro Tools Rigs

How commercial recording studios should book session vs. project revenue under ASC 606, classify engineers and producers across W-2, 1099-NEC, and 1099-MISC Box 2, treat client retainers as liabilities, separate producer points from mechanical royalties, and decide between Section 179 and MACRS on studio gear.

bookkeeping
creative-industries
revenue-recognition
payroll
+4
Section 1033 Involuntary Conversion: A Non-Farm Business Guide to Deferring Gain on Property Destroyed, Stolen, or Condemned
·mike

Section 1033 Involuntary Conversion: A Non-Farm Business Guide to Deferring Gain on Property Destroyed, Stolen, or Condemned

Section 1033 lets non-farm businesses defer gain on property that is destroyed, stolen, or condemned if the proceeds are reinvested in qualifying replacement property within 2, 3, or 4 years. This guide covers the election mechanics on Form 4797, the similar-or-related-in-service-or-use vs. like-kind tests, the carryover-basis recapture trap, and the bookkeeping needed to survive an IRS look-back.

tax
tax-planning
tax-compliance
disaster-loss
+5
When Capital Gain Becomes Ordinary Income: Section 1239 and the Family Business Trap
·mike

When Capital Gain Becomes Ordinary Income: Section 1239 and the Family Business Trap

Section 1239 converts capital gain to ordinary income on sales of depreciable property between related parties — including a controlling owner and their own corporation, partnership, or trust. The constructive ownership rules under Section 267(c) make the more-than-50% threshold easier to cross than family business owners expect.

tax
tax-planning
depreciation
family-business
+4
Section 30C EV Charger Credit Before the June 30, 2026 Cliff: Census Tracts, Prevailing Wage, and Form 8911
·mike

Section 30C EV Charger Credit Before the June 30, 2026 Cliff: Census Tracts, Prevailing Wage, and Form 8911

The Section 30C credit returns 30% of EV charger cost — up to $1,000 per port for homeowners and $100,000 per port for businesses — but sunsets after June 30, 2026. A line-by-line guide to census tract eligibility, prevailing wage and apprenticeship rules, depreciation interaction, recapture, and Form 8911.

tax-credits
tax-planning
tax-deadlines
depreciation
+4
Permanent 100% Bonus Depreciation Returns: How Small Businesses Stack Section 168(k), Section 179, and QIP in 2026
·mike

Permanent 100% Bonus Depreciation Returns: How Small Businesses Stack Section 168(k), Section 179, and QIP in 2026

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act made 100% bonus depreciation under Section 168(k) permanent for qualified property placed in service after January 19, 2025. This guide explains how small businesses coordinate Section 179, qualified improvement property, and the new Section 168(n) manufacturing deduction — and the acquisition-date rules that decide eligibility.

bonus-depreciation
section-179
depreciation
tax-planning
+4
Schedule M-1: Reconciling Book Income to Tax on Forms 1120, 1120-S, and 1065
·mike

Schedule M-1: Reconciling Book Income to Tax on Forms 1120, 1120-S, and 1065

Schedule M-1 reconciles book net income to taxable income on Forms 1120, 1120-S, and 1065. Walk through every line, the permanent versus temporary differences that drive the gap (federal tax, 50% meals, MACRS depreciation, deferred revenue), when Schedule M-3 takes over at $10 million in assets, and the workpaper discipline that keeps books and returns tied together.

tax-compliance
reconciliation
c-corporation
s-corporation
+4
Section 45L Before the Lights Go Out: How Builders and Developers Can Still Claim $2,500 to $5,000 Per Unit Before June 30, 2026
·mike

Section 45L Before the Lights Go Out: How Builders and Developers Can Still Claim $2,500 to $5,000 Per Unit Before June 30, 2026

Section 45L pays builders and developers $500 to $5,000 per energy-efficient home, but the One Big Beautiful Bill Act ends the credit for homes acquired after June 30, 2026. A practical guide to ENERGY STAR versus Zero Energy Ready certification, prevailing wage rules on multifamily, the LIHTC basis carve-out, and the Form 8908 mechanics that decide whether the credit survives audit.

tax-credits
tax-compliance
construction
real-estate
+4
Section 45W Commercial Clean Vehicle Credit: How Business Fleets Still Claim Up to $40,000 in 2026 After the OBBBA Cliff
·mike

Section 45W Commercial Clean Vehicle Credit: How Business Fleets Still Claim Up to $40,000 in 2026 After the OBBBA Cliff

Section 45W ended for vehicles acquired after September 30, 2025, but businesses with a binding contract and a payment by that date can still claim up to $7,500 for light EVs or $40,000 for heavy trucks in 2026 — here is how the credit is calculated, filed on Form 8936, and refunded as cash to tax-exempt fleets through elective pay.

tax-credits
tax-compliance
small-business
bookkeeping
+4
Section 514 UDFI Demystified: How Nonprofits, Foundations, and Self-Directed IRAs Get Taxed on Borrowed-Money Investments
·mike

Section 514 UDFI Demystified: How Nonprofits, Foundations, and Self-Directed IRAs Get Taxed on Borrowed-Money Investments

How Section 514 of the Internal Revenue Code taxes leveraged investments held by 501(c)(3) organizations, private foundations, and self-directed IRAs — including the debt/basis percentage calculation, Form 990-T mechanics, the 12-month look-back on sale, and the Section 514(c)(9) real estate exception for schools and pension trusts.

tax
nonprofit
real-estate
ira
+3
The Self-Rental Rule: Why Your Building Rents Are Nonpassive but Your Losses Stay Passive
·mike

The Self-Rental Rule: Why Your Building Rents Are Nonpassive but Your Losses Stay Passive

Reg. 1.469-2(f)(6) recharacterizes net rental income from property you rent to your own active business as nonpassive while leaving rental losses passive. This guide explains the asymmetry, walks through a dentist example with a $200,000 cost segregation deduction, and shows how the Reg. 1.469-4 grouping election can collapse the rule.

tax-planning
tax-compliance
real-estate
cost-segregation
+4
Repair or Capitalize? A Plain-English Guide to the Section 263(a)-3 Tangible Property Rules for Small Businesses
·mike

Repair or Capitalize? A Plain-English Guide to the Section 263(a)-3 Tangible Property Rules for Small Businesses

How the IRS Section 263(a)-3 tangible property regulations decide what small businesses can deduct now versus capitalize over decades — with the three safe harbors ($2,500/$5,000 de minimis, the small taxpayer building rule, and routine maintenance), the BRA test, and the unit-of-property trap that drives most mistakes.

tax
tax-deductions
tax-planning
depreciation
+4
Showing 25–36 of 88 posts