Tax Law, § 662(c)
The specific deduction of a resident individual or married individuals filing a joint return is $5,000. In the case of married individuals filing separate returns, regardless of whether on separate forms or on one form, the specific deduction is $2,500 for each spouse.
Example:
For the calendar year 1994, a trust reports rental income for which accelerated depreciation was used for property placed in service before 1987. The trust distributes 60 percent of such income to the beneficiaries. The total Federal items of tax preference (including the portion thereof allocable to the beneficiaries) is $10,000 (excess of depreciation claimed for regular tax purposes over depreciation refigured using the straight line method), and the New York and Federal items of tax preference allocable to the trust would be $4,000 (40 percent of $10,000). The specific deduction allowable under this paragraph would be computed as follows:
Amount for Federal (without allocation) | Amount for New York (without allocation) | |
Items of tax preference | $10,000 | $4,000 |
Specific deduction: | ||
$4,000/ $10,000 × $5,000 = $2,000 |
N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. Tit. 20 § 122.7