Comment by noughtme
3 years ago
?
Are you just framing up a mobile app for funzies?
Wouldn't it be a professional service, therefore an expense, therefore fully tax deductible?
3 years ago
?
Are you just framing up a mobile app for funzies?
Wouldn't it be a professional service, therefore an expense, therefore fully tax deductible?
No, this is completely wrong.
It's not "just an expense". Think about an architect designing a house. The tax treatment depends on how the person spending the money "uses" the labor. It might be an ordinary operating expense (fully deductible), but could also be inventory, or a depreciated "capital asset" (closely related to the idea of "capital gains" taxes) whose value is spread over a long period of time, generally related to the asset's usable life.
There is a large body of work around the correct treatment of this stuff, which sits at the core of accounting in the same way data structures sit at the core of CS. It's not the most straightforward thing to explain. The tax code contains a ton of exceptions, but in general, a thing that is long-lived, expensive, not routinely bought or sold, and provide some kind of long-lived economic benefit (e.g. shelter, the ability to produce something, or facilitate some kind of industrial process), is a capital asset. (Sounds a lot like software, doesn't it?) Inventory is something routinely bought and sold, generally for profit. A server is inventory for Dell. For a typical software startup, it's a capital asset.
The whole point of accounting is trying to accurately measure economic activity. It's more complicated than it looks. If you agree to a five-year contract and get paid upfront, not all that money is "earned" (hence taxable) in the first year. If you're in debt and the debt is forgiven, no money changes hands, but that's very much beneficial (and taxable) to you. And if you own a long-lived asset, you don't just get to say, oh, I spent all this money upfront, that's an expense I can use to reduce my taxes. Not how it works.
Just trying to shed some light on this. It is indeed rather complex.
No, that's what's changing and it's why everyone is freaking out - software development is no longer a fully-deductible expense.
Sorry, I couldn’t tell which side of the argument you were on, so I was curious if there were good reasons to defend the proposed change.
There are none.