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So much has been said about tax writeoff for certified new plane
purchases. Any possibility for homebuilts? When the kit is purchased? When completed and registered? |
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#3
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... So much has been said about tax writeoff for certified new plane purchases. Any possibility for homebuilts? When the kit is purchased? When completed and registered? Business use of a homebuilt is rather limited, so the rest of the questions are moot. Still, assuming you could find a business use, it is when the airplane is placed in service. |
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On Fri, 24 Dec 2004 08:05:11 -0800, "C J Campbell"
wrote: wrote in message roups.com... So much has been said about tax writeoff for certified new plane purchases. Any possibility for homebuilts? When the kit is purchased? When completed and registered? Business use of a homebuilt is rather limited, so the rest of the questions are moot. Still, assuming you could find a business use, it is when the airplane is placed in service. Have to admit I've wondered whether I could write off the cost of a kit if I wrote a series of articles about its construction. The amount one would make on the articles is probably quite a bit less than the kit and engine would cost, but one could avoid IRS trouble with careful planning. The IRS wants to see a profit in three out of five years. Buy the kit in year one and take a loss. Claim a profit from the articles written in years two and three. Buy the engine in year four and take a loss. Claim a profit in year five from the completion articles, and more profit in year six from articles related to test-flying. That is, if you can get any flying in while playing a seven-year game of rock-hockey at Leavenworth for tax evasion. :-) Ron Wanttaja |
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RobertR237 wrote:
wrote in message groups.com... So much has been said about tax writeoff for certified new plane purchases. Any possibility for homebuilts? When the kit is purchased? When completed and registered? Business use of a homebuilt is rather limited, so the rest of the questions are moot. Still, assuming you could find a business use, it is when the airplane is placed in service. You could write it off for business if you were using it to commute on business but look for a hardnosed audit. What do you mean, commute on business? If you mean commuting to work, then that doesn't count. If you meaning flying for business purposes, that isn't called commuting. Matt |
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I am self employed and from all these comments, the least I see is
that I can use it for business transportation - just like travel expense deduction on a car. If I claim no more deduction than equivalent airlines expenses I don't see how IRS would object. I use about 5gal/hr at 125kts IAS in my SQ2000 canard which can cruise even faster at higher altitudes. Considering straight line advantage over autos and waiting period at airports the fuel expenses are as good compared to car and cheaper than airlines - and I already got the bird. ----------------------------------------- SQ2000 canard: http://www.abri.com/sq2000 Ron Wanttaja wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2004 08:05:11 -0800, "C J Campbell" wrote: ....... Have to admit I've wondered whether I could write off the cost of a kit if I wrote a series of articles about its construction. The amount one would make on the articles is probably quite a bit less than the kit and engine would cost, but one could avoid IRS trouble with careful planning. The IRS wants to see a profit in three out of five years. Buy the kit in year one and take a loss. Claim a profit from the articles written in years two and three. Buy the engine in year four and take a loss. Claim a profit in year five from the completion articles, and more profit in year six from articles related to test-flying. That is, if you can get any flying in while playing a seven-year game of rock-hockey at Leavenworth for tax evasion. :-) Ron Wanttaja |
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![]() So much has been said about tax writeoff for certified new plane purchases. Any possibility for homebuilts? When the kit is purchased? When completed and registered? If you are talking about the accelerated depreciation deal, you have to purchase or upgrade an aircraft to the tune of $200K before Jan 1, 04 and have it in service during '05. Can you use an experimental aircraft commercially? Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
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![]() "Ron Wanttaja" wrote in message ... The IRS wants to see a profit in three out of five years. This is no longer true. The IRS lost a series of court cases on this one, most notably because huge corporations such as Amazon.com, airlines, and investment real estate would have been treated as hobby losses. Going after only small businesses was unconstitutional under the equal protection clause. Now the IRS uses other tests to determine if an entity is a business. Basically, you must demonstrate that the entity has "the trappings" of a business and is operated like a business; that is, the business should have its own bank accounts, pay its employees, charge for its services, have a business address, be registered as a business under local laws, pay business taxes, not mix business expenses with personal expenses, etc. So, yes. If you bought a kit for the purpose of writing a book about assembling it, the kit would probably be deductible if you actually wrote and published a book and did all the other stuff. You should get a good tax lawyer or accountant to set it up for you and make sure all your t's and i's are crossed and dotted. |
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![]() "Don Hammer" wrote in message ... So much has been said about tax writeoff for certified new plane purchases. Any possibility for homebuilts? When the kit is purchased? When completed and registered? If you are talking about the accelerated depreciation deal, you have to purchase or upgrade an aircraft to the tune of $200K before Jan 1, 04 and have it in service during '05. Can you use an experimental aircraft commercially? In theory. Some other countries allow it, for example. It is also fairly well accepted to use ultralights for commercial photography and filmmaking. But the exceptions to the rule are few and far between. |
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