Caution: Section 179 Depreciation

Tom Crouser October 15, 2013 Comments Off on Caution: Section 179 Depreciation
It shifts WHEN you pay, not the amount

It shifts WHEN you pay, not the amount

According to Section179.org, the 2015 deduction limit is $25,000. This is the amount of new or used equipment (or off-the-shelf software) you may purchase, put into service and write off as a direct deduction to your income this year. What’s bad about that? Nothing is bad, specifically. What’s bad is the way you PAY for the equipment. IF you purchase equipment and PAY CASH for it in 2013, then, by all means take the deduction. But if you borrow money to buy the equipment, then you need to realize that Section 179 saves no money in the long-run.

Huh? In simple terms, when you buy equipment you may depreciate (recapture your investment) according to the Internal Revenue Service’s Modified Accelerated Tax Recovery System (MACRS) which means you offset income OVER TIME. In real simple terms, should you purchase $100,000 in equipment and write it off over five years (it’s more complicated than this), then you would depreciate about $20,000 per year (more in early years and less in later years). So, if you pay cash, you are out $100,000 in year one and write off only $20,000 in year one. Then your year two through five depreciation deductions eventually catch up and you have deducted $100,000 over a five year period.

But if you borrow the money in year one ($100,000) and deduct the entire $100,000 in year one while only paying out $20,000 in cash, then your year two through five payments of $20,000 have no offsetting expense deductions leading one to exclaim, “If I’m making all this money, how come I have no cash?”

So, if you pay cash, then deduct it this year using Section 179. If you borrow money for the equipment, then you are better off matching your depreciation deduction more closely with when the cash goes out.

Further Depreciation Problem

The panic to buy equipment at the end of the year often results in us buying equipment we don’t need or which hasn’t been proven.

Here’s an expanded explanation from my 2011 alert to you ….

Section 179 Accelerated Depreciation in the U.S. does just that. It does allow you to accelerate or move your depreciation deductions you would take during out years to this year, but it provides NO additional deduction. Over time, you have exactly the same tax effect.

Okay, you might be thinking, “What is wrong with taking the depreciation this year instead of waiting?” Follow the cash to find out.

If you pay little or no money down to purchase $50k of equipment this year, you probably can deduct the amount as an expense and reduce the amount of income tax paid this year. “Well, isn’t that saving money? No, because there’s always next year.

Next year you still have to repay the loan (cash out) but you have NO offsetting expense deduction (depreciation). So, we get upside down in our car payment, so to speak. We pay out $12,500 of cash to repay the loan in out years and have $0 of expense deductions, which means we are paying MORE taxes in out years, precisely when we have less cash because of the payments. Had we delayed the deduction, our depreciation expense deduction would roughly offset the cash out.

What should we do? Again, follow the money. If you pay cash for equipment, then take the Section 179 deduction. If you finance, however, you are usually better off deducting depreciation normally.

That way you will have less of those confusing moments when the accountant says you made a lot of money, yet you are wondering where in the world is the cash.

A more detailed synopsis of Section 179 from may be found at Section179.org

For more details on limits and qualifying equipment, as well as Section 179 Qualified Financing, please read that entire website carefully. Again, it is http://www.section179.org

Tom Crouser

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