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    Heat pump dep

    Can I use a 10 year life on a replaced heat pump(old one blew up in this cold weather) since warranty only covers 10 years used in a residential rental. I did find a class life of 10 years in an article that said in essence since it was included in the energy rules for credits it was possible to have a class life of 5 years. what is your take on this. bty old one was 8 years old.

    #2
    I would take 10 years since that is the warranty expected life
    Believe nothing you have not personally researched and verified.

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      #3
      What energy rules? Is this a geothermal unit? Expected life is 12 - 15 for a regular heat pump and should be depreciated 27.5 years-same as the residential rental property.

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        #4
        27.5 years depreciation - it makes no difference how long something is under warranty or expected to last.

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          #5
          agree with TXEA, you posted what I intended to say.

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            #6
            Originally posted by TAX4US
            Can I use a 10 year life on a replaced heat pump ... used in a residential rental?
            No. There is a fairly large group of assets that has no specific assigned class life. They are referred to by the IRS as "Personal Property With No Class Life," and they are assigned a recovery period of 7-years under GDS (MACRS) or 12-years under ADS. Replacement HVAC units, furnaces (including heat pumps), a/c units and water heaters are among the most common of these. (Code §168(e)(3)(C)(v))

            When the same equipment is included in the purchase of residential rental property or non-residential real property, it is automatically included in the 27.5-year or 39-year life assigned to the entire building, unless it is broken out and depreciated as a component, which is allowed. Replacement units, however, should always be depreciated over 7 (or ADS's 12) years.

            You may wish to refer to IRS Pub 946, "How To Depreciate Property," where you will find the above information near the very end, right above the glossary.
            Roland Slugg
            "I do what I can."

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Roland Slugg View Post
              No. There is a fairly large group of assets that has no specific assigned class life. They are referred to by the IRS as "Personal Property With No Class Life," and they are assigned a recovery period of 7-years under GDS (MACRS) or 12-years under ADS. Replacement HVAC units, furnaces (including heat pumps), a/c units and water heaters are among the most common of these. (Code §168(e)(3)(C)(v))

              When the same equipment is included in the purchase of residential rental property or non-residential real property, it is automatically included in the 27.5-year or 39-year life assigned to the entire building, unless it is broken out and depreciated as a component, which is allowed. Replacement units, however, should always be depreciated over 7 (or ADS's 12) years.

              You may wish to refer to IRS Pub 946, "How To Depreciate Property," where you will find the above information near the very end, right above the glossary.
              I respectfully disagree. The HVAC is a building system and all building systems are depreciable over the life of the underlying building (27.5 years for residential rental). Here are the building systems:

              Heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems; Plumbing systems; Electrical systems; All escalators; All elevators; Fire-protection and alarm systems; Security systems; Gas distribution systems; and Other structural components that are specifically designated as building systems in future published guidance (Reg. §1.263(a)-3(e)(2)(ii)).

              This is the rule under the tangible property regulations and it has always been the rule. There is no basis for taking a 7 year write off for an HVAC now or ever. The 7 year catch all is not meant for any improvement permanently attached to a building.

              Comment


                #8
                No problem. When your clients replace their rental properties' heating and a/c units with new ones, you depreciate those units over 27½ years, but when my clients replace their rental properties' heating and a/c units with new ones, I will use a 7-year MACRS life on their returns.
                Roland Slugg
                "I do what I can."

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