This chapter consists of a comprehensive example that illustrates a filled-in Form 4562 as well as the Depreciation Worksheet from the
form instructions.
Fields of Flowers, Inc., operates a retail florist shop. It files its corporate tax return based on a calendar year. The corporation
began its
operation in 2001. The corporation uses all of its property 100% for business purposes.
The worksheet shows the information needed to figure depreciation on each item of property and the total depreciation for
2004. The corporation's
books and records support the information on the worksheet. There is an account for each item of property. These accounts
show the following
information.
-
The date of acquisition.
-
A description of the property.
-
The cost or other basis of the property.
-
The amount of section 179 deduction claimed.
-
The special depreciation allowance claimed.
-
The MACRS depreciation method used.
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The property class and recovery period.
-
The depreciation deducted each year.
For information on business recordkeeping, see Publication 583, Starting a Business and Keeping Records.
On February 2, 2002, the corporation bought the building used as its place of business for $250,000 and placed it in service.
It also bought and
placed in service on that date the following property.
-
A desk and chair for $1,025.
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Refrigeration equipment for $4,500.
-
Work tables for $1,200.
-
A cash register for $675.
The building is nonresidential real property. Fields of Flowers depreciates it using the straight line method and mid-month
convention over a
recovery period of 39 years. It uses Table A-7a.
The refrigeration equipment, work tables, and cash register are 5-year property and the desk and chair are 7-year property.
The corporation
claimed a section 179 deduction for their full cost. It takes no depreciation for this property.
In 2003, Fields of Flowers bought and placed in service the following new items of property.
-
On April 16, a delivery truck for $36,000.
-
On July 3, a copier for $300.
The corporation claimed a $24,000 section 179 deduction for the truck. It used the remaining cost of $12,000 ($36,000 - $24,000)
to figure a
special depreciation allowance for the truck of $3,600 (30% of $12,000). The basis of the truck for depreciation is $8,400
($12,000 - $3,600).
The corporation claimed a special depreciation allowance of $150 (50% of $300) for the copier. The basis of the copier for
depreciation is $150 ($300
- $150). It chose to use the 150% declining balance method over the GDS recovery period for these property items. The recovery
period for both
the truck and copier is 5 years. It applied the half-year convention for both items and used Table A-14.
In 2004, Fields of Flowers bought and placed in service the following new items of property.
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On March 11, a USA van for $49,800.
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On June 21, a computer for $3,000.
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On September 9, file cabinets for $475.
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On November 1, store counters for $1,870.
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On November 16, a sport utility vehicle (SUV) for $55,000.
The corporation elects to claim a section 179 deduction of $49,800 on the van and $25,000 on the SUV.
The total depreciable bases of the counters and the SUV, placed in service during the last three months of the corporation's
tax year, is $31,870.
This is more than 40% of $35,345, the total depreciable bases of all property placed in service during 2004. The corporation
must apply the
mid-quarter convention for all four items.
The corporation reduces the $55,000 cost of the SUV by its section 179 deduction of $25,000 for the SUV. It uses the remaining
cost of $30,000 to
figure a special depreciation allowance for the SUV of $15,000 (50% of $30,000). The basis of the SUV for depreciation is
$15,000 ($30,000 -
$15,000).
The corporation claims a special depreciation allowance of $1,500 (50% of $3,000) for the computer, $238 (50% of $475) for
the file cabinets, and
$935 (50% of $1,870) for the store counters. The basis of the computer for depreciation is $1,500 ($3,000 - $1,500). The basis
of the file
cabinets for depreciation is $237 ($475 - $238). The basis of the store counters for depreciation is $935 ($1,870 - $935).
The file cabinets are 7-year property for which the corporation uses Table A-4. The counters, the SUV, and the computer are
5-year property items.
The corporation elects to use ADS for its 5-year property. The ADS recovery period is 9 years for the counters and 5 years
for the SUV and computer.
The corporation uses Table A-10 for the computer and Table A-12 for the store counters and SUV.
Fields of Flowers is a corporation, so it reports depreciation on Form 4562. The corporation enters the total depreciation
deduction ($8,590.25)
for the property placed in service before 2004 on line 17 in Part III.
The delivery truck has seating only for the driver. It is not listed property. If it were listed property, its depreciation
would have been
reported in Part V of Form 4562.
The corporation reports the special depreciation allowance for the computer, file cabinets, and store counters in Part II.
It enters the total
allowance of $2,673 for all 3 items on line 14.
The corporation reports the MACRS depreciation for the file cabinets in Section B, Part III. It uses GDS for this property
and applies a
mid-quarter convention. On line 19(c), it enters “MQ” in column (e) to show the mid-quarter convention is applied and “200DB” in column (f)
to show it is using the 200% declining balance method. It enters the depreciation deduction of $25.38 in column (g).
The corporation reports the depreciation for the store counters and the computer in Section C, Part III. Both properties have
a class life assigned
to them in the Table of Class Lives and Recovery Periods in Appendix B and neither class life is 12 years or 40 years (lines 20b and 20c).
Therefore, the corporation enters the depreciation deduction of $200.50 on line 20(a) in column (g).
The van is listed property. Fields of Flowers has taxable income of $145,389. It elects to take the entire $49,800 cost as
a section 179 deduction
on the van, which it reports on line 26 in Part V of Form 4562 in column (i). The van weighs over 6,000 pounds. It is not
a passenger automobile and
is not subject to the limits discussed under Do the Passenger Automobile Limits Apply in chapter 5.
The SUV is also listed property. The corporation reports the special depreciation allowance and the MACRS depreciation for
it in Part V of Form
4562. It elects to take $25,000 of the cost of the vehicle as a section 179 deduction for the SUV. The SUV weighs over 6,000
pounds. It is not a
passenger automobile and is not subject to the passenger automobile limits discussed under Do the Passenger Automobile Limits Apply in
chapter 5. However, the SUV is subject to the $25,000 section 179 deduction limit for SUVs discussed under Section 179 Deduction Limit for Sport
Utility and Certain Other Vehicles in chapter 2.
The corporation reduces the cost of the SUV by the amount of the section 179 deduction and special depreciation allowance.
It enters “5” on
line 26 in column (f) to show the recovery period in years and “SL” and “MQ” in column (g) to show it is using the straight line method and
the mid-quarter convention. It enters the MACRS depreciation deduction of $375 in column (h) and the section 179 deduction
of $25,000 in column (i).
It enters the special depreciation allowance of $15,000 on line 25 in column (h).
The corporation enters the amount from line 28 on line 21 and the amount from line 29 on line 7. It completes Part I to determine
its allowable
section 179 deduction. It adds the amounts on lines 12, 14, 17, 19(c), 20(a), and 21 and enters the total, $101,664.13, on
line 22. It rounds the
total to $101,664 and enters it on the depreciation line of its tax return.
Depreciation Worksheet, Form 4562
Form 4562, page 1
Form 4562, page 2