QIP was defined as any improvement to an interior portion of a building which is nonresidential real property if such improvement is placed in service after the date such building was first placed in service. Such property does not include expenditures attributable to the enlargement of a building, any elevator or escalator, or the internal structural framework of a building. The term “internal structural framework” generally includes all load-bearing internal walls and any other internal structural supports essential to the stability of the building.
The 2017 TCJA also increased bonus depreciation from 50% to 100% and changed the phase-out period from the two-year period beginning with the 2018 taxable year (two-year period beginning with the 2019 taxable year for longer production period property) to the four-year period beginning with the 2023 tax year (four-year period beginning with the 2024 tax year for longer production period property). These provisions are effective for eligible property acquired and placed in service after September 27, 2017.
Property eligible for bonus depreciation has a recovery period of 20-years or less. Although the text of the 2017 TCJA stated that QIP is assigned a 15-year recovery period and a 20-year class life, the IRC failed to include these amendments. As a result, QIP continued to be recovered over a 39-year period and was ineligible for bonus depreciation when placed in service after 2017.
The 2020 CARES Act assigns a 15-year recovery period and a 20-year class life to QIP. In addition, the words “made by the taxpayer” are inserted after “any improvement” in the definition of QIP which disqualifies any improvements not made by the taxpayer.
These technical amendments are effective for QIP placed in service after December 31, 2017.
Taxpayers who placed QIP in service after 2017 should begin planning for the additional federal tax depreciation that will result from this technical amendment and consider the following:
The federal income tax savings resulting from the QIP technical amendment will likely result in a significant federal tax savings for taxpayers that placed QIP in service after 2017. However, this technical amendment interacts with other provisions of the CARES Act and advance planning should be undertaken to fully understand such interaction before changing prior year tax returns.
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