This part discusses the depreciation deduction limits and other
special rules that apply to certain listed property. It also discusses
the recordkeeping rules for listed property. Listed property includes
cars and other property used for transportation, property used for
entertainment, and certain computers and cellular phones.
Deductions for listed property (other than certain leased property)
are subject to the following limits and special rules.
- Limit for employees.
- Business-use limits and rules.
- Passenger automobile limits and rules.
What Is Listed Property?
Listed property is any of the following.
- Any passenger automobile.
- Any other vehicle used for transportation, unless it is an
excepted vehicle.
- Any property of a type generally used for entertainment,
recreation, or amusement.
- Any computer and related peripheral equipment unless
it is used only at a regular business establishment and owned or
leased by the person operating the establishment.
- Any cellular telephone (or similar telecommunication
equipment).
Passenger automobiles.
A passenger automobile is any four-wheeled vehicle made primarily
for use on public streets, roads, and highways and rated at 6,000
pounds or less of unloaded gross vehicle weight (6,000 pounds or less
of gross vehicle weight for trucks and vans). It includes any part,
component, or other item physically attached to the automobile or
usually included in the purchase price of an automobile.
Other vehicles used for transportation.
This includes trucks, buses, boats, airplanes, motorcycles, and
other vehicles used for transporting persons or goods.
Excepted vehicles.
The following vehicles are not listed property.
- Tractors and other special purpose farm vehicles.
- Bucket trucks (cherry pickers), dump trucks, flatbed trucks,
and refrigerated trucks.
- Combines, cranes and derricks, and forklifts.
- Buses with a capacity of at least 20 passengers that are
used as passenger buses.
Does the Limit for Employees Apply?
If you are an employee, the use of your listed property (whether
owned or rented) in performing services as an employee is a business
use only if both the following requirements are met.
- The use is for your employer's convenience.
- The use is required as a condition of your
employment.
If these requirements are not met, you cannot deduct depreciation
(including the section 179 deduction) or rent expenses for your use of
the property as an employee.
Employer's convenience.
Whether the use of listed property is for your employer's
convenience must be determined from all the facts. The use is for your
employer's convenience if it is for a substantial business reason of
the employer. The use of listed property during your regular working
hours to carry on your employer's business is generally for the
employer's convenience.
Condition of employment
Whether the use of listed property is a condition of your
employment depends on all the facts and circumstances. The use of
property must be required for you to perform your duties properly.
Do the Business-Use Limits Apply?
The business-use limits apply to listed property not used
predominantly (more than 50% of its total use) for qualified business
use. The use of property to produce income in a nonbusiness activity
(investment use) is not a qualified business use. However,
you can treat the investment use as business use to figure the
depreciable basis of the property.
Under this limit, the following rules apply.
- Property not used predominantly for qualified business use
during the year it is placed in service does not qualify for the
section 179 deduction.
- Any depreciation deduction under MACRS for property not used
predominantly for qualified business use during any year
must be figured using the straight line method over the ADS recovery
period. This rule applies each year of the recovery period.
- Excess depreciation on property previously used
predominantly for qualified business use must be recaptured (included
in income) in the first year in which it is no longer used
predominantly for qualified business use.
- A lessee must include an amount in income if the leased
property is not used predominantly for qualified business use.
To determine whether this limit applies, you must allocate the use
of any item of listed property used for more than one purpose during
the year among its various uses.
Do the Passenger Automobile Limits Apply?
The depreciation deduction (including the section 179 deduction)
you can claim for a passenger automobile each year is limited. (For
the definition of a passenger automobile, see What Is Listed
Property, earlier.)
Exception for clean fuel modifications.
The passenger automobile limits do not apply to any
costs you pay to retrofit parts and components to modify an automobile
to run on clean fuel. The limits apply only to the cost of the
automobile without this modification.
Exception for leased cars.
The passenger automobile limits generally do not apply to passenger
automobiles leased or held for leasing by anyone regularly engaged in
the business of leasing passenger automobiles.
Maximum Depreciation Deduction
Determine the maximum depreciation deduction you can claim for a
passenger automobile based on the date you placed it in service. The
maximum deductions (in dollar amounts) for most passenger automobiles
for 2000 are shown in the following table.
Maximum Depreciation Deduction
for Passenger Automobiles
|
|
|
|
4th |
Year |
|
|
|
Year |
Placed in |
1st |
2nd |
3rd |
and |
Service |
Year |
Year |
Year |
Later |
2001 |
$3,060 |
$4,900 |
$2,950 |
$1,775 |
2000 |
4,900 |
2,950 |
1,775 |
1999 |
2,950 |
1,775 |
1998 - 1995 |
1,775 |
1994 - 1993 |
1,675 |
1992 - 1991 |
1,575 |
Pre-1991 |
1,475 |
If your business/investment use of the automobile is less than
100%, you must reduce the maximum deduction amount proportionately.
Clean-fuel vehicles.
The maximum depreciation deductions for passenger automobiles that
run on clean fuel are higher than those for other automobiles. The
maximum deductions (in dollar amounts) for clean-fuel vehicles for
2001 are shown in the following table.
Maximum Depreciation Deduction
for Clean-Fuel Vehicles
|
|
|
|
4th |
Year |
|
|
|
Year |
Placed in |
1st |
2nd |
3rd |
and |
Service |
Year |
Year |
Year |
Later |
2001 |
$9,280 |
$14,800 |
$8,850 |
$5,325 |
2000 |
14,800 |
8,850 |
5,325 |
1999 |
8,950 |
5,325 |
1998 - 1997 |
5,425 |
For more information on clean-fuel vehicles, see chapter 12 of
Publication 535,
Business Expenses.
Car expenses.
For information about deducting expenses for the business use of
your passenger automobile, see chapter 4 in Publication 463.
What Records Must Be Kept?
You cannot take any depreciation or section 179 deduction for the
use of listed property unless you can prove business and investment
use with adequate records or sufficient evidence to support your own
statements.
Adequate records.
To meet the adequate records requirement, you must maintain an
account book, diary, log, statement of expense, trip sheet, or similar
record or other documentary evidence that, together with the receipt,
is sufficient to establish each element of an expenditure or use. You
do not have to record information in an account book, diary, or
similar record if the information is already shown on the receipt.
However, your records should back up your receipts in an orderly
manner.
How long to keep records.
For listed property, you must keep records for as long as any
excess depreciation can be recaptured (included in income). Recapture
can occur in any tax year of the recovery period.
For more information on records, see chapter 4 in Publication 946.
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