Would like to revive an unanswered question from a previous thread.
I try to simplify explanations to clients about repairs. "If it is an improvement, we have to capitalize and depreciate it. If it existed prior and is just a replacement for what previously existed, it is a deductible repair."
Yet the IRS has some sort of repair allowance, where if a repair exceeds a certain threshhold of original cost, then they want it to be capitalized and depreciated. Example, a building costs $150,000 several years ago. This year, $60,000 is spent is pure repairs, no improvements. Under this "repair allowance doctrine" and a 35% allowance, the threshold would be $52,500, the entire $60,000 would have to be capitalized.
I haven't heard of IRS making audit adjustments for this sort of thing in over 30 years. Are they still doing this??
I try to simplify explanations to clients about repairs. "If it is an improvement, we have to capitalize and depreciate it. If it existed prior and is just a replacement for what previously existed, it is a deductible repair."
Yet the IRS has some sort of repair allowance, where if a repair exceeds a certain threshhold of original cost, then they want it to be capitalized and depreciated. Example, a building costs $150,000 several years ago. This year, $60,000 is spent is pure repairs, no improvements. Under this "repair allowance doctrine" and a 35% allowance, the threshold would be $52,500, the entire $60,000 would have to be capitalized.
I haven't heard of IRS making audit adjustments for this sort of thing in over 30 years. Are they still doing this??
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