Section 162 - Trade or business expenses

178 Analyses of this statute by attorneys

  1. The Most Important Items in the $1.9T American Rescue Plan Signed by President Biden

    BakerHostetlerJeffrey ParavanoMarch 12, 2021

    The ARPA permanently repeals the provision. The repeal is scored as raising $22 billion to help lower the cost of the ARPA.B. Increase in Number of Employees Subject to IRC Section 162(m)’s Limitation on Deductions of Executive CompensationIRC Section 162(m) generally prohibits tax deductions by publicly traded corporations for so-called covered employees to the extent annual compensation of those employees exceeds $1 million. Section 162(m) generally applies to the CEO, the CFO and the three next-highest-compensated individuals.

  2. The Taxation of the Marijuana Business (A Primer)

    Garvey Schubert BarerHarold SnowMarch 11, 2016

    Businesses, in general, in which the sale of merchandise is an income producing factor, calculate their taxable income in accordance with three primary sections of the IRC. Those are code sections IRC § 162(a), IRC § 471 and IRC § 263A. IRC § 162(a) permits the taxpayer to deduct all of the ordinary and necessary expenses associated with the business, and not directly related to the creation of the “product” (inventory), from gross receipts to arrive at taxable income.

  3. Federal Income Taxation of Intellectual Property Development and Cost Recovery

    Gray ReedApril 10, 2024

    Intellectual property (“IP”) development can cost millions of dollars so cost recovery timing can be financially material. General tax principles typically require that expenses associated with creating assets having useful lives lasting longer than the current tax year are capitalized. However, IP as an asset class has several statutory cost recovery possibilities (§§ 162, 167, 174, 197, etc.) Like many areas of federal income tax, the rules are full of exceptions and exceptions to exceptions. Naturally federal courts have also supplied a host of tests and factors that can impact the federal income tax cost of IP development. This post is therefore not exhaustive and covers only select topics. As such, specialized areas, like film and television production expenses under § 181 are beyond the scope of this discussion.The General Deduction Rule: § 162To use § 162, an IP development cost must be (1) an ordinary and necessary expense (as opposed to a capital expenditure) and (2) paid or incurred “in carrying on a trade or business”. With respect to the expense requirement, the Treasury Regulations include a robust regulatory regime under §§ 263 and 263A that specifically discusses the capitalization of IP costs. However, it is important to remember that the foregoing regulations only affect amounts otherwise deductible under §§ 162(a) and 212. The § 263 re

  4. IRS Provides Additional Clarity Regarding Donations to Scholarship Granting Organizations - SALT Alert: Alabama Edition

    Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLPBruce ElyDecember 20, 2019

    Proc. 2019-12. These safe harbors provide that the receipt of a state or local tax credit that reduces a state or local tax imposed directly on the entity may be treated as meeting the requirements of an ordinary and necessary business expense for purposes of IRC Section 162 to the extent of the credit received or expected to be received. In other words, for payments falling within the safe harbor, the receipt of the tax credit is itself the “business reason” for the payment for purposes of Section 162.

  5. After the Lender Case -- Securities Law Restrictions That Apply to Family Offices Managing Other Peoples' Money

    Stroock & Stroock & Lavan LLPMichael EmanuelNovember 7, 2018

    nvestment partnerships that it advised; The taxpayer (Lender Management) therefore received not just a return on its investment, but compensation attributable to its services provided to others; Lender Management employed five employees during each of the tax years at issue; and The key person at Lender Management (Keith Lender, who was Harry Lender’s grandson) worked approximately fifty hours per week in Lender Management, had a business degree from Cornell University and a MBA from Northwestern University, and prior to joining Lender Management worked for several years in marketing and brand management for major corporations. The Tax Court determined that the activities of Lender Management -- which involved providing investment management services to others for profit (although the others were all part of the Lender extended family or their related entities) -- were sufficient to constitute a trade or business to give rise to fully deductible trade or business expenses under IRC section 162. The Internal Revenue Service had contended that these expenses were not trade or business expense deductions under IRC section 162, but instead were deductible under IRC section 212 -- which meant that, as miscellaneous itemized deductions, they were subject to the 2% of adjusted gross income (“AGI”) floor and the alternative minimum tax.

  6. Baby Out With the Bathwater?

    Lane Powell PCJustin HobsonMarch 1, 2018

    [1]I. Quick Explanation and History of IRC 212 IRC Section 212 provides, in its entirety and unchanged since its inclusion in the 1954 Code:§ 212 Expenses for production of income.In the case of an individual, there shall be allowed as a deduction all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year— (1)for the production or collection of income;(2)for the management, conservation, or maintenance of property held for the production of income; or(3)in connection with the determination, collection, or refund of any tax. The predecessor to section 212 was adopted in 1942 because courts were denying “ordinary and necessary” deductions for taxpayers who could not establish that they were engaged in a trade or business and therefore who were unable to satisfy that prerequisite for deducting expenses under IRC 162.[2] Indeed, Reg.

  7. FASB Updates for 2016 Financial Statements Could Impact Permissible Adjustments under Code Section 162(m)

    Proskauer Rose LLPElliot KatzDecember 3, 2015

    IRC Section 162(m) provides that a public company may not deduct annual compensation paid to a “covered employee” in excess of $1,000,000 per year, other than certain “qualified performance-based compensation.” For these purposes, “covered employees” generally include the company’s CEO and its three most highly compensated executive officers (other than the CEO and CFO) identified in the company’s “Summary Compensation Table.”To qualify for the Section 162(m) qualified performance-based compensation exemption, compensation must be paid subject to pre-established and objective performance goals set by a compensation committee consisting solely of two or more outside directors, and the material terms of such goals must be approved by the company’s holders. Generally, any exercise of discretion with respect to the performance goals after they have been established would disqualify the compensation from being considered “qualified performance-based compensation.”

  8. The Tax Court in Brief - April 2021

    Freeman LawMay 29, 2021

    The Court denied the Taxpayer a deduction of approximately $20,000 for tax years 2012 and 2013.Key Points of Law:IRC section 162(a) allows a taxpayer to deduct the “ordinary and necessary” expenses it pays in carrying on a trade or business. The IRC specifically lists the rent paid by a business as one of these deductible expenses.

  9. Tax Court Finds Legal Fees Incurred in Defending Hatch-Waxman Lawsuits are ‎Deductible Expenses

    Locke Lord LLPBuddy SandersMay 4, 2021

    On the other hand, the court held that Mylan’s fees for preparing its Paragraph IV notice letters are not deductible and must be capitalized.In its 2012-14 federal income tax returns, Mylan claimed deductions for the legal fees in question as ordinary and necessary business expenses under 26 U.S.C. § 162(a). The IRS issued notices of deficiency to Mylan for each of those years.Mylanat 2. Mylan filed petitions with the court for redetermination of the noted deficiencies, contending that all of its legal fees from 2012 through 2014 for preparing its notice letters and defending against patent infringement suits under the Hatch-Waxman Act qualify as deductible expenses under § 162(a) rather than capitalized expenses under 26 U.S.C. §263(a).

  10. Proposed Regulations that Impact Environmental Enforcement Aim to Clarify 2017 Tax Act

    Holland & Knight LLPDianne PhillipsAugust 14, 2020

    As described in two previous Holland & Knight Energy and Natural Resources Blog posts, "Recent Changes Expected to Impact Environmental Enforcement" and "Tax Changes Impacting Government Enforcement: Comments Due November 13, 2018," the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of 2017, P.L. 115-97 (Dec. 22, 2017), made changes to the long-standing rule precluding deductibility of "any fine or similar penalty paid to a government for the violation of any law." This blanket prohibition was changed by Section 13306, which revised 26 U.S.C. § 162(f) to state that "no deduction otherwise allowable shall be allowed under this chapter for any amount paid or incurred (whether by suit, agreement, or otherwise) to, or at the direction of, a government or governmental entity in relation to the violation of any law or the investigation or inquiry by such government or entity into the potential violation of any law" except in two circumstances when established by the taxpayer through the establishment requirement. The two exceptions are "for amounts constituting restitution or paid to come into compliance with law."