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Cost Segregation Studies Allow Owners To Pocket More Cash
Bottom
Line: Asset Management
Tax-saving
trick: Cost segregation studies allow owners to pocket more cash
IRS issues guidelines for a qualified study.
By
Nicole Crate, ASA
APARTMENT FINANCE TODAY • JUNE 2006
Whether they choose to buy and hold properties or do renovations
or new construction, multifamily owners and developers who retain ownership can
benefit from a little-known secret and immediate tax savings, sometimes
amounting to millions of dollars, by conducting a cost segregation study.
IRS guidelines
In January 2005, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued its revised “Cost
Segregation Audit Technique Guide,” for guidance purposes to assist IRS
examiners, specialists who conduct studies and practitioners who hire
specialists. It explains why cost segregation studies are performed, how they
are prepared and what to look for when reviewing studies and hiring
specialists (see www.irs.gov/ businesses/article/0,id=134180,00.html). The
guide outlined 13 key principal elements of a “qualified study,” including:
- Preparation by an
individual with expertise and experience;
- Detailed
description of methodology;
- Use of appropriate
documentation;
- Interviews
conducted with appropriate parties;
- Use of common
nomenclature;
- Use of standard
numbering system;
- Explanation of
legal analysis;
- Determination of
unit costs and engineering “take-offs”;
- Organization of
assets into lists or groups;
- Reconciliation of
total allocated costs to actual costs;
- Explanation of the
treatment of indirect costs;
- Identification and
listing of Sec. 1245 property; and
- Consideration of
related aspects (i.e., change in accounting method and sample
techniques).
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The time for a property owner to think about having a cost
segregation study performed is at the point of purchase or during the early
stages of construction. Taking the time to identify an opportunity will allow
an owner to reap the benefits right away and smooths out the cost segregation
process – benefiting the owner and the cost segregation specialist performing
the study.
A cost segregation study is an engineering-based tax analysis that
allows real estate owners to accelerate the depreciation of property assets,
thereby reducing their federally taxable income. It can also be used for
financial accounting, insurance and property tax purposes.
For income tax depreciation purposes, there are two major types of
assets: Sec. 1250 real property and Sec. 1245 personal property. By taking
advantage of certain rules in the tax law, property may be further segregated
within these two sections by identifying five-year and seven-year personal
property, 15-year land improvements, and 27.5-year residential and 39-year
nonresidential real property.
For example, the following items would appear to be structural in
nature: specialty lighting, supplemental HVAC, wiring for computer equipment,
receptacles, kitchen appliances, chemical sprinkler systems dedicated to
equipment, and supplemental plumbing. However, a significant portion of these
items service dedicated components in buildings and can qualify for accelerated
depreciation upon further inspection.
Multifamily properties suitable for cost segregation include:
- High-value properties
such as seniors housing, garden apartment communities, luxury apartment
communities, mixed-use with retail, mixed-use with office, college housing
and high-rise communities in excess of $1 million. These can generate
sizable savings from a study.
- Any property
purchased for full basis (i.e., cash plus assumption of debt).
- Any development
property.
- Any property acquired
in a tax-free exchange (i.e., a Sec. 1031 exchange), provided the asset
has substantial tax basis. Cost segregation studies can help identify the
real and personal property basis in the new “like-kind” property that is
exchanged for the existing property to help avoid the possibility of
paying taxes on any excess property above the adjusted basis.
- Assets owned since
1987: Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Revenue Procedure 2004-11 allows
property owners to retroactively catch up on missed depreciation on assets
owned as far back as 1987 with a one-year catch-up adjustment called a
Sec. 481(a) adjustment. This creates a large tax deduction and generates
additional cash flow from tax savings in the year the tax return is filed
and the cost segregation study is performed.
In addition to depreciation and retroactive analyses, there are
other uses for cost segregation studies in real estate. Purchase price
allocations under new accounting rules (Financial Accounting Standards Board
Statement No. 141) require the allocation of the purchase price by determining
the fair market value of the underlying tangible and intangible assets. A
component of this evaluation includes determining the depreciated replacement
cost of the core and shell of the property (a natural derivative of the cost
segregation study).
Bonus depreciation, resulting from the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief
Reconciliation Act of 2003, allows real estate owners to take an additional 30
percent or 50 percent deduction (depending upon when the asset was placed in
service) in the first year for newly constructed assets with less than a 20-year
life or qualified leasehold improvements with a life of more than 20 years on a
three-year-old building. Property qualifying for bonus depreciation must have
been placed in service before May 6, 2005.
Private owners and developers receive immediate cash flow benefits
through additional depreciation. There is virtually no reason why they would
not want to have a cost segregation study performed. Real estate investment
trusts (REITs) also stand to gain from cost segregation studies in one of two
ways: First, they can significantly reduce their taxable income and its
distribution requirement, thereby retaining additional cash flow. Second, a
cost segregation study permits a REIT to pay dividends in the form of return of
capital (untaxed until shareholders’ shares are sold) instead of ordinary
income if it chooses not to alter its distribution policy.
While many opportunity funds do not take advantage of cost
segregation studies because they have plans to dispose of their assets in the
near term or because they are owned by pension funds that will not benefit from
the additional depreciation, the time value of money realized through a cost
segregation study may still ultimately present some financial gain.
How
does a cost segregation study work?
Cost segregation studies for existing properties can have a
turnaround time of four to six weeks, depending on the size and complexity of
the project. Newly constructed properties can start in the developmental stage
on through to completion of construction and can last from one to two years.
The studies typically include, but are not limited to, the
following:
- A site visit to
verify the condition, functionality and existence of assets.
- Copies of as-built
drawings, including a site survey with a legal description.
- A review of
property-condition reports, purchase agreements and appraisals, which are
used to corroborate evidence when original construction documents are not
available.
- General contractor
and subcontractor payment applications, generally referred to as AIA
(American Institute of Architects) documents, as well as owner invoices
for work performed or items purchased outside the contractor’s scope.
- Depreciation
schedules for property treatment verification on projects eligible for a
Sec. 481(a) adjustment.
- Interviews with
contractors, property managers, and building engineers to ascertain
specific uses of property.
Upon completion of a thorough review of gathered data, functional
and permanency tests, engineering quantity “take-offs” are conducted to determine
assets that qualify as real and/or personal property as defined by the IRS.
Quality deliverables include proper verbiage and references as dictated by the
IRS Guide to Cost Segregation Techniques.
What
do you gain?
Let’s say that an owner purchased a 200,000-square-foot garden
style apartment complex for $10 million in June 2005; the property has 300
units. A cost segregation study conducted in the year of purchase revealed $2.1
million of costs segregated into shorter tax lives (five-, seven- and 15-year
property) and an increase of $1.2 million of depreciation in the first five
years. For this study, five-year assets include items such as carpeting,
laundry equipment and dedicated plumbing for laundry and dishwashers.
Seven-year assets include furniture and fixtures in the management office, and
15-year assets include landscaping, paving, sidewalks and curbing, to name a
few.
Assuming a 7% discount rate and 40% tax rate, the owner of this
property would receive a net present value tax savings of $100,000 in the first
year and $400,000 over the first five years based on the segregation of assets
into shorter depreciation periods. The first-year net present value savings
more than pays for the study, which can range from $12,000 to $14,000 for a
facility of this size.
Multifamily owners and developers typically focus on cash flow,
value and return on investment, but many are unaware of the opportunity to
realize immediate tax savings with the help of a cost segregation study. By
reducing taxable income and increasing cash flow, owners can leverage a
qualified cost segregation study as a significant financial management tool
that plays a key part in their tax, accounting and insurance planning.
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