A Blog About Tax Savings for Building Owners

Tag: Qualified Improvement Property

The Hidden Tax Deduction That Saves Building Owners Thousands—And Most CPAs Miss It – Partial Asset Disposition

Photo Credit: Office Banao

Most building owners and their tax advisors miss this KILLER tax deduction. How do I know they miss it? Because they don’t call me to get these studies done. Partial Asset Disposition SHOULD be evaluated every year for every building owner whether you own commercial property or residential investment property. But that’s ONLY if you legally prefer paying LESS in INCOME TAX as well as REDUCE your recapture tax liability down the road in the event you decide to sell your building.

I just finished up one of these recently where it was $280,000 in interior improvements for an office. That seems like pretty standard stuff. Most tax professionals won’t even have this small of a project studied. It was all interior so most would just call it QIP and be done with it. (QIP is Qualified Improvement Property and gets a 15 year class life). In 2024, bonus depreciation was 60% so you could take 60% of $280,000 or $168,000 tax deduction. Awesome. The client just got a $168,000 and all it took was less than 5 minutes of his tax advisor’s time to figure that out. So it didn’t cost him much. Perhaps the tax advisor bills him $100 for his time to figure this out. Everything’s cool, right? Wrong. Wrong in a big way.

If the owner qualified for PAD – partial asset disposition – he should take PAD. (Note: there are some criteria as to if the improvement qualifies for PAD so the owner’s need to double check this with their cost seg firm and tax advisor).

In this scenario above, because the CPA was on top of his game and recalled this idea of a PAD, he reached out to discuss this particular project. We studied the improvement and did the PAD and did you know the owner ended up picking up an additional $118,000 in a deduction because he did PAD? That’s a net tax savings of about $40k after paying for the study. On top of that, since this property identified was tossed in a landfill, it gets removed from the basis of his building so when he goes to sell it, he will have less recapture tax to pay. If you don’t remove the property from your books that has been thrown away, you continue to carry something on your books that actually isn’t there any more. And you’ll end up paying more in recapture tax when you go to sell.

So in this scenario, if you don’t do PAD, not only would you be missing out on about $40k in immediate tax savings, but you’ll pay more in tax (recapture tax) when you go to sell your building.

So next time you are doing building improvement whether it’s interior or exterior and it’s over $100k, please remember to reach out and have a conversation with a cost segregation expert. These studies are not expensive.  By doing them you are assuring your accounting and depreciation are being done correctly and you get some significant tax benefits both now and when you sell.

John Murphy CSSI

Unlocking Tax Benefits in Mixed-Use Buildings: Cost Segregation for Office/Retail and Short-Term Rental Conversions

Photo credit – Hotel Excelsior – Banker’s Suite on 2nd Level Above Alerus in downtown Excelsior, MN

We are working on a very cool and quite complicated but exciting project in Excelsior, MN. I also learned something new that I thought I’d share. And for the record, this study has not quite started yet. When we get this one done, I’ll have to come back and provide and update to see if it worked out as we think it might.

The picture above is now the newly remodeled short-term rental that sits over top the Alerus space in downtown Excelsior, MN which has also been completed renovated. Here a photo from the street out front so you can see that it’s commercial on the main level and residential or STR now above.

This is an existing building that has been in-service for many years. The owners purchased it a couple of years ago. The upstairs was a long term rental apartment. The main level has been and continues to be commercial use. The owners have spent a significant sum of money converting the long term apartement into a short term rental (aka Airbnb). I was wondering if perhaps the improvements to convert the LTR to an STR might be considered QIP (Qualified Improvement Property). QIP gets 15 year class life and would get 80% bonus depreciation in 2023. QIP is only for commercial property. STRs are considered commercial property – 39 year class life instead of 27.5 for LTRs. To get classified as QIP is a big swing in favor of of the building owner if this turns out to be the case.

We believe this will qualify as QIP because the building was in-service and the building would have had to have had 80% of the revenue coming in from the residential rental part of the building in order for this NOT to be classified as QIP. I was not aware of that little rule. It looks like it will be good news for these owners. (Note if you have a new mixed-use building like this that has not been put into service yet and you have commercial on the main and an STR above it would not quaify for QIP. The building has to have been put into service at some point to qualify as QIP).

If you have a mixed use building like this one where you have retail on the bottom and you want to convert long term rental space above it to a short term rental, we should talk about how cost segregation might be of help. In fact you might not even need us to do the analysis but many CPAs and tax pros will still have us do the calculations and reclassifications so that everything is done correctly, buttoned up and is ready to be met with scrutiny if needed. I’m here to help – anywhere in the U.S. 864-276-1448

John Murphy Cost Segregation Services, Inc. "Unlocking enefits: Why Property and Casualty Insurance Agents Should Offer Cost Segregation to Clients"

#costsegregation #QIP #mixeduse #mixeduseproperty #taxes #taxdeductions #longtermrentals #shorttermrentals #airbnb #CPAs #taxprofessionals #enrolledagents #commercialrealestate #qualifiedimprovementproperty #tangiblepropertyregulations #bonusdepreciation

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