Businesses have ongoing incentives to acquire and install capital equipment. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 made significant changes to both Section 179 and bonus depreciation. These changes continue to be in effect for 2020 and when used together may allow businesses to deduct up to 100% of capital purchases.
Read on for an overview of both deductions and how they could save you money during this tax year.
2019 | 2020 | |
Section 179 Maximum Deduction | 2019 $1,000,000 |
2020 $1,040,000 |
Phase-out threshold | 2019 $2,500,000 |
2020 $2,590,000 |
Bonus Depreciation | 2019 100% |
2020 100% |
Equipment | 2019 New and used for both |
2020 New and used for both |
Internal Revenue Code Section 179 allows businesses to expense the full purchase price of qualifying equipment and/or software purchased during the tax year. When you buy a piece of qualifying equipment, you may be able to deduct the full purchase price on your business income tax return.
Before the TCJA, the government capped business taxpayers’ Section 179 deduction at $500,000, with a phase-out beginning at $2 million. The new Act raised the deduction limit to $1 million and the phase-out threshold to $2.5 million. This increases Section 179 benefits for small and mid-size businesses who spend less than $3.5 million per year for equipment.
Bonus Depreciation, according to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), allows business taxpayers to deduct additional depreciation for the cost of qualifying business property, beyond normal depreciation allowances. It’s intended to spur capital purchases by all business taxpayers, small, mid-sized and large.
Before the TCJA, the IRS limited Bonus Depreciation to new equipment. The law now allows for depreciation on used equipment, though it must be “first use” by the purchasing business. The rules allow Bonus Depreciation to 100 percent for all qualified purchases made between September 27, 2017 and January 1, 2023. Bonus Depreciation then ramps down starting in 2023.
While each deduction can help businesses deduct purchasing costs for their property, combining them can offer the greatest possible benefits. IRS rules require that most businesses apply Section 179 first, followed by bonus depreciation.
Here’s why you might consider using both deductions:
Limited circumstances for stand-alone 179 benefits.
The Section 179 expense limit, along with the $2,590,000 phase-out threshold, are now permanent parts of the tax code. However, since Bonus Deprecation now covers new and used equipment, the benefits of Section 179 by themselves would only apply to taxpayers with specific business circumstances.
Short-term consistency with the bonus depreciation limit.
With the Bonus Depreciation limit of 100 percent through 2022, businesses have greater incentive to make near-term purchases. Before the TCJA, was passed, the bonus depreciation limit varied from year to year.
Expands qualifying equipment beyond physical hardware.
The new rules include software, which may mean they can now benefit companies that aren’t necessarily purchasing heavy equipment.
If you’re wondering how Section 179 and bonus depreciation could affect your business tax deductions, check out the calculator below.
2020 Section 179 and bonus depreciation tax deduction example | |
Cost of equipment | $3,000,000 |
Section 179 deduction | $630,000 |
Bonus depreciation deduction | $2,370,000 |
Total first year deduction | $3,000,0000 |
Cash savings on purchase: (assuming 21% C-Corp tax bracket) | $630,000 |
Lowered cost of equipment: (after tax savings) | $2,370,000 |
If you’re wondering about how these deductions could affect your equipment financing strategy, we can help. Contact Equipment Finance.