|
Tax
Advantages of Leasing
As of the 2003
calendar year, the program in I.R.S. Section 179 states that entering
into a one dollar buyout option lease (Finance Lease) may deduct up to
a total of $100,000 from their calendar year 2003 income. As well, your
business need not spend $100,000 this year in order to claim the amount,
but instead enter into a lease agreement during this calendar year. Leases
smaller than 100,000, of course, are eligible for tax deductions on a
dollar-for-dollar basis, providing annual deductions do not exceed your
total tax liability. Contact us here for more details.
Fair Market
Value Leases - 100% Tax Deductible Payments
The key benefit of the Fair Market Lease is that
the lessee has the option to return the equipment once the lease concludes,
without any further obligation. The other option, of course, is to purchase
the equipment for its fair market value, or continue to lease the equipment
from the lessor. Using a FMV lease, the equipment is not recorded as an
asset, nor does it become a long-term liability, and instead can be treated
as an off balance sheet operating expense. Thus, FMV lease payments are
100% deductible.
Accelerate
Depreciation With Leasing
When purchasing equipment either through cash, loan
or with a finance lease (one dollar option), cash expenses can be recovered
by claiming equipment depreciation according to IRS "useful life"
rules. In most cases, you can also claim interest portions as expenses
as well. This depreciation may last anywhere from five to seven years
in this case.
With a Fair
Market Lease, you can expense 100% of your equipment during the lease
term you select. As an example, a 36 month FMV equipment allows you to
write off the full expense of the item within three years, as opposed
to its whole value, which could take five years.
Avoiding
AMT Double Taxation
With the US Tax Reform Act of 1986, Congress targeted small and medium
size businesses that had claimed depreciation on equipment, thus lowering
tax liability. In effect, they ensured that companies who use depreciation
to greatly lower tax liabilities are subject to review. This review does
enable the IRS to classify some depreciation writeoffs as what is known
as "tax preferences", and insist on an additional Alternative
Minimum Tax, or AMT. The result is that owning or buying too much equipment
can now trigger new taxes!! With equipment leasing, however, payments
are for tax reasons the same as a rental fee, and thus do not qualify
as tax preferences, and thus are ineligible for AMT.
APPLY
NOW or CONTACT US
|
|