Momentum - Business to Business Online Magazine MOMENTUM January 2020 | Page 24
TAXING MATTERS
T. MARK RUSH, CPA
Partner
Ham, Langston & Brezina, LLP
[email protected]
TCJA CHANGES VACANT
LAND TAX STRATEGIES
T
he Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) likely requires
that you rethink the tax strategies you were
using on your vacant land investments. The
TCJA gives you three new and/or altered tax
law situations every year from now through
2025 that you need to consider:
1. Capitalize the expenses and add them to the cost of
the vacant lot or land.
2. Deduct the interest and taxes as itemized deductions.
3. Say goodbye to those expenses that were deductible
as miscellaneous itemized deductions before the
TCJA disallowed them for tax years 2018 through
2025.
Interest paid on the vacant lot or unproductive land is
either
• deductible as investment interest (limited to
investment income), or
• capitalized and added to your cost basis of the vacant
lot.
You deduct investment interest as an itemized
deduction.
But will you itemize your deductions? The TCJA
significantly beefed up the standard deduction
amounts. For 2019, the IRS updated your standard
deduction amounts for inflation to $12,200 single and
$24,400 married filing jointly.
Real estate taxes on the vacant lot
• are deductible as personal itemized deductions, or
• if elected, are capitalized and added to the cost basis
of the vacant lot.
Whoa. Doesn’t the TCJA $10,000 limit on the
personal deduction for taxes come into play? No. The
vacant land is a tax code Section 212 investment, and
the property taxes on such an investment are exempt
from the $10,000 limit.
Example. You pay $22,000 in income taxes, $7,000 in
property taxes on your personal residence, and $5,000
22
MOMENTUM | 2020 Year of Small Business
in property taxes on the vacant land. The $22,000 and
$7,000 run into the $10,000 limit. The $5,000 faces no
such limit. Thus, your itemized deduction ceiling on
property taxes is $15,000 ($10,000 limit plus $5,000 for
the vacant land).
You also had lawn mowing and insurance costs for
the vacant lot.
Before the TCJA, you had two choices for your
vacant lot lawn mowing and insurance expenses:
1. Deduct the costs as miscellaneous itemized
deductions, where they suffered from the 2 percent
of adjusted income floor and possible total
disallowance by the alternative minimum tax.
2. Capitalize the costs using the tax code Section 266
election.
But today, after the TCJA, you get no benefit
from the lawn mowing and insurance costs. For
tax years 2018 through 2025, the TCJA disallows
all miscellaneous itemized deductions, and that
deduction disallowance, in turn, makes it impossible
to capitalize the costs under Reg. Section 1.266-1(b)(1)
because the costs are no longer “otherwise expressly
deductible under the provisions of subtitle A of the
Code.”
Election Required
Here’s another place where tax knowledge pays off.
On the vacant lot or unproductive land
• you may elect to capitalize some and not other
carrying costs (e.g., capitalize interest but not
property taxes), or
• you may make the election to capitalize on a year-by-
year basis so you can capitalize this year and not next
year.
Wow! You get to decide your best tax advantage
every year. But if you are going to capitalize costs, you
must make the election to capitalize in your tax return
for the year elected or your capitalization is not valid.