Comment by demosthanos

6 months ago

From a quick search it appears to me like construction labor is deductible as an expense in the year it is incurred. Do you have evidence that says otherwise?

My reading of § 1.263A-1 is that construction labor must be capitalized.

§ 1.263A-1.a.3.A indicates that it's in scope: Real property and tangible personal property produced by the taxpayer

§ 1.263A-1.e.2 specifies that Direct Costs are subject to capitalization: Producers. Producers must capitalize direct material costs and direct labor costs.

(I'm just a taxpayer, not a tax lawyer or even an EA or CPA.)

What tax code references or treasury regulations did you find to support your belief that construction labor can be expensed in the year performed?

> Dear ChatGPT, is construction labor deductible as an expense in the year it is incurred according to GAAP? Please answer in a few lines.

Under GAAP, construction labor is not immediately deductible as an expense in the year it is incurred if it relates to the construction of a long-term asset (like a building). Instead, it is capitalized as part of the asset's cost and then expensed over time through depreciation. Only labor costs not tied to asset creation (e.g., routine maintenance) are expensed as incurred.

  • Though your answer is correct for the tax code as well as GAAP, Generally Accepted Accounting Principles are not necessarily followed by the tax code.

    • Unfortunately my understanding of the R&D expensing rule is that it is lifted directly from GAAP, which means private companies have to adhere to those (heavyweight) rules to comply.

    • Fair point. I changed the question to "according to the tax code" and it told me that

      Construction labor is generally not deductible as an expense in the year incurred if it is related to the construction or improvement of a capital asset (like a building). Instead, under the U.S. tax code (IRC §263A), these costs must usually be capitalized and recovered through depreciation over time. Exceptions may apply for certain small taxpayers or repairs.