I need some help with a sales of a commercial building placed in service in 1982. Depreciation schedule shows: 15 yrs, PRE/NA. I didn't do taxes before 2000 and have no clue what that stands for. Therefor I cannot find out what to do with recaptured depreciation for this Sec. 1250 property. Is this an accelerated method of depreciation or straight line?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Commerc.Building, Depreciation PRE/NA 15 yrs
Collapse
X
-
Pre
Originally posted by Gretel View PostI need some help with a sales of a commercial building placed in service in 1982. Depreciation schedule shows: 15 yrs, PRE/NA. I didn't do taxes before 2000 and have no clue what that stands for. Therefor I cannot find out what to do with recaptured depreciation for this Sec. 1250 property. Is this an accelerated method of depreciation or straight line?Last edited by veritas; 03-12-2012, 08:02 PM.
-
Originally posted by veritas View PostThe method used was ACRS. Accelerated Cost Recovery System. PRE is short for Prescibed. You need to know if the straight line method was used.
Comment
-
Hmmm . . . . if this is COMMERCIAL property, not residential, and it was placed in service in 1982 and the prescribed method was used, which is accelerated and not straight-line, then .....
You have Section 1245 property, not Section 1250. ALL of the depreciation is recaptured as ordinary income.
Be definition, under ACRS, commercial property not depreciated using straight-line, is Section 1245 property.
Maribeth
Comment
-
Accelerated Trap
Gretel, back then if one used anything more aggressive than straight-line, this disqualified the entire property from capital gains rates upon sale, forever. (Forever includes 2011). This would include the ENTIRE property, not just the recapture portion.
And virtually impossible to figure out because regardless of whether straight-line or accelerated methods were used, the property would be fully depreciated under either selection no later than 2001.
This is a good ethical question - if there is no way to find out, how do you report the sale? Ordinary or Capital Gains?? In conjunction with this -- if YOU don't know, do you think the IRS would know??
Comment
-
In your OP, you state "depreciation schedule shows 15 yrs ACRS Pre/NA." What depreciation schedule? If there is a current one in the file or return that shows this, the bldg would have been totally depreciated by 1997. When sold, entire cost recovery amount comes in as ordinary income under ACRS.Last edited by Burke; 03-13-2012, 03:00 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Burke View PostIn your OP, you state "depreciation schedule shows 15 yrs ACRS Pre/NA." What depreciation schedule? If there is a current one in the file or return that shows this, the bldg would have been totally depreciated by 1997. When sold, entire cost recovery amount comes in as ordinary income under ACRS.
I read TTB and Pub. 946 but since I could not figure out which method this depreciation was I had to ask for help.
After all responses I still don't know if this depreciation detail shows if it was straight line or accelerated depreciation. Snag, my thinking was already along those line of declaring this straight line depreciation.
Anyway, I appreciate any comment I got on this issue.
Comment
-
Sorry about that. The fact that it says "15 years" indicates it was ACRS, which was the default method in place in 1982. Straight-Line on a commercial building would have been at least 20-25 years or more, meaning it still would have been depreciating in the year 2000, as it would have run until at least 2002. Since you say it was already fully depreciated in 2000, it could not have been straight-line method. Maribeth's response is correct. 1245 prop.Last edited by Burke; 03-13-2012, 04:15 PM.
Comment
Disclaimer
Collapse
This message board allows participants to freely exchange ideas and opinions on areas concerning taxes. The comments posted are the opinions of participants and not that of Tax Materials, Inc. We make no claim as to the accuracy of the information and will not be held liable for any damages caused by using such information. Tax Materials, Inc. reserves the right to delete or modify inappropriate postings.
Comment