Business Provisions of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA)
Source: IRS.gov
5/15/2009
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) provides a number
of tax incentives for businesses. Most of the tax incentives for businesses are
found in Subtitle C of Division B, Title I of ARRA. In addition, some of the
energy incentives, contained in Subtitle B, [and a subsidy for premiums for
COBRA health continuation coverage in Title III of Division B,] provide tax
relief for businesses.
Here is a summary of the key ARRA provisions, in numerical order, which may
impact businesses, large and small:
TAX INCENTIVES FOR BUSINESS (SUBTITLE C)
50-Percent Special Depreciation Allowance/Bonus Depreciation
(Section 1201) - The new law extends the 50-percent special depreciation
allowance that was available for 2008 acquisitions to acquisitions of qualifying
property in 2009. This provision enables businesses to deduct half the adjusted
basis of qualifying property in the year it is placed in service. The extension
applies to qualifying property placed in service in 2009 (2010 for long
production period property and certain transportation property).
Acceleration of Certain Business Credits (Section 1201):
Corporations that acquire eligible business property have an additional year to
accelerate certain tax credits in lieu of a bonus depreciation deduction. The
extension applies to eligible business property placed in service in 2009 (2010
for long production period property and certain transportation property).
Section 179 Expensing (Section 1202): During 2009, small
businesses can elect to expense up to $250,000 of the cost of qualifying
property under section 179. Without the new law, the limit would have dropped to
$133,000. The existing $25,000 limit still applies to sports utility vehicles.
The $250,000 amount provided under the new law is reduced if the cost of all
section 179 property placed in service by the taxpayer during the tax year
exceeds $800,000.
Expanded Net Operating Loss Carryback (Section 1211): Many
small businesses that had expenses exceeding their income for 2008 can choose to
carry the loss back for up to five years, instead of the usual two years. For
small businesses that were profitable in the past but lost money in 2008, this
could mean a special tax refund. The option is available for a small business
that has no more than an average of $15 million in gross receipts over a
three-year period. This option is available for most eligible taxpayers for a
limited time. A corporation that operates on a calendar-year basis, for example,
must file a claim by Sept. 15, 2009. For eligible individuals, the deadline is
Oct. 15, 2009.
Estimated Tax Requirement Modified (Section 1212): Many
individual small business taxpayers may be able to defer until the end of the
year paying a larger part of their 2009 tax obligation. For 2009, eligible
individuals can make quarterly estimated tax payments equal to 90 percent of
their 2009 tax or 90 percent of their 2008 tax, whichever is less. Individuals
qualify if they received more than half of their gross income from their small
business in 2008 and meet other requirements. For details, see Publication 505.
Discharge of Business Indebtedness (Section 1231): The act
allows certain businesses that repurchase specific types of debt in 2009 and
2010 to pay taxes on cancellation of debt income over a five year period,
starting with tax year 2014.
Exclusion of Gain on the Sale of Certain Small Business Stock
(Section 1241): ARRA provides an extra incentive for investment in small
businesses. The new law provides an increase in the Section 1202 exclusion from
50 percent (60 percent for enterprise zone qualified business entity stock) to
75 percent for any gain from the sale or exchange of qualified small business
stock acquired after Feb. 17, 2009 and before Jan. 1, 2011, and held for more
than five years. This provision is limited to individual investors and not
available to corporations.
S-Corporation Built-in Gains Holding Period (Section 1251):
For tax years beginning in either 2009 or 2010, the new law eliminates the
corporate level tax on the built-in gains of an S-Corporation that converted
from C-corporation status at least seven tax years before the current tax year.
COBRA PREMIUM ASSISTANCE (TITLE III)
COBRA: Health Insurance Continuation Subsidy (Section 3001):
Under the new law, employees who were involuntarily terminated after Aug. 31,
2008 and before Jan. 1, 2010, and who elect COBRA health continuation coverage,
are entitled to receive a 65 percent subsidy on their COBRA premiums. For
periods of COBRA coverage beginning after Feb. 16, 2009, the involuntarily
terminated employee must be treated as having paid the required COBRA premium if
the individual pays 35 percent of the premium amount. The employer (or, in some
cases, multiemployer health plan or insurer) may recover the other 65 percent by
taking the subsidy amount as a credit on their quarterly employment tax return.
ENERGY INCENTIVES (SUBTITLE B)
Extension of Renewable Energy Production Tax Credit (Section
1101): The new law generally extends the “eligibility dates” of a tax credit for
business facilities producing electricity from wind, closed-loop biomass,
open-loop biomass, geothermal energy, municipal solid waste, qualified
hydropower and marine and hydrokinetic renewable energy. The new law extends the
"placed in service date” for wind facilities to Dec. 31, 2012. For the other
facilities, the placed-in-service date was extended from Dec. 31, 2010 (Dec. 31,
2011 in the case of marine and hydrokinetic renewable energy facilities) to Dec.
31, 2013.
Election of Investment Credit in Lieu of Production Credit
(Section 1102): Businesses that place in service facilities that produce
electricity from wind and some other renewable resources after Dec. 31, 2008 can
choose either the energy investment tax credit, which generally provides a 30
percent tax credit for investments in energy projects or the production tax
credit, which can provide a credit of up to 2.1 cents per kilowatt-hour for
electricity produced from renewable sources. A business may not claim both
credits for the same facility.
Repeal of Certain Limits on Business Credits for Renewable Energy
Property (Section 1103): The new law repeals the $4,000 limit on the 30
percent tax credit for small wind energy property and the limitation on property
financed by subsidized energy financing. The repeal applies to property placed
in service after Dec. 31, 2008.
Coordination with Renewable Energy Grants (Section 1104):
Business taxpayers also can apply for a grant instead of claiming either the
energy investment tax credit or the renewable energy production tax credit for
property placed in service in 2009 or 2010. In some cases, if construction
begins in 2009 or 2010, the grant can be claimed for energy investment credit
property placed in service through 2016, and for qualified renewable energy
facilities, the grant is 30 percent of the investment in the facility and the
property must be placed in service before 2014 (2013 for wind facilities).
New Clean Renewable Energy Bonds (Section 1111): Certain
State utilities, governmental entities and cooperatives that initiate projects
to generate electricity from renewable sources (for example wind and solar) can
finance those projects through qualified tax credit bonds. The new law increases
the amount of funds available to issue new clean renewable energy bonds from the
one-time national limit of $800 million to $2.4 billion.
Temporary Increase in Credit for Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling
Property (Section 1123): The new law modifies the credit rate and limit
amounts for property placed in service in 2009 and 2010. Qualified property
(other than property relating to hydrogen) is now eligible for a 50 percent
credit, and the per-location limit increases to $50,000 for business property
(increases to $2,000 for other/residential locations). Property relating to
hydrogen keeps the 30 percent rate as before, but the per-business location
limit rises to $200,000.
Increased Exclusion Amount for Commuter Transit Benefits and Transit
Passes (Section 1151): The new law increased to $230 the monthly tax
exclusion for employer-provided commuter transportation and transit pass
benefits, effective from March through the end of 2009. Employers can generally
deduct these qualified transportation fringe benefits as a business expense.
These benefits are also excluded from an employee's wages for income tax and
payroll tax purposes. Because of this exclusion from employee wages, the
employer can reduce the amount paid in employment taxes.
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