a) A taxpayer
shall be allowed a credit against the tax imposed by IITA Section 201(a) and
(b) for investment in qualified property placed in service in an enterprise
zone created pursuant to the Illinois Enterprise Zone Act [20 ILCS 655] or for
qualified property placed in service on or after July 1, 2006 in a river edge
redevelopment zone established pursuant to the River Edge Redevelopment Zone
Act [65 ILCS 115].
b) For partners
in a partnership and shareholders of Subchapter S corporations, there shall be
allowed an enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone investment credit
to be determined in accordance with the determination of income and
distributive share of income under sections 702 and 704 and Subchapter S of the
Internal Revenue Code.
c) The
credit shall be 0.5% of the basis for property in a zone.
d) The credit shall be available only in the
taxable year in which the property is placed in service in the enterprise zone
or river edge redevelopment zone and shall not be allowed to the extent that it
would reduce a taxpayer's liability for the tax imposed by IITA Section 201(a)
and (b) below zero.
1) Qualifying property
shall be considered placed in service in an Illinois enterprise zone or river
edge redevelopment zone on the date on which the property is placed in a
condition or state of readiness and availability for a specifically assigned
function.
2) Property that is
disposed of, is moved out of the enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment
zone, or ceases to qualify for any other reason during the same taxable year it
was placed in service in an enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone
will not be considered in computing the credit for the taxable year.
3) The credit shall be allowed for the tax
year in which the property is placed in service, or, if the amount of the
credit exceeds the original liability or the liability as later amended, the
excess may be carried forward and applied to the tax liability of the 5 taxable
years following the excess credit year.
4) The credit shall be applied to the
earliest year for which there is a liability.
5) If there is credit for more than one tax
year that is available to offset a liability, the credit accruing first in time
shall be applied first.
e) The term "qualified property" means
property that is:
1) tangible, whether new or
used. The terms "new" and "used" shall have their commonly ascribed meanings.
Buildings and structural components of buildings may be qualified property. The
term tangible property generally includes:
A)
objects or things that are physically capable of being touched and seen and
over which a person may assert rights of ownership; and
B) personal or real property, which may
consist of such items as buildings, component parts of buildings, machinery,
equipment and vehicles.
C) Items
such as stock certificates, bonds, notes and the like are not tangible personal
property. While the certificate or paper may be tangible, the item itself, the
share of ownership of a corporation or the promise to pay, is an intangible
that is memorialized by the paper.
2) depreciable pursuant to IRC section
167, except that 3-year property as defined
in IRC section
168(c)(2)(A) is not
eligible for the credit.
A) Depreciable
property is property used in the trade or business of a taxpayer, or held for
production of income, that is subject to wear and tear, exhaustion, or
obsolescence.
B) Property that is
depreciated under the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS), as
provided by IRC section
168, is considered
depreciable pursuant to IRC section
167 for purposes of the enterprise zone or
river edge redevelopment zone Investment Credit.
C) Examples of tangible property that is not
depreciable include land, inventories or stock-in-trade, natural resources, and
coin or currency.
D) The provisions
of 26 CFR 1.167(a)-4 will be utilized in making determinations as to whether
particular leasehold improvements are depreciable.
E) IRC section
179 allows taxpayers, under certain
circumstances, to expense a designated dollar amount of equipment purchased in
a single tax year. Based on this provision, if the total cost of the property
was equal to or less than the amount specified under IRC section
179, the taxpayer has the option of
expensing the cost all in one year as a depreciation expense. While the
property does have a useful life of four or more years, since the election was
made to completely expense the cost of the property in one year, the property
has no federal depreciable basis and does not have a basis upon which to
compute the Illinois investment tax credit. Property not fully expensed under
section 179 would qualify for the credit based on the cost of the depreciable
property reduced by the section 179 deduction.
3) acquired by purchase as defined in IRC
section
179(d).
A) A purchase is any acquisition of property
except:
i) an acquisition from a person whose
relationship to the acquiring person is such that a resulting loss would be
disallowed under IRC section
267 or
707(b);
ii) an acquisition by one component member of
a controlled group from another component member of the group;
iii) an acquisition of property if the basis
of the property in the hands of the person acquiring it is determined in whole
or in part by its adjusted basis in the hands of the person from whom the
property was acquired; or
iv) an
acquisition of property, the basis of which is determined under IRC section
1014(a). IRC section
1014(a) covers property
received from a decedent. Property acquired by bequest or demise is not
acquired by purchase.
B)
For purposes of determining whether property is acquired by purchase as defined
by IRC section
179(d), the family of an
individual includes only the individual's spouse and the ancestral and lineal
descendants of the individual and the individual's spouse.
C) For purposes of determining whether
property is acquired by purchase only, a controlled group has the same meaning
as in IRC section
1563(a), except stock
ownership of only 50% or more is required (also see
26 CFR
1.179-4).
D) Property that the taxpayer constructs,
reconstructs or erects is generally considered acquired by purchase.
4) used in the enterprise zone or
river edge redevelopment zone by the taxpayer.
A) The term "used in an Illinois enterprise
zone or river edge redevelopment zone" means that the property for which the
credit is being claimed is physically located within the boundaries of an
Illinois enterprise zone certified by the Illinois Department of Commerce and
Economic Opportunity or river edge redevelopment zone established pursuant to
the River Edge Redevelopment Zone Act from the time it is placed in service and
while it is being utilized by the taxpayer claiming the credit in that
taxpayer's business operation.
i) Storage of
property in an enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone will not
constitute use. The taxpayer must make use of, convert to its service, avail
itself of, or employ the property in the enterprise zone or river edge
redevelopment zone in order to demonstrate use of the property in the
enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone.
ii) A lessor may claim the credit for
otherwise qualified property if the property is physically located in an
Illinois enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone from the time it is
placed in service and all other conditions of eligibility for the credit are
met.
iii) A lessee of tangible
property may never claim the credit because a lessee has not acquired the
property by purchase.
B)
Mobile property, such as vehicles, must be used predominantly in an Illinois
enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone in order to qualify for the
credit.
i) Removal of such property from the
enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone for a temporary or transitory
purpose will not disqualify the property so long as it continues to be used
predominantly in the enterprise zoneor river edge redevelopment zone.
ii) Mobile property is considered to be
predominantly used in an enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone if
usage in the enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone exceeds usage
outside of the enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone.
5) not property that has
been previously used in Illinois in such a manner and by such a person as would
qualify for the credit.
A) Generally, used
property will not qualify for the credit if it was previously used in Illinois
in such a manner that it could have qualified for the credit.
B) However, property that would otherwise
qualify for the credit will not be disqualified because it was previously used
in Illinois in such a manner that it could have qualified for the credit, if
that use pre-dated the effective date of the law that established the credit.
EXAMPLE 1: Corporation A purchases a used pickup truck for
use in its manufacturing business in Illinois from an Illinois resident who
used the truck for personal purposes in Illinois. If the truck meets all other
requirements for the credit, it will not be disqualified because it has been
previously used in Illinois for a non-qualifying purpose.
EXAMPLE 2: Corporation A purchases a used pickup truck from
Corporation B. Corporation B used the truck in its business in a qualifying
manner and could have claimed the credit for the truck, but did not.
Corporation A may not claim the credit for the truck because the truck has been
previously used in Illinois in such a manner that it could have qualified for
the credit.
f) The basis of qualified property shall be
the basis used to compute the depreciation deduction for federal income tax
purposes, including any bonus depreciation deduction allowed under IRC section
168(k). If the basis of the
property for federal income tax depreciation purposes is increased after it has
been placed in service in the enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone
by the taxpayer, the amount of the increase shall be deemed property placed in
service on the date of the increase in basis.
g) If, during any taxable year, any property
ceases to be qualified property in the hands of the taxpayer within 48 months
after being placed in service, or the situs of any qualified property is moved
outside the enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone within 48 months
after being placed in service, the tax imposed under IITA Section 201(a) and
(b) for the taxable year shall be increased.
1) Any property disposed of by the taxpayer
within 48 months after being placed in service ceases to qualify.
A) A taxpayer disposes of property when he or
she sells the property, exchanges or trades-in worn-out property for new
property, abandons the property or retires it from use.
B) Property destroyed by casualty, stolen, or
transferred as a gift is disposed of property.
C) Property that is mortgaged or used as
security for a loan is not disposed of property, provided that the taxpayer
continues to use the property in its business within an Illinois enterprise
zone or river edge redevelopment zone.
D) Property transferred to a trustee in
bankruptcy is considered disposed of property.
E) A transfer of property by foreclosure is a
disposition of property.
F) A
reduction in the basis of qualified property resulting from a redetermination
of the purchase price of the property is a disposition of property to the
extent of the reduction in basis in the year in which the reduction takes
place. For example, this would occur when property is purchased and placed in
service in one year, and in a later year the taxpayer receives a refund of a
portion of the original purchase price.
2) Any property converted to personal use
ceases to qualify for the credit.
3) The increase in tax shall be determined
by:
A) recomputing the investment credit that
would have been allowed for the year in which credit for the property was
originally allowed by eliminating the property from the computation,
and
B) subtracting the computed
credit from the amount of credit previously allowed. The difference between the
recomputed credit and the credit actually claimed is added to the income tax
for the year in which the property ceased to qualify or was moved outside of
the enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone.
EXAMPLE: In 2007, Corporation A places qualifying property
with a basis of $55,000 into service in an enterprise zone or river edge
redevelopment zone located in Illinois and computes a Section 201(f) enterprise
zone or river edge redevelopment zone Investment Tax Credit of $275 ($55,000 x
0.5%). Corporation A's 2007 income tax liability is $420. After the application
of the credit, Corporation A has remaining income tax liability of $145. In the
following year, Corporation A moved a qualifying asset having a basis in 2007
of $5,000 from the enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone to another
location in Illinois. As a result, Corporation A is required to recapture a
portion of the enterprise zone or river edge redevelopment zone Investment
Credit that was applied against its 2007 income tax liability. In order to
determine its additional income tax for 2008, Corporation A must recompute its
2007 enterprise zone Investment Tax Credit by eliminating the disqualified
property ($55,000 - $5,000 x 0.5% = $250). This recomputed credit is subtracted
from the enterprise zone Investment Tax Credit actually used in 2007 ($275 -
$250 = $25), and the difference is added to Corporation A's 2008 income tax
after application of the Investment Tax Credit.
h) Automatic Sunset of Credit for
River Edge Redevelopment Zone Property. IITA Section 250(a) provides that,
if a reasonable and appropriate sunset date is not specified in the
Public Act that creates a credit, a taxpayer shall not be entitled to take the
credit for tax years beginning on or after 5 years after the effective date of
the Public Act creating the credit. IITA Section 250(b) provides that
any credit scheduled to expire in 2011, 2012, or 2013 by operation of
this Section shall be extended by 5 years. The credit for property
placed in service in a river edge redevelopment zone was created by PA 94-1021,
which had an effective date of July 12, 2006, and specified no sunset date for
the credit. Accordingly, no credit is allowed under this Section for property
placed in service in a river edge redevelopment zone for any taxable year
beginning on or after July 12, 2016.