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Minnesota Income Tax Treatment of Federal Bonus Depreciation

What is bonus depreciation?

Federal law allows taxpayers to claim 50 percent of an asset's basis as "bonus depreciation" in the year the asset is placed in service. Taxpayers may then claim the regular depreciation amount on the remaining 50 percent of the asset's basis. This provision applies to assets placed in service after December 31, 2007, and before January 1, 2013, for most property, and before January 1, 2014, for certain property with longer production periods. Federal law also allows 100 percent bonus depreciation for property placed in service after September 8, 2010, and before January 1, 2012.

Table 1 compares depreciation allowed at the federal level before and after enactment of bonus depreciation for a ten-year asset with a $100,000 basis.

Table 1
Year of Asset's Life Federal Depreciation Before Bonus Depreciation Federal Depreciation with Bonus Depreciation
Bonus Regular Total
1 $10,000 $50,000 $5,000 $55,000
2 $18,000 $9,000 $9,000
3 $14,400 $7,200 $7,200
4 $11,520 $5,760 $5,760
5 $9,220 $4,610 $4,610
6 $7,370 $3,685 $3,685
7 $6,550 $3,275 $3,275
8 $6,550 $3,275 $3,275
9 $6,560 $3,280 $3,280
10 $6,550 $3,275 $3,275
11 $3,280 $1,640 $1,640
Total $100,000 $50,000 $50,000 $100,000

The total amount of depreciation allowed over the life of the asset equals its $100,000 basis, both under the current federal law and under the old law. The bonus depreciation provision acts to shift depreciation toward the early years of the asset's life.

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What assets qualify for federal bonus depreciation?

The following types of assets qualify for federal bonus depreciation:

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How does Minnesota treat bonus depreciation?

Under the provisions of Laws 2008, chapter 154, and Laws 2011, first special session, chapter 7, Minnesota requires taxpayers to add-back to taxable income 80 percent of the bonus depreciation in the year the asset is placed in service, and then subtract one-fifth of the amount added back in each of the five following tax years. Put another way, Minnesota taxpayers are allowed to claim 20 percent of the bonus depreciation in the first year, and the remaining 80 percent in equal parts in each of the five following years. This is the same state tax treatment as applied to bonus depreciation enacted at the federal level in 2002 and 2003. Taxpayers are allowed to claim the full bonus amount, just over a six-year period rather than all in the first year. Table 2 shows how the bonus depreciation is treated at the state level.

Table 2
50 percent Bonus
Year of Asset's Life Federal Bonus Depreciation State Treatment of Bonus Depreciation
1 $50,000 $10,000
2 $8,000
3 $8,000
4 $8,000
5 $8,000
6 $8,000
Total $50,000 $50,000

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Does Minnesota continue to recognize "regular" depreciation as it occurs under the federal tax?

In addition to the bonus depreciation of an asset in its first year of life, federal law provides for taxpayers to depreciate the remaining basis of the asset using previously existing depreciation rules and schedules. Minnesota will continue to allow deduction of this "regular" depreciation in the same year it is allowed at the federal level. Table 3 continues the example of the ten-year, $100,000 basis asset. Deduction of bonus depreciation in the first year federally and first six years at the state level left $50,000 of basis remaining for assets placed in service under 50 percent depreciation.

Table 3
50 percent Bonus
Year of Asset's Life Federal Regular Depreciation State Regular Depreciation
1 $5,000 $5,000
2 $9,000 $9,000
3 $7,200 $7,200
4 $5,760 $5,760
5 $4,610 $4,610
6 $3,685 $3,685
7 $3,275 $3,275
8 $3,275 $3,275
9 $3,280 $3,280
10 $3,275 $3,275
11 $1,640 $1,640
Total $50,000 $50,000

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December 2011