OBBBA & 100% Bonus Depreciation
How the One Big Beautiful Bill Act reinstated 100% bonus for property placed in service after January 19, 2025 — and when the 40%/60% election still makes sense.
100% bonus depreciation is back for property placed in service after January 19, 2025. A brand-new §168(n) allowance targets U.S. production property. States continue to decouple in their own directions. We keep your schedules right and your team focused on higher-value work.
We run federal and state depreciation for every book you need. Gax, AMT, ACE, E&P, and financial reconciled to the general ledger and packaged into workpapers your preparer, provision team, and auditor can pick up without question.
Acquisition invoices, in-service dates, class lives, methods, conventions, dispositions, and adjustments – searchable, exportable, and defensible.
Short tax years, like-kind exchanges, changes in accounting method (Form 3115), listed property recapture, partial dispositions, cost segregation studies, and the newest §168(n) qualification analysis.
Scope and fees agreed up front. No surprise invoices when volume grows or a new law reshapes the calculation.
Plug our specialists into your existing process for peak-period lift and technical questions, or hand off the entire depreciation and fixed asset function. Either way, scope and pricing are agreed up front.
The legislation, limits, and methodology shaping fixed asset tax treatment in 2025 and 2026.
How the One Big Beautiful Bill Act reinstated 100% bonus for property placed in service after January 19, 2025 — and when the 40%/60% election still makes sense.
The new 100% special allowance for qualifying U.S. production real property placed in service after July 4, 2025.
$2.5M max and $4M phase-out in 2025; $2.56M and $4.09M in 2026. SUV caps, trade-or-business income limits, and coordination with bonus.
Which states decouple from federal bonus and §179, how add-backs and subtractions flow, and why a separate state book is non-negotiable.
Reclassify building components into shorter lives, and claim losses on retired components — without triggering avoidable recapture.
How we translate Pub. 946's rules — property classes, conventions, and MACRS tables — into schedules your preparer and auditor can rely on.