I have a small business with a home office in my home. In 2019 I did some improvements to a separate structure outbuilding on my property and turned it into a shop also for my business. As far as I understand, for my home office I combined the square footage of the room in my house and the outbuilding, as my total home office square footage. Also, the total improvements I did to the outbuilding were above the $10,000 limit for the Safe Harbor Election for Small Taxpayers so I'm planning on depreciating them instead of listing them as an expense. Would I list the improvements as one total cost under one asset - Real Estate Property - Qualified Improvement property? Or do I need to list them individually? And do I need to add the outbuilding itself as an asset also? Not sure of the value since it was on the land purchased with my home. Any help would be appreciated, thanks!
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Yes, you are correct on all points.
Your business property will include the square footage of your office as well as your shop, as long as both are used 100% for business purposes.
If the improvements you made were all part of the building and not equipment, etc, then yes, you can list them as one item. You generally don't want to combine anything that could be moved or detached and replaced.
Yes, the building would be a separate asset depreciated at the lower of cost or Fair Market Value when converted to your business use. Sometimes a Property tax statement is a good place to start deciding on the value.
Here is more information on Qualified Improvements: Qualified Improvements
Thank you so much for your reply. I do have a couple other questions:
Thanks again!
Items under $2,500 can be written off based on the De Minimis Safe Harbor.
There are six categories of depreciable property that qualify for the Section 179 deduction:
Sorry, these are disqualified
As with other types of tax deductions and expenses, not everything counts. Here are the exceptions:
See the Original Article
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