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Updated 5 months ago on . Most recent reply
New fence replacement on rental property is deductible or depreciation
Hi,
My rental property is a single-family home. I had to replace the fences after a strong storm last year, which costed $4200 in materials and labor. Is it possible for me to declare it as a repair and deduct the expense in the same year? It was not a newly constructed fence to increase the value of the property; rather, it was a replacement for an old, damaged fence due to nature disaster. If my logic is faulty and I have to perform deprecation, could you please advise me the number of years that a fence has to be depreciated?
Thanks,
Jane
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Quote from @Jane Dang:
I appreciate all of your suggestions. Although many of you are CPAs or tax professionals, I find conflicting information. It appears that there is no obvious process for claiming this fence. If I see a CPA, I wonder if he will follow his own advice and how I will know if he is correct when other CPAs disagree. I feel as though I'm stuck.
@Henry Clark, The property is located in California and has a market value of $1.7M. Since it's easy and advantageous to write off in the same year, It is easy for me to be consistent in that manner, but I don't think we have that choice, we have to follow what IRS allowing.
@Sean Graham, I looked up section 179 but it seems fence is not in the list of qualified items.
https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employe...
and this is their 256-page guide to train their auditors:
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p5712.pdf
So yes, you will come across different opinions from different tax professionals. This happens in many areas of the tax law.
The suggestion to "expense everything below $20,000" flies in the face of the regulations. You have a de minimis exception which is set at $2,500, and it can be doubled to $5,000 if you follow certain strict and tedious accounting practices known as AFS. But not $20,000.
You are also correct that Section 179 does not apply to fences.