Special Tax Breaks for Small Businesses

 

Special Tax Breaks for Small Businesses

 

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), enacted in February, created, extended or expanded a variety of business tax deductions and credits. Some of these changes—the bonus depreciation and increased section 179 deduction, for example—are only available this year. The following are some of the key provisions for buisnesses.

 

Faster Write-Offs for Certain Capital Expenditures: Many small businesses that invest in new property and equipment will be able to write off most or all of these purchases on their 2009 returns. The new law extends through 2009 the special 50 percent depreciation allowance, also known as bonus depreciation, and increased limits on the section 179 deduction, named for the relevant section of the Internal Revenue Code. Normally, businesses recover these capital investments through annual depreciation deductions spread over several years. Both of these provisions encourage these investments by enabling businesses to write them off more quickly.

 

The bonus depreciation provision generally enables businesses to deduct half the cost of qualifying property in the year it is placed in service.

 

The section 179 deduction enables small businesses to deduct up to $250,000 of the cost of machinery, equipment, vehicles, furniture and other qualifying property placed in service during 2009. Without the new law, the limit would have dropped to $133,000. The existing $25,000 limit still applies to sport utility vehicles. A special phase-out provision effectively targets the section 179 deduction to small businesses and generally eliminates it for most larger businesses.

 

Exclusion of Gain on the Sale of Certain Small Business Stock: The new law provides an extra incentive for individuals who invest in small businesses. Investors in qualified small business stock can exclude 75 percent of the gain upon sale of the stock. This increased exclusion applies only if the qualified small business stock is acquired after Feb. 17, 2009 and before Jan. 1, 2011, and held for more than five years. For previously-acquired stock, the exclusion rate remains at 50 percent in most cases.

 

Estimated Tax Requirement Modified: Many individual small business taxpayers may be able to defer, until the end of the year, paying a larger part of their 2009 tax obligations. For 2009, eligible individuals can make quarterly estimated tax payments equal to 90 percent of their 2009 tax or 90 percent of their 2008 tax, whichever is less. Individuals qualify if they received more than half of their gross income from their small businesses in 2008 and meet other requirements.

 

COBRA Credit: Employers that provide the 65 percent COBRA premium subsidy under ARRA to eligible former employees claim credit for this subsidy on their quarterly or annual employment tax returns. To help avoid imposing an unnecessary cash-flow burden, affected employers can reduce their employment tax deposits by the amount of the credit.

 

Other ARRA business provisions relate to discharges of certain business indebtedness, the holding period for S corporation built-in gains and acceleration of certain business credits for corporations.

 

If you have a specific question regarding this article, as a public service, and at no cost to you, I invite you to call me with your question. Also at no charge, I am happy provide you with a second opinion on your return that was done by another paid preparer.

 

Call me and I will be happy to explain my “CPA Quality Tax Preparation at H&R Block Rates”™, my many discounts including the Virtual Tax Office eMail-Order Tax Return Discount of $50 and how you can, in general, minimize your tax preparation fees regardless of who prepares your tax returns. To read previously published tax articles go to www.danghazel.com. You can contact me at info@danghazel.com or call me at 305-451-4224 or 540-825-2771.

 

Thank you for your interest in reading my tax column. This column is offered as a public service with the understanding that each person's tax situation is different; that you should consult your CPA before taking any action based upon comments made in this article.