The
American Horse Council reports that
President Obama signed the Small
Business Jobs and Credit Act of 2010
into law on September 27, 2010. The
bill is intended to help small
businesses and create new jobs. The
bill continues the bigger write-off
for horses and other property
purchased and placed in service by a
horse business that were originally
included in earlier stimulus bills.
The first incentive allows an owner
who purchases a horse or other
business property used in a horse
business and places it in service in
2010 or 2011 to expense up to
$500,000 of the cost. This so-called
"Section 179" expensing allowance
applies to horses, farm equipment
and most other depreciable property.
Once total purchases of horses and
other eligible property reach $2
million, the expense allowance goes
down one dollar for each dollar
spent over $2 million. Without the
bill the expensing allowance would
have been $250,000 in 2010 and gone
down to $25,000 for later years.
"Let's assume a horse business
purchases $750,000 of depreciable
property in 2010, including $650,000
for horses, and places it all in
service. That business can write off
$500,000 on its 2010 tax return and
depreciate the balance," explained
American Horse Council President Jay
Hickey.
This provision will benefit any
business involved in the horse
industry that purchases and places
depreciable property in service in
2010 or 2011.
The second incentive reinstitutes
the 50% first-year bonus
depreciation for horses and most
other depreciable property purchased
and placed in service during 2010.
Bonus depreciation had expired at
the end of 2009. This benefit
applies to any property that has a
depreciable life of 20 years or
less. Also, the property must be
new, meaning that the original use
of the horse or other property must
commence with the taxpayer. For a
horse to be eligible, it cannot have
been used for any purpose before it
is purchased.
"The tax benefits in this bill are
great for any horse business that
has or is planning on making major
purchases," said Hickey. "he
expensing and bonus depreciation
provisions can be used together in
2010. For example, let's assume an
owner pays $1,000,000 for a colt to
be used for racing and $100,000 for
other depreciable property, bringing
total purchases to $1,100,000 in
2010. If the colt had never been
raced or used for any other purpose
before the purchase and is placed
into service, the owner would be
able to expense $500,000, deduct
another $300,000 of bonus
depreciation (50% of the $600,000
remaining balance), and take regular
depreciation on the $300,000
balance."
"We hope the horse industry will
take full advantage of these two tax
benefits while they last," Hickey
said. |
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