Cost Segregation – Segregate
building costs and capture savings
PHYSICIAN’S NEWS DIGEST
Segregate building costs and
capture savings
By
If your practice is
preparing to buy, build, or remodel a medical facility, you may want to consider
a cost segregation study. Cost segregation studies are designed to accelerate
income tax depreciation deductions, providing you with maximum cash flow.
A cost segregation study
is a means of breaking down total building costs and categorizing them into structural
and nonstructural assets. Generally, structural assets are classified as real
property but non structural assets are considered personal property.
Cost segregation studies
offer numerous benefits. Property owners can substantially reduce taxable income,
maximize
current depreciation by accelerating deductions, increase
cash flow and minimize property tax assessments since property tax bills are
based on the value of real property. And with the additional 30 percent bonus
depreciation available under the Job Creation and Worker Assistance Act of
2002, a cost segregation study is especially beneficial between now and Sept.
11, 2004.
Health care practices
have another valuable opportunity, courtesy of the IRS, if you constructed or
purchased real estate in a prior year but did not take advantage of a cost
segregation study. This IRS gift horse allows you to deduct depreciation
amounts that a practice was legally entitled to but did not claim (e.g., due to
erroneous property classification as a 39-year depreciable building). This cash
flow windfall is available to you even though the statute of limitations
previously closed on the property construction or acquisition year. Qualified
cost segregation professionals have the engineering and appraisal skills to
"carve out" the overlooked shorter-life assets and file the necessary
IRS paper work to recover unused tax deductions.
Valuable Tax Savings
Imbedded in Buildings
A health care practice's
real estate holdings may constitute a huge capital investment. With an
engineering-based cost segregation study, it is possible to maximize the real
property's [mancial return by generating significant
cash flow savings. Cost segregation professionals generate cash tax savings by
carving out shorter-lived assets (qualifying for 5-, 7-, or 15- year write¬off periods) that are normally imbedded in a
building's construction or acquisition costs (generally depreciated over 39
years).
You can "mine
out" these buried tax savings from:
• New buildings presently
under construction.
• Existing buildings
undergoing renovation, remodeling, restoration or expansion.
• Purchases of existing
properties.
• Office/facility
leasehold improvements and "fit outs."
• Post-1986 real estate
construction, building acquisitions, or improvements where no cost segregation
study was performed (even though the statute of limitations previously closed
on the property construction/acquisition year).
Based on the results of
previous cost segregation studies, for every million dollars of property reclassified
for faster depreciation write-offs, the present value of increased cash flow
from income tax savings approximates $230,000.
Reclassifying Assets
In the case of medical
buildings, many assets can be properly reclassified as nonstructural or
personal property and, therefore, eligible for depreciation over five or seven
years, rather than the 39 years required for nonresidential real property. This
means property owners get larger tax deductions sooner, with significant
savings in the fIrst year.
Land improvements, which
can be depreciated over 15 years, can also be segregated from real property.
Land improvements include exterior lighting, parking lots, walkways, fencing
and landscaping.
Here's an example of the
potential savings that can be realized by reclassifying $100,000 in real
property as personal property. First-year deductions on real property would
total $2,564, based on a 39-year depreciation schedule. But assume that the
$100,000 is reclassified as seven-year personal property.
• If otherwise eligible,
the taxpayer can take the Internal Revenue Code Section 179 deduction, which
allows expensing up to $25,000 of original costs in the first year.
• The property (ifnew) qualifies for the 30 percent bonus depreciation on
the remaining basis ($22,500).
• By applying the
seven-year depreciation schedule to the remaining amount ($52,500), a taxpayer
ends up with $55,000 in fIrSt-year deductions as
opposed to $2,564.
As you can see, being
able to increase and accelerate deductions in the short term means more cash
available to your business now.
Timing Considerations
The best time to perform
a cost segregation study is when you begin planning to buy, build, or remodel a
medical building. It's easier to value and segregate assets at that point and
to secure supporting documentation such as drawings and blueprints.
Building owners may also
be able to work with their contractor in the planning stages to make strategic
decisions that result in more assets qualifying as personal property. For
instance, track lighting could be classified as personal property, but not
fluorescent lighting.
Sometimes personal
property is thought of rather narrowly as furniture and other moveable
equipment. While these are valid examples of personal property, the category
encompasses much more. Just about anything within a building that exists to
support medical equipment can be considered personal property and, therefore,
eligible for accelerated depreciation.
Examples include: site
preparation costs; associated labor and overhead; structural modifications for
equipment, such as reinforced flooring or lead shielding for radiology;
specialized heating, cooling or ventilation; and electrical or plumbing
components necessary for oxygen equipment, dental chairs or laser equipment.
During a cost segregation
study, the following takes place:
• Physical inspection of
the property.
• Examination of
architectural/engineering drawings and specifications for potential asset
reclassification.
• Analysis of cost data,
including the contractor's application of payments, change orders,
owner-incurred costs and indirect disbursements.
• Preparation of an
itemized list of property qualifying for shorter~life
classification based on relevant income tax authorities.
• Apportionment of direct
labor, material components and indirect costs based on engineering drawings and
specifications.
• Reconciliation of total
costs per the engineering analysis to capitalized project costs.
Support for Cost
Segregation
A pivotal 1997 tax case
involving Hospital Corporation of America (HCA) clarified guidelines on
classifying and depreciating personal property, which has been a boon to those
in the medical industry seeking to maximize their personal property deductions.
Sometimes personal
property is thought of rather narrowly as furniture and other moveable
equipment. While these are valid examples of personal property, the category
encompasses much more. Just about anything within a building that exists to
support medical equipment can be considered personal property and, therefore,
eligible for accelerated depreciation.
Examples include: site
preparation costs; associated labor and overhead; structural modifications for
equipment, such as reinforced flooring or lead shielding for radiology;
specialized heating, cooling or ventilation; and electrical or plumbing
components necessary for oxygen equipment, dental chairs or laser equipment.
During a cost segregation
study, the following takes place:
• Physical inspection of
the property.
• Examination of
architectural/engineering drawings and specifications for potential asset
reclassification.
• Analysis of cost data,
including the contractor's application of payments, change orders,
owner-incurred costs and indirect disbursements.
• Preparation of an
itemized list of property qualifying for shorter-life classification based on
relevant income tax authorities.
• Apportionment of direct
labor, material components and indirect costs based on engineering drawings and
specifications.
• Reconciliation of total
costs per the engineering analysis to capitalized project costs.
A pivotal 1997 tax case
involving Hospital Corporation of America (HCA) clarified guidelines on
classifying and depreciating personal property, which has been a boon to those
in the medical industry seeking to maximize their personal property deductions.
The ruling found that HCA
correctly classified as personal property items associated with hospital
equipment including: portions of the electrical system; television wiring;
telephone equipment; carpeting; vinyl wall and floor coverings; kitchen
plumbing connections and exhaust hoods; patient corridor handrails; and
accordion-style room dividers.
In recent years, the
Internal Revenue Service also simplified procedures allowing taxpayers to make
changes to their accounting methods and retroactively claim
"catch-up" depreciation if they missed deductions they were eligible
for in preVIous years.
In general, high-value
properties and those recently placed in service yield the greatest benefits
from a cost segregation study, but cost segregation produces savings in a
variety of situations.
If you are planning to
buy, build, or remodel a medical building, ask your tax advisor whether a cost
segregation study might be worthwhile for your specific circumstances. Although
these studies are detailed and complex, your CPA can
coordinate the process for you, freeing you to sit back and enjoy the money¬saving benefits.
Benefits of Cost
Segregation
With a qualified cost
segregation study, indisputable evidence for massive tax savings are documented that withstand governmental agency scrutiny.
Cost segregation professionals provide full documentation, emploYing
engineering and cost estimating procedures recognized in IRS rulings and
judicial decisions. A complete "audit trail" will trace derived costs
from contract documents and other source data. And, property is categorized
into shorter-life classes based on applicable tax authorities.
Studies are designed to:
• Maximize current
depreciation through accelerated deductions.
• Reduce taxable income.
• Minimize property tax
assessments.
• Increase cash flow.