Section 179 and Bonus Depreciation provide substantial tax deductions for businesses by allowing accelerated first-year depreciation on capital equipment purchases.
Despite being available for years, many eligible business owners miss out by misunderstanding eligibility or usage rules.
This guide breaks down exactly what these provisions entail, who benefits, how recent updates impact planning, and how to leverage them for maximum deductions.
Table of Contents:
Section 179 allows businesses to fully deduct the cost of qualified capital asset purchases like equipment, software, and machinery in the first year up to a set limit, rather than slowly depreciating deductions over 5-7 years. Bonus Depreciation provides an additional percentage deduction in year one beyond the normal depreciation schedule.
Combined, these accelerate deductions to provide immediate tax savings and improved cash flow for reinvestment. They encourage business investments and growth.
Section 179 Deduction Limit: $1.22 million (increased from $1.16 million in 2023)
Phase-Out Threshold: $3.05 million (increased from $2.859 million in 2023)
Bonus Depreciation Percentage: 60% (decreased from 80% in 2023, falling by 20% each year until phased out in 2027)
This means for 2024:
Sources for 2024 Updates:
Nearly all businesses purchasing equipment, software, vehicles, or machinery for active use in operations qualify for Section 179 and Bonus Depreciation, including:
Eligible assets range from computers, furnishings, heavy equipment to company vehicles. Some building improvements may also qualify.
Work with a CPA, but in general:
Be aware of phase-out rules that begin limiting Section 179 at a certain spending level.
Avoid flags like:
Maintain detailed asset records confirming business percentages, placed-in-service dates, and cost basis to avoid personal use claims.
There are several common misconceptions business owners have around eligibility, use cases, and requirements for Section 179 and Bonus Depreciation.
Many believe only C-Corps qualify, however C-Corps, S-Corps, partnerships, and sole proprietors all can utilize Section 179 so long as they are filing taxes as an active trade or business.
For example, a freelance consultant organized as an LLC takes equipment deductions just as a manufacturing corporation would.
Unlike with some niche credits, Section 179 places no restrictions on which industries can claim the deduction. Service companies such as marketing firms, restaurants purchasing new equipment, construction contracting businesses, and manufacturers all benefit equally.
The key is business use of capital assets rather than any sector focus.
Used equipment does qualify for bonus depreciation as long as it is new to the taxpayer, i.e. not previously owned, or acquired from a related party.
Any used capital purchase new only to the business also qualifies under Section 179 first year expensing rules.
Only the business claiming deductions needs treat it as new - used machinery still provides benefits.
While powerful on their own, Section 179 & Bonus Depreciation should fit into a larger overarching plan.
Treating capital purchases as standalone tax events fails optimizing bigger picture planning items like entity structure selection, retirement plan funding, or qualified business income deductions.
It’s all part of a bigger picture. Pulling in a wealth advisor to operate as “quarterback,” working in concert with your CPA, can help you look at your entire strategy through the lens of your long-term objectives (for both your business & personal life).
For more business owner tax planning strategies, check out our additional resources:
This is not professional tax advice. Please consult a tax professional to address your specific situation.