Alabama Administrative Code
Title 810 - ALABAMA DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE
Chapter 810-27-1 - MULTISTATE TAX COMPACT
Section 810-27-1-.11 - Property Factor: Valuation
Universal Citation: AL Admin Code R 810-27-1-.11
Current through Register Vol. 42, No. 11, August 30, 2024
(1) Property Factor: Valuation of Owned Property.
(a) Property owned
by the taxpayer shall be valued at its original cost. As a general rule,
"original cost" is deemed to be the basis of the property at the time of
acquisition by the taxpayer and adjusted by subsequent capital additions or
improvements thereto and partial disposition thereof, by reason of sale,
exchange, abandonment, etc. However, intangible drilling and development costs
shall be included in the property factor whether or not they have been expensed
for either federal or state tax purposes. See §
40-18-6,
Code of Ala. 1975, and the rules promulgated
thereunder for basis determination rules.
1.
EXAMPLE: The taxpayer acquired a factory building in Alabama at a cost of
$500,000 and, 18 months later, expended $100,000 for major remodeling of the
building. Taxpayer files its return for the current taxable year on the
calendar-year basis. Depreciation deduction in the amount of $22,000 was
claimed with respect to the building on the return for the current taxable
year. The value of the building includable in the numerator and denominator of
the property factor is $600,000; the depreciation deduction is not taken into
account in determining the value of the building for purposes of the
factor.
2. EXAMPLE: During the
current taxable year, Corporation X merges into Corporation Y in a tax-free
reorganization under the Internal Revenue Code. At the time of the merger,
Corporation X owns a factory which X built five years earlier at a cost of
$1,000,000. X has been depreciating the factory at the rate of two percent per
year, and its basis in X's hands at the time of the merger is $900,000. Since
the property is acquired by Y in a transaction in which, under the Internal
Revenue Code, its basis in Y's hands is the same as its basis in X's hands, Y
includes the property in Y's property factor at X's original cost, without
adjustment for depreciation, i.e. $1,000.000.
3. EXAMPLE: Corporation Y acquires the assets
of Corporation X in a liquidation by which Y is entitled to use its stock cost
as the basis of the X assets under Internal Revenue Code
1954, §334(b)(2) (i.e. stock possessing 80 percent control is
purchased and liquidated within two years). Under these circumstances, Y's cost
of the assets is the purchase price of the X stock, prorated over the X assets.
If the original cost of property is unascertainable, the property is included
in the factor at its fair market value as of the date of acquisition by the
taxpayer.
(b) Inventory
of stock of goods shall be included in the factor in accordance with the
valuation method used for federal income tax purposes.
(c) Property acquired by gift or inheritance
shall be included in the factor at its basis for determining depreciation for
federal income tax purposes.
(2) Property Factor: Valuation of Rented Property.
(a)
Multiplier and Subrentals. Property rented by the
taxpayer is valued at eight times its net annual rental rate. The net annual
rental rate for any item of rented property is the annual rental rate paid by
the taxpayer for the property less the aggregate annual subrental rates paid by
subtenants of the taxpayer. (See Rule
810-27-1-.18.(3))
for special rules when the use of such net annual rental rate produces a
negative or clearly inaccurate value or when property is used by the taxpayer
at no charge or is rented at a nominal rental rate.) Subrents are not deducted
when they constitute business income because the property which produces the
subrents is used in the regular course of a trade or business of the taxpayer
when it is producing such income. Accordingly there is no reduction in its
value.
1. EXAMPLE: The taxpayer receives
subrents from a bakery concession in a food market operated by the taxpayer.
Since the subrents are business income, they are not deducted from rent paid by
the taxpayer for the food market.
2. EXAMPLE: The taxpayer rents a 5-story
office building primarily for use in its multistate business, uses three floors
for its offices and subleases two floors to various other businesses on a
short-term basis because it anticipates it will need those two floors for
future expansion of its multistate business. The rental of all five floors is
integral to the operation of the taxpayer's trade or business. Since the
subrents are business income, they are not deducted from the rent paid by the
taxpayer.
3. EXAMPLE: The taxpayer
rents a 20-story office building and uses the lower two stories for its general
corporation headquarters. The remaining 18 floors are subleased to others. The
rental of the eighteen floors is not incidental to but rather is separate from
the operation of the taxpayer's trade or business. Since the subrents are
nonbusiness income they are to be deducted from the rent paid by the
taxpayer.
(b)
Annual rental rate. The amount paid as rental for
property for a 12-month period (i.e., the amount of the annual rent). Where
property is rented for less than a 12-month period, the rent paid for the
actual period of rental shall constitute the "annual rental rate" for the tax
period. However, where a taxpayer has rented property for a term of 12 or more
months and the current tax period covers a period of less than 12 months (due,
for example, to a reorganization or change of accounting period), the rent paid
for the short tax period shall be annualized. If the rental term is for less
than 12 months, the rent shall not be annualized beyond its term. Rent shall
not be annualized because of the uncertain duration when the rental term is on
a month-to-month basis.
1. EXAMPLE: Taxpayer
A, which ordinarily files its returns based on a calendar year, is merged into
Taxpayer B on April 30. The net rent paid under a lease with 5 years remaining
is $2,500 a month. The rent for the tax period January 1 to April 30 is
$10,000. After the rent is annualized the net rent is $30,000 ($2,500 x
12).
2. EXAMPLE: Same facts as in
Example 1. except that the lease would have terminated on August 31. In this
case, the annualized rent is $20,000 ($2,500 x 8).
(c)
Annual rent. The
actual sum of money or other consideration payable, directly or indirectly, by
the taxpayer or for its benefit for the use of the property and includes:
1. Any amount payable for the use of real or
tangible personal property, or any part thereof, whether designated as a fixed
sum of money or as a percentage of sales, profits or otherwise.
(i) EXAMPLE: A taxpayer, pursuant to the
terms of a lease, pays a lessor $1,000 per month as a base rental and at the
end of the year pays the lessor one percent of its gross sales of $400,000. The
annual rent is $16,000 ($12,000 plus one percent of $400,000 or
$4,000).
2. Any amount
payable as additional rent or in lieu of rents, such as interest, taxes,
insurance, repairs or any other items which are required to be paid by the
terms of the lease or other arrangement, not including amounts paid as service
charges, such as utilities, janitor services, etc. If a payment includes rent
and other charges unsegregated, the amount of rent shall be determined by
consideration of the relative values of the rent and other items.
(i) EXAMPLE: A taxpayer, pursuant to the
terms of a lease, pays the lessor $12,000 a year rent plus taxes in the amount
of $2,000 and interest on a mortgage in the amount of $1,000. The annual rent
is $15,000.
(ii) EXAMPLE: A
taxpayer stores part of its inventory in a public warehouse. The total charge
for the year was $1,000 of which $700 was for the use of storage space and $300
for inventory insurance, handling and shipping charges, and C.O.D. collections.
The annual rent is $700.
(d)
Exclusions:
Annual rent does not include:
1. Incidental day-to-day expenses such as
hotel or motel accommodations, daily rental of automobiles, etc.
2.
Royalties. Based
on extraction of natural resources, whether represented by delivery or
purchase. For this purpose, a royalty includes any consideration conveyed or
credited to a holder of an interest in property which constitutes a sharing of
current or future production of natural resources from such property,
irrespective of the method of payment or how such consideration may be
characterized, whether as a royalty, advance royalty, rental or
otherwise.
(e)
Leasehold improvements. For the purposes of the
property factor, be treated as property owned by the taxpayer regardless of
whether the taxpayer is entitled to remove the improvements, or the
improvements revert to the lessor upon expiration of the lease. Hence, the
original cost of leasehold improvements shall be included in the
factor.
(3) Factor: Under Completed Contract Method of Accounting.
(a) Taxpayers using the completed contract
method of accounting shall assign the values of property owned and utilized in
the performance of such contracts to Alabama in the ratio of gross receipts
from contracts completed in Alabama during the tax period to gross receipts
from all completed contracts during the tax period. Such property not utilized
in the performance of the completed contracts shall be assigned as otherwise
provided in this rule.
(d) For
property rented and utilized in the performance of completed contracts, such
property shall be valued at eight (8) times the rental rate for the completed
contract period.
(4) Applicability:
(a) For tax periods beginning
on or after January 1, 2021, the property factor is no longer considered in
calculating a taxpayer's Alabama apportionment factor.
(b) The provisions of this rule are
applicable for tax periods beginning on or after January 1, 2021, when:
1. A taxpayer petitions and is granted
approval from the department to employ an alternative apportionment method in
accordance with §
40-27-1,
Code of Ala. 1975.
2. Measuring against nexus thresholds
pursuant to §
40-18-31.2,
Code of Ala. 1975.
Authors: Holly H. Coon, Jennifer Reynolds, Christina Hall, CPA, Kathleen Abrams
Statutory Authority: Code of Ala. 1975, §§ 40-2A-7(a)(5), 40-8-6, 40-18-5.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Alabama may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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