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left arrowPrevious Page: Publication 225 - Farmer's Tax Guide - Dispositions of Property Used in Farming
right arrowNext Page: Publication 225 - Farmer's Tax Guide - Other Gains
Use  left arrowright arrow to find additional instances of index items.

Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP50d9fd2e
Depreciation Recapture


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left link arrow Depreciation, Recapture right link arrow

If you dispose of depreciable or amortizable property at a gain, you may have to treat all or part of the gain (even if it is otherwise nontaxable) as ordinary income.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP1542b99e
Section 1245 Property


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left link arrow Section 1245 Property right link arrow

A gain on the disposition of section 1245 property is treated as ordinary income to the extent of depreciation allowed or allowable. See Gain Treated as Ordinary Income, later.

Any recognized gain that is more than the part that is ordinary income because of depreciation is a section 1231 gain. See Treatment as ordinary or capital under Section 1231 Gains and Losses, earlier.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP4d0f31b2
Defined.


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Section 1245 property includes any property that is or has been subject to an allowance for depreciation or amortization and is any of the following types of property.

  1. Personal property (either tangible or intangible).
  2. Other tangible property (except buildings and their structural components) used as any of the following.
    1. An integral part of manufacturing, production, or extraction, or of furnishing transportation, communications, electricity, gas, water, or sewage disposal services.
    2. A research facility in any of the activities in (a).
    3. A facility in any of the activities in (a) for the bulk storage of fungible commodities.
  3. That part of real property (not included in (2)) with an adjusted basis reduced by certain amortization deductions (including those for certified pollution control facilities, childcare facilities, removal of architectural barriers to persons with disabilities and the elderly, or reforestation expenses) or a section 179 deduction.
  4. Single purpose agricultural (livestock) or horticultural structures.
  5. Storage facilities (except buildings and their structural components) used in distributing petroleum or any primary product of petroleum.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP15af27c8
Buildings and structural components.
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Section 1245 property does not include buildings and structural components. The term building includes a house, barn, warehouse, or garage. The term structural component includes walls, floors, windows, doors, central air conditioning systems, light fixtures, etc.

Do not treat a structure that is essentially machinery or equipment as a building or structural component. Also, do not treat a structure that houses property used as an integral part of an activity as a building or structural component if the structure's use is so closely related to the property's use that the structure can be expected to be replaced when the property it initially houses is replaced.

The fact that the structure is specially designed to withstand the stress and other demands of the property and cannot be used economically for other purposes indicates it is closely related to the use of the property it houses. Structures such as oil and gas storage tanks, grain storage bins, and silos are not treated as buildings, but as section 1245 property.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP5c431080
Facility for bulk storage of fungible commodities.
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This is a facility used mainly for the bulk storage of fungible commodities. Bulk storage means storage of a commodity in a large mass before it is used. For example, if a facility is used to store sorted and boxed oranges, it is not used for bulk storage. To be fungible, a commodity must be such that one part may be used in place of another.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP1c7ebbc4
Gain Treated as Ordinary Income


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left link arrow Gain, Ordinary Income right link arrow

The gain treated as ordinary income on the sale, exchange, or involuntary conversion of section 1245 property, including a sale and leaseback transaction, is the lesser of the following amounts.

  1. The depreciation and amortization allowed or allowable on the property.
  2. The gain realized on the disposition (the amount realized from the disposition minus the adjusted basis of the property).
For any other disposition of section 1245 property, ordinary income is the lesser of (1) above or the amount by which its fair market value is more than its adjusted basis. For details, see chapter 3 of Publication 544.

Use Part III of Form 4797 to figure the ordinary income part of the gain.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP64c538ba
Depreciation claimed on other property or claimed by other taxpayers.


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Depreciation and amortization include the amounts you claimed on the section 1245 property as well as the following depreciation and amortization amounts.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP0d1dce00
Example.

Jeff Free paid $120,000 for a tractor in 2002. He depreciated it using the 150% declining balance method. The tractor is 7-year property. On February 23, 2004 he traded it for a chopper and paid an additional $30,000. To figure his depreciation deduction for the current year, Jeff continues to use the basis of the tractor as he would have before the trade to depreciate the chopper. Because this is the third year of depreciation, he takes a deduction of $18,036 ($120,000 × .1503).

Jeff can also depreciate the additional $30,000 basis on the chopper. Because this is the first year of depreciation on the $30,000, he takes a depreciation deduction of $3,213 ($30,000 × .1071). The total depreciation he can deduct for 2004 is $21,249 ($18,036 + $3,213).

Temporary regulations were issued to provide more flexibility for computing depreciation deductions when property is acquired in a like-kind exchange. For details, see chapter 7 and the instructions for Form 4562.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP6c27f8dd
Depreciation and amortization.


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Depreciation and amortization deductions that must be recaptured as ordinary income include (but are not limited to) the following items.

  1. Ordinary depreciation deductions.
  2. Section 179 deduction (see chapter 7).
  3. Any special depreciation allowance.
  4. Amortization deductions for all the following costs.
    1. Acquiring a lease.
    2. Lessee improvements.
    3. Pollution control facilities.
    4. Reforestation expenses.
    5. Section 197 intangibles.
    6. Childcare facility expenses incurred before 1982.
    7. Franchises, trademarks, and trade names acquired before August 11, 1993.
  5. Deductions for all the following costs.
    1. Removing barriers to the disabled and the elderly.
    2. Tertiary injectant expenses.
    3. Depreciable clean-fuel vehicles and refueling property (minus any recaptured deduction).
  6. Any basis reduction for the investment credit (minus any basis increase for a credit recapture).
  7. Any basis reduction for the qualified electric vehicle credit (minus any basis increase for a credit recapture).


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP51be369a
Example.

You file your returns on a calendar year basis. In February 2002, you bought and placed in service for 100% use in your farming business a light-duty truck (5-year property) that cost $10,000. You used the half-year convention and your MACRS deductions for the truck were $1,500 in 2002 and $2,550 in 2003. You did not claim the section 179 expense deduction for the truck. You sold it in May 2004 for $7,000. The MACRS deduction in 2004, the year of sale, is $893 (1/2 of $1,785). Figure the gain treated as ordinary income as follows.
1) Amount realized $7,000
2) Cost (February 2002) $10,000  
3) Depreciation allowed or allowable (MACRS deductions: $1,500 + $2,550 + $893) 4,943  
4) Adjusted basis (subtract line 3 from line 2) $5,057
5) Gain realized (subtract line 4 from line 1) 1,943
6) Gain treated as ordinary income (lesser of line 3 or line 5) $1,943


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP40408e18
Depreciation allowed or allowable.


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You generally use the greater of the depreciation allowed or allowable when figuring the part of gain to report as ordinary income. If, in prior years, you have consistently taken proper deductions under one method, the amount allowed for your prior years will not be increased even though a greater amount would have been allowed under another proper method. If you did not take any deduction at all for depreciation, your adjustments to basis for depreciation allowable are figured by using the straight line method.

This treatment applies only when figuring what part of the gain is treated as ordinary income under the rules for section 1245 depreciation recapture.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP260b7302
Disposition of plants and animals.


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If you made the choice not to apply the uniform capitalization rules (see chapter 6), you must treat any plant you produce as section 1245 property. If you have a gain on the property's disposition, you must recapture the preproductive expenses you would have capitalized if you had not made the choice by treating the gain, up to the amount of these expenses, as ordinary income. For section 1231 transactions, show these expenses as depreciation on Form 4797, Part III, line 22. For plant sales that are reported on Schedule F, this recapture rule does not change the reporting of income because the gain is already ordinary income. You can use the farm-price method or the unit-livestock-price method discussed in chapter 2 to figure these expenses.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP435b63fa
Example.

Janet Maple sold her apple orchard in 2004 for $80,000. Her adjusted basis at the time of sale was $60,000. She bought the orchard in 1997, but the trees did not produce a crop until 2000. Her preproductive expenses were $6,000. She chose not to apply the uniform capitalization rules. Janet must treat $6,000 of the gain as ordinary income.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP32e5ad1a
Section 1250 Property


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Section 1250 property includes all real property subject to an allowance for depreciation that is not and never has been section 1245 property. It includes a leasehold of land or section 1250 property subject to an allowance for depreciation. A fee simple interest in land is not section 1250 property because it is not depreciable.

Gain on the disposition of section 1250 property is treated as ordinary income to the extent of additional depreciation allowed or allowable. To determine the additional depreciation on section 1250 property, see Additional Depreciation, later.

You will not have additional depreciation if any of the following apply to the property disposed of.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP6c7931a5
Additional Depreciation


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left link arrow Depreciation, Additional right link arrow

If you hold section 1250 property longer than 1 year, the additional depreciation is the actual depreciation adjustments that are more than the depreciation figured using the straight line method. For a list of items treated as depreciation adjustments, see Depreciation and amortization under Section 1245 Property, earlier.

If you hold section 1250 property for 1 year or less, all the depreciation is additional depreciation.

Figure straight line depreciation for ACRS real property by using its 15-, 18-, or 19-year recovery period as the property's useful life.

The straight line method is applied without any basis reduction for the investment credit.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP440bf363
Depreciation claimed by other taxpayers or claimed on other property.


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Additional depreciation includes all depreciation adjustments to the basis of section 1250 property whether allowed to you or another person (as for carryover basis property).


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP75ba9539
Depreciation allowed or allowable.


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You generally use the greater of depreciation allowed or allowable (to any person who held the property if the depreciation was used in figuring its adjusted basis in your hands) when figuring the part of the gain to be reported as ordinary income. If you can show that the deduction allowed for any tax year was less than the amount allowable, the lesser figure will be the depreciation adjustment for figuring additional depreciation.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP68715014
Applicable Percentage


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The applicable percentage used to figure the ordinary income because of additional depreciation depends on whether the real property you disposed of is nonresidential real property, residential rental property, or low-income housing. The applicable percentage for nonresidential real property is explained next. The applicable percentages for residential rental property and low-income housing are explained in chapter 3 of Publication 544.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP2165cdb7
Nonresidential real property.


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For real property that is not residential rental property, the applicable percentage for periods after 1969 is 100%. For periods before 1970, the percentage is zero and no ordinary income will result from its disposition because of additional depreciation before 1970.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP1dd60b9d
More information.


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For more information about depreciation recapture on section 1250 property, see chapter 3 of Publication 544.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP777a6ab6
Gain Treated as Ordinary Income


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left link arrow Gain, Ordinary Income right link arrow

To find what part of the gain from the disposition of section 1250 property is treated as ordinary income, follow these steps.

  1. In a sale, exchange, or involuntary conversion of the property, figure the amount realized that is more than the adjusted basis of the property. In any other disposition of the property, figure the fair market value that is more than the adjusted basis.
  2. Figure the additional depreciation for the periods after 1975.
  3. Multiply the lesser of (1) or (2) by the applicable percentage, discussed earlier. Stop here if (2) is equal to or more than (1). This is the gain treated as ordinary income because of additional depreciation for the periods after 1975.
  4. Subtract (2) from (1).
  5. Figure the additional depreciation for periods after 1969 but before 1976.
  6. Add the lesser of (4) or (5) to the result in (3). This is the total gain treated as ordinary income because of additional depreciation.
Use Part III, Form 4797, to figure the ordinary income part of the gain.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP0825b1a2
Installment Sale


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left link arrow Installment Sale right link arrow

If you report the sale of property under the installment method, any depreciation recapture under section 1245 or 1250 is taxable as ordinary income in the year of sale. This applies even if no payments are received in that year. If the gain is more than the depreciation recapture income, report the rest of the gain using the rules of the installment method. For this purpose, include the recapture income in your installment sale basis to determine your gross profit on the installment sale.

If you dispose of more than one asset in a single transaction, you must separately figure the gain on each asset so that it may be properly reported. To do this, allocate the selling price and the payments you receive in the year of sale to each asset. Report any depreciation recapture income in the year of sale before using the installment method for any remaining gain.

For more information on installment sales, see chapter 10.


Taxmap/pubs/p225-039.htm#TXMP75652447
Other Dispositions


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left link arrow Disposition right link arrow

Chapter 3 of Publication 544 discusses the tax treatment of the following transfers of depreciable property.

Publication 544 also explains how to handle a single transaction involving multiple properties.

left arrowPrevious Page:  Publication 225 - Farmer's Tax Guide - Dispositions of Property Used in Farming
right arrowNext Page:  Publication 225 - Farmer's Tax Guide - Other Gains
Use   left arrowright arrow  to find additional instances of index items.