The recently enacted 2010 Small
Business Jobs Act includes a wide-ranging assortment of tax breaks and
incentives for small business, paid for with various revenue raisers. Here's a
brief overview of some of the tax changes in the new law.
Tax breaks and incentives
- Enhanced small business expensing (Section
179 expensing). In order to help small businesses quickly
recover the cost of certain capital expenses, small business taxpayers can
elect to write off the cost of these expenses in the year of acquisition in
lieu of recovering these costs over time through depreciation. Under pre-2010
Small Business Jobs Act law, taxpayers could expense up to $250,000 of
qualifying property?generally, machinery, equipment and certain software?placed
in service in tax years beginning in 2010. This annual expensing limit was
reduced (but not below zero) by the amount by which the cost of qualifying
property placed in service in tax years beginning in 2010 exceeded $800,000 (the
investment ceiling). Under the new law, for tax years beginning in 2010 and
2011, the $250,000 limit is increased to $500,000 and the investment ceiling to
$2,000,000.
The new law also makes certain
real property eligible for expensing. For property placed in service in any tax
year beginning in 2010 or 2011, the up-to-$500,000 of property expensed can
include up to $250,000 of qualified real property (qualified leasehold improvement property, qualified restaurant
property, and qualified retail improvement property).
- General business credits of eligible small
businesses for 2010 allowed to be carried back five years. Generally, a business's unused general
business credits can be carried back to offset taxes paid in the previous year,
and the remaining amount can be carried forward for 20 years to offset future
tax liabilities. Under the new law, for the first tax year of the taxpayer
beginning in 2010, eligible small businesses can carry back unused general
business credits for five years. Eligible small businesses consist of sole
proprietorships, partnerships and non-publicly traded corporations with $50
million or less in average annual gross receipts for the prior three years.
- S corporation holding period. Generally, a C corporation converting to
an S corporation must hold onto any appreciated assets for 10 years following
its conversion or face a business-level tax imposed on the built-in gain at the
highest corporate rate of 35%. This holding period is reduced where the 7th tax
year in the holding period preceded the tax year beginning in 2009 or 2010. The
2010 Small Business Jobs Act temporarily shortens the holding period of assets
subject to the built-in gains tax to 5 years if the 5th tax year in the holding
period precedes the tax year beginning in 2011.
- Extension of 50% bonus first-year
depreciation. Businesses are allowed to deduct the cost of capital expenditures
over time according to depreciation schedules. In previous legislation,
Congress allowed businesses to more rapidly deduct capital expenditures of most
new tangible personal property, and certain other new property, placed in
service in 2008 or 2009 (2010 for certain property), by permitting the
first-year write-off of 50% of the cost. The new law extends the first-year 50%
write-off to apply to qualifying property placed in service in 2010 (2011 for
certain property).
- Special rule for long-term contract
accounting. The new law provides that in determining
the percentage of completion under the percentage of completion method of
accounting, bonus depreciation is not taken into account as a cost. This
prevents the bonus depreciation from having the effect of accelerating income.
- Boosted deduction for start-up
expenditures. The new
law allows taxpayers to deduct up to $10,000 in trade or business start-up
expenditures for 2010. The amount that a business can deduct is reduced by the
amount by which startup expenditures exceed $60,000. Previously, the limit of
these deductions was capped at $5,000, subject to a $50,000 phase-out
threshold.
- Deductibility of health insurance for the
purpose of calculating self-employment tax. The new law allows business owners to
deduct the cost of health insurance incurred in 2010 for themselves and their
family members in calculating their 2010 self-employment tax.
- Cell phones removed from listed property
category. This means
that cell phones can be deducted or depreciated like other business property,
without onerous recordkeeping requirements.
Offsets (revenue raisers)
- Information reporting required for rental
property expense payments. For
payments made after Dec. 31, 2010, the new law requires persons receiving
rental income from real property to file information returns with IRS and
service providers reporting payments of $600 or more during the tax year for
rental property expenses. Exceptions are provided for individuals renting their
principal residences on a temporary basis (including active members of the
military), taxpayers whose rental income doesn't exceed an IRS-determined
minimal amount, and those for whom the reporting requirement would create a
hardship (under IRS regs).
- Allow participants in governmental 457
plans to treat elective deferrals as Roth contributions. For tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2010, the new law will
allow retirement savings plans sponsored by state and local governments
(governmental 457(b) plans) to include designated Roth accounts. Contributions
to Roth accounts are made on an after-tax basis, but distributions of both
principal and earnings are generally tax-free.
- Allow rollovers from elective deferral
plans to designated Roth accounts. The new law allows 401(k), 403(b), and
governmental 457(b) plans to permit participants to roll their pre-tax account
balances into a designated Roth account. The amount of the rollover will be
includible in taxable income except to the extent it is the return of after-tax
contributions. If the rollover is made in 2010, the participant can elect to
pay the tax in 2011 and 2012. Plans will be able to allow these rollovers
immediately as of date of enactment.
Please keep in mind that we've
described only the highlights of the most important changes in the new law. If
you would like more details about any aspect of the new legislation, please do
not hesitate to call.