Tax-Saving Tips: February 2022
Make Sure You Grab Your Home Internet Deduction
If
you do some work at home, you’re probably using your home internet connection.
Are your monthly internet expenses deductible? Maybe.
The
deduction rules depend on your choice of business entity (proprietorship,
corporation, or partnership).
Deduction
on Schedule C
If
you operate your business as a sole proprietorship or as a single-member LLC,
you file a Schedule C to report your business income and expenses. As a Schedule
C taxpayer, you may deduct ordinary and necessary expenses, which include
business-related internet subscription fees.
You
can deduct your use of your home internet whether or not you claim the
home-office deduction, as follows:
·
If
you claim the home-office deduction on your Form 1040, the internet expense
goes on line 21 (utilities) of IRS Form 8829 as either a direct or an indirect
expense.
·
If
you do not claim the home-office deduction, enter the business portion of your
internet expenses as utilities expenses on line 25 of your Schedule C.
Deduction
When You Operate as a Corporation
When
you operate your business as a corporation, you are an employee of that
corporation. Because of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), the only way for you
to reap the benefits of the home internet deduction (or a home office) is to
have your corporation reimburse you for the deduction. In the case of a
reimbursed employee expense,
·
the
corporation deducts the expense as a utility expense, and
·
you
receive the reimbursement as a tax-free reimbursed employee business expense.
Why
is the reimbursement method the only way for the corporate owner to get the
deduction? The TCJA eliminated the 2018-2025 deduction for miscellaneous
itemized expenses. These include unreimbursed employee expenses, such as
internet connection fees.
Deduction
When You Operate as a Partnership
If
you have deductible home internet expenses and/or a home office and operate as
a partner in a partnership, you have two ways to get a tax benefit:
1.
Deduct
the costs as unreimbursed partner expenses (UPE) on your personal return.
2.
Or
get reimbursed tax-free from your partnership via an accountable plan (think
“expense report”).
Substantiating
Your Home Internet Expense Deduction
Where
business owners can run into trouble with the IRS is in substantiating their
internet expense deduction.
You
should have no problem showing the total cost for your home internet
connection—just total your monthly bills. The problem is in establishing what
percentage of the total cost was for business, because only that percentage is
deductible.
Ideally,
you should keep track of how much time you use your home internet connection
for business and how much time for personal use. A simple log or notation on
your business calendar or appointment book—indicating approximately how many
hours you were online for business each day while working at home—should be
sufficient.
Google
it and you can find software and apps that will track your internet use.
Instead
of tracking your home internet use every day throughout the year, you could use
a sampling method such as that permitted for tracking business use of vehicles
and other listed property. There is no logical reason the IRS shouldn’t accept
such a sampling for internet use.
Selling Your Home
to Your S Corporation
The
strategy behind creating an S corporation and then selling your home to that S
corporation comes into play when
·
you
want to convert your home to a rental property and take advantage of the
exclusions, or
·
you
need more time to sell the home to realize the benefits of the $250,000
exclusion ($500,000 if filing a joint return).
With
this strategy, one question often comes up: If a married couple sells their
home to their S corporation to be a rental property, can the owners be the
renters?
Answer:
No. In this situation, the tax code treats your S corporation as you, the
individual taxpayer, and thus you would be renting from yourself, and that
would produce no tax benefits.
In
effect, the S corporation renting the residence to the owner of the S
corporation is the same as homeowners renting their residence to themselves. It
produces no tax benefits.
On
the other hand, your S corporation could rent the home for use as a principal
residence to your son or daughter or other related party, and the tax code
would treat that rental the same as any rental to a third party.
Reverse Mortgage
as a Tax Planning Tool
When
you think of the reverse mortgage, you may not think of using it as a tax
planning tool.
If
you are house rich but cash poor, the reverse mortgage can
·
give
you the cash you desire,
·
save
you a boatload of both income and estate taxes, when used in the right
circumstances.
With a reverse mortgage, you as the borrower don’t
make payments to the lender to pay down the mortgage principal over time.
Instead, the reverse happens: the lender makes payments to you, and the
mortgage principal gets bigger over time.
You can receive reverse
mortgage proceeds as a lump sum, in installments over a period of months or
years, or as line-of-credit withdrawals. After you pass
away or permanently move out, you or your heirs sell the property and use the
net proceeds to pay off the reverse mortgage balance, including accrued
interest.
So, with a reverse mortgage, you can keep control
of your home while converting some of the equity into much-needed cash.
In contrast, if you sell your residence to raise
cash, it could involve an unwanted relocation to a new house and trigger a taxable gain way in excess of the federal
home sale gain exclusion break—up to $500,000 for joint-filing couples and up
to $250,000 for unmarried individuals.
The combined federal and state
income tax hit from selling could easily reach into the hundreds of thousands
of dollars.
For instance, the current
maximum federal income tax rate on the taxable portion of a big home sale gain
is 23.8 percent—20 percent for the “regular” maximum federal capital gains rate
plus another 3.8 percent for the net investment income tax. And that’s just
what you have to pay the feds.
With the reverse mortgage, you
can avoid paying income taxes on the sale. And perhaps even better yet, you can
avoid estate taxes.
The federal income tax basis
of an appreciated capital gain asset owned by a deceased individual, including
a personal residence, is stepped up to fair market value as of the date of the
owner’s death or (if the estate executor chooses) the alternate valuation date
six months later.
When the value of an asset
eligible for this favorable treatment stays about the same between the date of
death and the date of sale by your heirs, there will be little or no taxable
gain to report to the IRS—because the sale proceeds are fully offset (or nearly
so) by the stepped-up basis. Good!
Big Tax Break:
Qualified Improvement Property
Do
you own or lease non-residential (think “commercial”) real property for your
business, or rent non-residential real property to others?
If
so, interior improvements you make to the property may be fully deductible in a
single year instead of over multiple years.
But
to be deducted instantly, the improvements must fit into the category that the
tax code calls “qualified improvement property” (QIP).
What Is QIP?
Ordinarily,
non-residential real property is depreciated over 39 years. And so are
improvements to such real property after it is placed in service.
But
Congress wants to encourage business owners to improve their properties. So,
starting in 2018, the TCJA established a new category of depreciable real
property: QIP, which has a much shorter recovery period than regular commercial
property—15 years. But even better, for tax years 2021 and 2022, QIP can
qualify for that immediate 100 percent bonus depreciation deduction.
QIP
consists of improvements, other than personal property, made by the taxpayer to
the interior of non-residential real property after the date the building was
first placed in service. For example, QIP includes interior improvements or
renovations to any of the following:
·
Office
building (or single offices)
·
Restaurant
or bar
·
Store
·
Strip
mall
·
Motel
or hotel
·
Warehouse
·
Factory
Since
QIP applies only to non-residential property, improvements to residential
rental property such as an apartment building are not QIP.
Transient
Property
Airbnb
and similar short-term residential rentals also qualify as non-residential
property if they are rented on a transient basis—that is, over half of the
rental use is by a series of tenants who occupy the unit for less than 30 days
per rental.
QIP
Examples
Examples
of interior improvements that can receive QIP treatment include the following:
·
Drywall
·
Ceilings
·
Interior
doors
·
Modifications
to tenant spaces (if the interior walls are not load-bearing)
·
Fire
protection
·
Mechanical
·
Electrical
·
Plumbing
·
Heating
and air interior equipment and ductwork
·
Security
equipment
QIP
does not include improvements related to the enlargement of a building, an
elevator or escalator, or the internal structural framework of a building.
Structural framework includes “all load-bearing internal walls and any other
internal structural supports.”
Placed
in Service
QIP
consists only of improvements made after the building was placed in service.
But for these purposes, “placed in service” means the first time the building
is placed in service by any person. By reason of this rule, you can purchase an
existing property that was placed in service by an owner anytime in the past,
renovate it before you place it in service, and still get QIP treatment.
But
you have to make the improvements. You can’t acquire a building and
treat improvements made by a previous owner as QIP.
How to Deduct Qualified Improvement Property
You
may deduct the cost of QIP in one of three ways:
·
use
first-year bonus depreciation,
·
use
IRC Section 179 expensing, or
·
depreciate
the cost over 15 years using straight-line depreciation.
As
mentioned earlier, QIP placed in service in 2021 and 2022 is eligible for 100
percent bonus depreciation. That is, you can deduct the entire cost in one
year, without limit.
Starting
in 2023, the tax code reduces bonus depreciation by 20 percent per year until
it is completely phased out for property placed in service in 2027.
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