I don't know that anything I read can be any substitute for facts & circumstances judgement when it comes to accumulating amortizable start-up costs.
Sorta easy when you have a retail store, and your start-up costs can stop when you first open your doors to the public.
Not so easy with this situation: New corporation is in the business of government contracting. ACRN Corp begins Sept 1, 2009 with minimal payroll and operating expenses. Corp will add a staff of 8 people and begin bidding Oct 1, 2009 on 3-4 Federal government defense contracts. After many months of bidding activity, the first such contract award will occur no earlier than March 1st of 2010. Others will be awarded from April to July 2010.
As you can read, this is not simply a matter of painting an old shop and opening your doors. This is a very long and drawn-out process.
Anyone offer any suggestions (with citation guidance) as to when we can stop collecting these start-up costs, and begin ordinary and necessary deductions??
Sorta easy when you have a retail store, and your start-up costs can stop when you first open your doors to the public.
Not so easy with this situation: New corporation is in the business of government contracting. ACRN Corp begins Sept 1, 2009 with minimal payroll and operating expenses. Corp will add a staff of 8 people and begin bidding Oct 1, 2009 on 3-4 Federal government defense contracts. After many months of bidding activity, the first such contract award will occur no earlier than March 1st of 2010. Others will be awarded from April to July 2010.
As you can read, this is not simply a matter of painting an old shop and opening your doors. This is a very long and drawn-out process.
Anyone offer any suggestions (with citation guidance) as to when we can stop collecting these start-up costs, and begin ordinary and necessary deductions??
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