The owner of an auto repair shop has his logo displayed on his personal use vehicle. His vehicle is only used for commuting. If he pays for a graphic design company to provide a full vehicle wrap on this vehicle, is he allowed a depreciation deduction? Does a full vehicle wrap allow you to treat an otherwise personal auto as a business asset - because you use it for advertising?
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I wonder
If he drove the vehicle around areas where either the streets were full of cars or there were a lot of pedestrians or just people in their yards who would see the car, and if he scrupulously did not stop other than as required by the traffic laws, did not get out of the car or accomplish anything that benefited him personally, could he not deduct either the actual costs as advertising expense or deduct the mileage assuming that he kept good records? I would agree that in practice the IRS will cast a jaundiced eye at this unless the taxpayer can prove that the driving being deducted had no personal benefits and no benefits at all other than the advertising.
There is actually a business in Texas that is owned and operated by a former Psychologist and a former Psychiatrist that operates a fleet of pickup trucks that do nothing except drive around Houston while decorated with signs advertising businesses. Ads range in size from a foot wide and inches tall to covering one side of a truck. There are other companies in other places including Asheville NC that put advertising on panel trucks or on trucks made to carry sheets of glass and drive around in order to expose the paid ads.. What I am saying is that the idea of this "advertising vehicle" is not novel.
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Originally posted by erchess View PostIf he drove the vehicle around areas where either the streets were full of cars or there were a lot of pedestrians or just people in their yards who would see the car, and if he scrupulously did not stop other than as required by the traffic laws, did not get out of the car or accomplish anything that benefited him personally, could he not deduct either the actual costs as advertising expense or deduct the mileage assuming that he kept good records? I would agree that in practice the IRS will cast a jaundiced eye at this unless the taxpayer can prove that the driving being deducted had no personal benefits and no benefits at all other than the advertising.
There is actually a business in Texas that is owned and operated by a former Psychologist and a former Psychiatrist that operates a fleet of pickup trucks that do nothing except drive around Houston while decorated with signs advertising businesses. Ads range in size from a foot wide and inches tall to covering one side of a truck. There are other companies in other places including Asheville NC that put advertising on panel trucks or on trucks made to carry sheets of glass and drive around in order to expose the paid ads.. What I am saying is that the idea of this "advertising vehicle" is not novel.
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Originally posted by Judysam View PostThe owner of an auto repair shop has his logo displayed on his personal use vehicle. His vehicle is only used for commuting. If he pays for a graphic design company to provide a full vehicle wrap on this vehicle, is he allowed a depreciation deduction? Does a full vehicle wrap allow you to treat an otherwise personal auto as a business asset - because you use it for advertising?You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say will be misquoted, then used against you.
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The cost of wrapping the vehicle would certainly be deductible. I am betting you could argue that the cost of paying for car washes that otherwise would not be done (so say you wash it weekly now at $10/wash instead of every 3 months) could be a deduction.
But only the increase in costs due to the advertising should be deductible IMO. Otherwise everyone could just slap a bumper sticker on their car for the company they work for and claim all of their commuting expenses as an unreimbursed employee business expense. Right?
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Originally posted by erchess View Post. What I am saying is that the idea of this "advertising vehicle" is not novel.
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Not qualified
Originally posted by veritas View Postwon't accept the answer no.
His buddies or the graphic design company has already told him it's ok.In other words, a democratic government is the only one in which those who vote for a tax can escape the obligation to pay it.
Alexis de Tocqueville
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