Cost Segregation Applied
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taxpayer can substantially increase cash flow by segregating property costs.
Cost Segregation
Applied
BY JAY A. SOLED AND
CHARLES E. FALK
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
. COST
SEGREGATION CAN PROVIDE REAL ESTATE purchasers with tremendous tax benefits from accelerated
depreciation deductions and easier write-offs when an asset becomes obsolete,
broken or destroyed.
. CPA’s CAN RECOMMEND USING THE cost segregation
technique when a taxpayer constructs a building or buys an existing one. It can
be used even if a structure was acquired several years earlier.
. BUYERS OF REAL
ESTATE SHOULD OBTAIN an
engineering report that segregates assets into four categories: personal
property, land improvements, building components and land.
. ONE OF THE AREAS OF CONTROVERSY is the distinction
between tangible personal property and a' building's structural components. The
Tax Court has set forth criteria CPAs can use in making a factual determination
of whether property is inherently permanent and therefore excluded from the
definition of tangible personal property.
Cost Segregation
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. ADVANTAGES OF COST SEGREGATION include the value of
front-loaded depreciation deductions, write-offs of building components that
need replacement and lower local realty-transfer taxes.
. DISADVANTAGES INCLUDE THE COST OF
THE engineering study, the triggering of depreciation recapture and
understatement penalties for taxpayers that use cost segregation too
aggressively.
JAY A. SOLED, JD, is an associate professor of
taxation at Rutgers University in Newark, New Jersey. His e-mail address is iaysoled~andromeda.rutgers.edu.
CHARLES E. FALK, CPA, JD, is an executive in residence at Seton Hall University in South Orange, New Jersey. His
e-mail address is cefalk25~aol.com.
Purchasers of
real estate can gain tremendous tax benefits by using a popular
asset depreciation technique called cost segregation.
Using this method, buyers view a real estate acquisition as consisting not only
of land and buildings but also tangible personal property and land
improvements. The tax savings come from accelerated depreciation deductions and
possible easier property write-off's. A taxpayer can use cost segregation when
constructing a building, buying an existing one, or, in certain circumstances,
years after disposing of one so long as the year of disposition still is open
under the statute of limitations (see revenue procedure 2004-11).
Present-Value Savings
Each $100,000 in assets reclassified from a 39-year
recovery period to a five-year recovery period results in approximately $16,000
in net-present-value savings, assuming a 5°,'0 discount rate and a 35% marginal
tax rate.
CPA’s play a central role in the cost segregation
process. They are the most likely people to recommend use of the technique to
their clients or employers. CP As also will review and implement the findings
in the required engineering report. This article will guide CP As through the
process by discussing how cost segregation operates, providing a comprehensive
example of the technique in a real estate acquisition and outlining its
advantages and disadvantages.
A
BRIEF HISTORY
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Under prior law taxpayers
would separate a building's parts into its various components-doors, walls and
floors. Once these components were isolated, taxpayers would depreciate them
using a short cost-recovery period. CP As referred to this practice as
component depreciation.
The introduction of the accelerated cost recovery
system (ACRS) and the modified accelerated cost recovery system (MACRS) eliminated
the use of component depreciation, but not the use of cost segregation. Hospital
Corporation of America [HCA] v. Commissioner, 109 TC 21 (1997), is
the seminal cost segregation case. In it the Tax Court permitted HCA to use
cost segregation with respect to a multitude of improvements (see exhibit
1). Critical to the Tax Court's analysis was that in formulating
accelerated depreciation methods, Congress intended to distinguish between
components that constitute IRC section 1250 class property (real property) and
property items that constitute section 1245 class property (tangible personal
property). This distinction opened the doors to cost segregation.
Armed with this
victory, taxpayers have increasingly begun to use cost segregation to their
advantage. The IRS reluctantly agreed that cost segregation does not constitute
component
depreciation (action on decision (AOD) 1999-008).
Moreover, cost segregation recently was featured in temporary regulations
issued by the Treasury Department (regulations section 1.4461 T). In a chief
counsel advisory (CCA), however, the IRS warned taxpayers that an
"accurate cost segregation study may not be based on non-contemporaneous
records, reconstructed data or taxpayers' estimates or assumptions that have no
supporting records" (CCA 199921045).
Exhibit 1: Some
Property Improvements Pass Muster
In Hospital Corporation of America v. Commissioner, the Tax Court permitted use
of the
cost segregation technique for these building
improvements.
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5-year
39-year
depreciable
life depreciable life
Primary and secondary
electrical distribution systems
Branch electrical wiring and connections special
equipment
Wiring and related property items in the laboratory
and maintenance shop
Other wiring and related property
Wiring to television equipment
Conduit, floor boxes and power boxes
Electrical wiring relating to internal communications
Carpeting
Vinyl wall and floor coverings
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Kitchen water piping and steam lines
Special plumbing to X-ray machines Kitchen hoods and exhaust systems Patient
corridor handrails
Overhead lights
Accordion doors and partitions
Bathroom accessories and mirrors Acoustical tile ceilings
Steam boilers
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HOW THE TECHNIQUE WORKS
The process of cost segregation begins at the time of
purchase. Accounting professionals should advise clients or employers buying
real estate to use an engineering report to segregate assets into four
categories:
. Personal property.
. Land improvements.
. Buildings (which should be further broken down into
component parts).
. Land
This allows a purchaser to achieve faster depreciation
deductions as well as possible and easier subsequent write-offs, so its cash
flow will be increased. Assets allocated into the first two categories enjoy
relatively short useful lives and, thus, accelerated depreciation methods.
Furthermore, if the components of a building have been separately valued and a
component subsequently becomes worthless, the taxpayer can write it off more
easily.
Personal property. Taxpayers normally can depreciate this property using a five- or seven-year
recovery period and the double-declining method. Within permissible bounds,
there is a huge tax savings premium for valuing this property as high as
possible. This category includes items such as furniture, carpeting, certain fixtures
and window treatments.
Land improvements. Like the first category, these have a relatively short useful life-l 5
years and are subject to an accelerated depreciation method, namely the 150%
declining-balance method. Again, within permissible bounds, purchasers should
maximize the values they attribute to this category, which ordinarily includes
items such as sidewalks, fences and docks.
The building. As
in the first and second categories, buyers should attempt to maximize a
building's value; any residual value will be allocated to non-depreciable land.
Although a building's separate components (such as its roof) all are considered
part of the building itself, there is merit to
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valuing and depreciating each component separately
(albeit, on the same depreciation schedule). This way, if one of the building's
components subsequently becomes worthless, the taxpayer can write it off
immediately.
Land. Whatever
amount of the purchase price is not accounted for in the three prior categories
is allocated to land. Land valued in this residuary fashion may have a
relatively low or insignificant value, but proper documentation normally will
protect a taxpayer from an IRS challenge.
THE HARD PART
One of the trickier aspects of cost segregation is the
actual categorization of property. Distinguishing between tangible personal
property and a building made up of its structural components is an area of
great controversy. IRC section 1245(a)(3) and Treasury regulations section 1.
1245-3(b )(1) say the distinction between tangible personal property and
structural components should be based on the criteria once used to determine
whether property qualified for the now repealed investment tax credit under IRC
section 38.
The Treasury regulations found under IRC section 48
delineate this distinction. Treasury regulations section 1.48-1(c) defines
tangible personal property as all property "except land and improvements
thereto, such as buildings or other inherently permanent structures (including
items which are structural components of such buildings or structures)."
That section further defines tangible personal property as "all
property (other than structural components) which is contained in or attached
to a building." Examples of such property, it says, consist of printing
presses, transportation and office equipment, refrigerators and display racks.
Treasury regulations section 1.48-1 (e )(2) classifies
as structural components any property that "relates to the
operation or maintenance of a building," and includes, by way of example,
parts of a building (walls, floors and ceilings), as well as any permanent
coverings (paneling, windows and doors), components of a central air
conditioning or heating system (motors, pipes and ducts), plumbing and fixtures
(sinks and bathtubs), electrical wiring and lighting fixtures, stairs and
elevators and sprinkler systems.
CP As may want to read Senate report 1881, which
accompanied the Revenue Act of 1962, and Senate report 95-1263, which
accompanied the Revenue Act of 1978, which both amplify and elucidate the
distinction between tangible personal property and structural components.
In distinguishing between a building's tangible personal
property and structural components, CPA’s will find the courts to be a final
source of guidance. In Whiteco Industries,
Inc. v. Commissioner (65 TC 664 (1975», for example, the Tax Court
set forth the following six questions CPAs can use to determine whether
property is inherently permanent and thus a structural component excluded from
the definition of tangible personal property:
. Can the property be
moved? Has it been moved? (For example, a shed with a concrete floor vs. a
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shed with a wooden
floor.)
. How difficult is
removal of the property, and how time-consuming is it? (For example, a wine
cellar vs. a prefabricated photo-processing lab.)
. Is the property designed
or constructed to remain permanently in place? (For example, a wooden barn vs.
a wire chicken coop.)
. Are there circumstances that tend to show the
expected or intended length of affiliation - or that the property may or will
have to be moved? (For example, permanent concrete pilings vs. floating docks
that can be removed in the winter.)
. How much damage will
the property sustain upon its removal? (For example, a steel-encased bank vault
vs. an easily removable lighting system attached by bolts.)
. How is the property
affixed to the land? (For example, permanently glued bathroom tile vs.
removable billboard.)
Even with ample regulatory, legislative and judicial
guidance, making the distinction between tangible personal property and a
building's structural components remains a challenge for CPAs. No bright-line
test exists. What is fortunate, however, is that many of the factual issues
involving properties of different sorts have been litigated, and their outcomes
illuminate the direction a court confronted with similar facts is likely to
take. Examples of how the courts viewed various categories of property are
provided in "Categorizing Property: Court Rulings," below.
COST SEGREGATION EXAMPLE
A thorough analysis of the facts of each situation
helps CP As quantify the present-value tax savings associated with using cost
segregation.
Consider the following example based on an actual cost
segregation engineering report. Suppose a taxpayer purchases a nonresidential
building for $12,135,000 (assume the land is owned by an independent third
party). If the taxpayer does not use cost segregation, it must use
straight-line depreciation over 39 years.
In contrast, suppose the accounting professional
advises his or her client or employer to retain an engineering consultant to
prepare a cost segregation study. The engineer's report shows that of the total
purchase price, $11,285,000 should be allocated to the building, $50,000 to
IS-year property and $800,000 to 5-year property. Allocating part of the
purchase price to these two additional _ property categories results in tremendous tax savings.
Assuming a 35% tax rate and a 5% discount rate, the cost segregation study
produces $133,563 of tax savings. Exhibit 2 illustrates the yearly savings.
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WHEN TO APPLY THE TECHNIQUE
CP As should keep three additional things in mind.
First, the 2001 and 2003 tax acts made cost segregation more valuable. If real
property is reclassified as 5-, 7- and 15-year personal property, it may
qualify for 30% and 50% bonus depreciation. This bonus depreciation applies to
new property in the first year it is placed in service. The magnitude of this
additional allowance in the first year
can be enormous. For
example, a shift of $1 million from 39-year property to 5-year property
can augment first-year depreciation deductions by a whopping $575,000 ($25,000
vs. $600,000). The resulting cash flow can provide the capital for numerous
other projects. (Practitioners should be
aware, however, that the application of alternative minimum
tax-which in certain instances mandates slower depreciation
methodologies-may reduce some of the tax savings associated with cost segregation.)
Second, cost segregation is applicable not only when
taxpayers acquire new or existing structures but also when they previously had
acquired or improved a structure and have the proper engineering report to
justify cost segregation. (If, however, the real property in question was put
into service too many years ago-commonly 1000there may be insufficient adjusted
basis remaining to justify using cost segregation.)
Third, regulations issued in March 2004 sanction the
use of cost segregation years after a real estate acquisition. Treasury
regulations section 1.446-1 T( e)( 5)(iii), example 9, posits a situation where
a cost segregation study was conducted four years after an initial building
acquisition; the study showed the taxpayer had missed opportunities to take
enhanced depreciation deductions. Under these circumstances the taxpayer was
permitted to make an IRC section 481 adjustment all in the year it changed its
method of depreciation. These changes in methodology, however, require that the
taxpayer in a timely manner file form 3115 for permission to change its
depreciation accounting method, which is granted automatically under current
revenue procedures.
Today virtually all real-property purchases entail the
simultaneous acquisition of tangible personal property. For that reason CP As
should routinely recommend the use of cost segregation studies whenever the
expenditures for an acquisition, including leasehold improvements, equal or
exceed $750,000.
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RESOURCES
AICPA National Real Estate
Conference November 7-9, 2004
Renaissance Esmeralda Resort and Spa Indian Wells,
California
AICPA National Construction Industry
Conference
December 2--4,2004
Marriott New Orleans, New Orleans
F or more information or to register, go to www.
cpa2biz.com or call the Institute at 888-777-7077.
ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES
The benefits of cost segregation overwhelmingly
outweigh the drawbacks. When it comes to real estate acquisitions, the jewel of
cost segregation is that it yields enhanced depreciation deductions. As
evidenced by the above example, there can be astounding differences in outcomes
between using and not using it. The major advantage of cost segregation is not
necessarily that it will produce more depreciation deductions (except,
of course, to the extent depreciable basis has been allocated away from the
land element of the purchase). Instead, due to the time value of money, the
advantage of these front-loaded deductions will be quantifiably greater than
had the deductions been spread over longer periods of time using slower
depreciation methods.
Another advantage of using cost segregation is that if
a building component subsequently needs replacement, taxpayers can write off
its remaining tax basis. To illustrate, suppose a cost segregation study showed
the initial value of a roof to be $500,000. Two years later, when the roof has
an adjusted tax basis of $480,000, it needs to be replaced. The taxpayer could
deduct a $480,000 loss. Had the taxpayer not done the cost segregation study,
the outcome would have been vastly different; no loss could be taken because
the roofs tax basis and the basis of the building would remain intertwined.
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Categorizing Property: Court Rulings
A number of court cases serve as a useful compass to
help CP As navigate the difficult (and, according to some observers, possibly
treacherous) waters of distinguishing between tangible personal property and
the structural components of a building.
Partitions. In
Metro National Corporation v. Commissioner (52 TCM 1440 (1987)),
the taxpayer used gypsum board partitions that were readily and cheaply moved
and reused; the removal process did not damage the other partitions, ceiling,
floor or building structure. The court held the partitions were tangible
personal property. In Dixie Manor, Inc. v. United States (79-2 US
Tax Cases 9469 (W.D. Ky. 1979)), on the other hand, the taxpayer installed the
gypsum board in a manner that rendered it non-moveable without causing
significant damage to the building, and the court held the partitions
constituted a structural component of the building.
Property in the nature of machinery. Here CPAs can compare Weirickv.
Commissioner (62 TC 446 (1974)), in which the court deemed line towers,
located at various points between the upper and lower terminals of a ski lift,
to be tangible personal property in the nature of machinery, with Munford,
Inc. v. Commissioner (849 F2d 1398 (11th Cir. 1988)), in which a
specialized refrigerated warehouse had more attributes of a building than of
machinery.
Wall coverings. On this issue practitioners can compare Hospital Corporation of
America v. Commissioner (109 TC 21 (1997)), where easily removed
vinyl wall coverings were held to be tangible personal property, with Duaine v. Commissioner (49 TCM 88
(1985)), where tiles glued to the walls and floors of a fast-food restaurant
were held to be structural components of the building.
Lighting. In
Morrison, Inc. v. Commissioner (891 F2d 857 (11th Cir. 1990)),
the court ruled lighting fixtures and electrical connections that did not
provide basic illumination and were accessory to a business were tangible
personal property. In Duaine v. Commissioner,
however, it found decorative lighting fixtures to be structural components
because they provided the building's only light.
Electrical systems.
For guidance in this area, CPAs can
compare Scott Paper Co. v. Commissioner (74 TC 137 (1980)), where
the portion of the taxpayer's primary electrical distribution system that did
not relate to the overall operation or maintenance of buildings was held to be
tangible personal property" with Hospital Corporation of America, where
part of the electrical system used to power employee personal equipment or
equipment relating to the operation or maintenance of the building ( an
elevator) was deemed a structural component of the building.
Cost segregation also may
result in lower local realty-transfer taxes. Localities often impose these
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taxes based on a building's fair market value. When a
cost segregation study reduces a building's value, this produces a
corresponding reduction in the amount of the transfer tax due (and a potential
reduction of annual real estate taxes as well).
The process of cost segregation has shortcomings,
however. First, and most easily quantifiable, is the actual cost of the
engineering study. While the fees vary widely, a well-done study is not
inexpensive: A typical cost segregation study and written report will cost
between $10,000 and $25,000. Cost factors are the property's location, whether
the building is new or existing, the nature of the property (residential vs.
nonresidential) and time pressures for completion of construction. As in any
investment, the taxpayer must conduct a cost-benefit analysis. From the time of
its initial commission, a cost segregation study should take about four to six
weeks to complete. A business entity can deduct the cost of the study as a
business expense under IRC section 162.
A second disadvantage is that the subsequent
disposition of the real estate acquisition likely will trigger the tax code's
recapture provisions. For tangible personal property, IRC section 1245 will
apply, so the taxpayer must recognize ordinary income, potentially subject to
the top marginal tax rate (in 2004, 35%). Installment sale treatment also will
not be available with respect to the recapture. With real property, IRC section
1250 will apply, so the taxpayer must recognize unrecaptured
section 1250 gain, taxed at 25%. (In practice the contract for sale usually can
be adjusted to allocate less of the purchase price to recapture items.)
Another disadvantage is that taxpayers who use cost
segregation too aggressively, or who receive misinformation in their
engineering report, may be subject to penalties. There is a 20% penalty on the
portion of any tax underpayment from a "substantial valuation
overstatement" (IRC section 6662(a)). A valuation overstatement occurs if
the valuation is 200% or more than the amount determined to be the correct amount
(IRC section 6662(e)(1)). This penalty will not apply, however, if the
overvaluation does not result in a substantial misstatement of taxes-that is,
exceeding $5,000 (IRC section 6662(e)(1))-or the taxpayer can show reasonable
cause and that it acted in good faith (IRC section 6664(c)(1)).
Some taxpayers are reluctant to use cost segregation,
equating it with a high-risk tax shelter. In truth, this reluctance is
misplaced. If the cost of the components in the engineering report is well documented,
the cost segregation technique is no more aggressive than using a permissible
depreciation method under the Internal Revenue Code. In a well prepared
engineering-based report, tangible property and land improvement segments of
real estate may be traced to applicable construction documents, and the
property unit costs are clearly determined. You will normally have great
success in an IRS examination sustaining claimed tax benefits. In contrast, an
accountant's ad hoc cost segregation calculation or reliance on a contractor
(who typically is familiar neither with a subcontractor's cost for specific
property items nor the tax law) is a recipe for disaster on examination.
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. CPA’s should
routinely recommend that their clients or employers use cost segregation
studies whenever the expenditures for a structure, including leasehold
improvements, equal or exceed $750,000.
. Cost segregation can be used for new construction and improvements, for the purchase of existing structures and for buildings acquired in prior tax years-even if the building has been disposed of.
. A taxpayer that uses cost segregation for a previously
acquired structure must file IRS Form 3115, Change in Accounting Method.
. If a taxpayer
disposes of a building for which cost segregation was used, it should consider
the recapture considerations associated with this disposition.
. Greater tax savings
will be possible with an engineering report that clearly identifies property as
tangible personal property rather than as structural building components.
OVERLOOKED OPPORTUNITY
Accounting professionals must be able to suggest and
help implement cost segregation for their clients or employers so they can
achieve maximum tax savings. In the past when taxpayers purchased real estate,
they traditionally allocated 20% of the purchase price to land and 80% to
buildings. While the IRS rarely questioned this simplistic approach, purchasers
did themselves a financial disservice: They forfeited opportunities to achieve
a better tax result.
Although the cost segregation technique always was
available to real estate purchasers, it often was overlooked as a tax-savings
tool. Recently, however, buyers have begun to recognize that despite some
drawbacks, cost segregation can dramatically increase tax savings. They are,
therefore, taking advantage of this opportunity, challenging the "business
as usual" mantra..
Exhibit 2:
Straight-Line Method vs. Cost Segregation Technique