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    | Publication 535 | 2008 Tax Year |  
                  
                  
                  
                     
                     If someone owes you money that you are not going to be able to collect, you have a bad debt. There are two kinds of bad debts—business
                        and
                        nonbusiness. This chapter discusses only business bad debts.
                        
                      Generally, a business bad debt is one that comes from operating your trade or business. You can deduct business bad debts
                        on your business income
                        tax return.
                        
                      All other bad debts are nonbusiness bad debts and are deductible only as short-term capital losses on Schedule D (Form 1040).
                        For more information
                        on nonbusiness bad debts, see Publication 550.
                        
                      
                     
                        
                           
                              Topics - This chapter discusses:
                               
                        
                           
                              Definition of business bad debt
                              When a debt becomes worthless
                              How to claim a business bad debt
                              Recovery of a bad debt 
                     
                        
                           
                              Useful Items - You may want to see:
                               
                        Publication 
                           
                              525
                                 Taxable and Nontaxable Income
                              536
                                 Net Operating Losses (NOLs) for Individuals, Estates, and Trusts
                              544
                                 Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets
                              550
                                 Investment Income and Expenses
                              556
                                 Examination of Returns, Appeal Rights, and Claims for Refund See chapter 12 for information about getting publications and forms.
                     
                   
                     
                        
                           
                              Definition of Business Bad Debt
                               A business bad debt is a loss from the worthlessness of a debt that was either:
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              Created or acquired in your trade or business, or
                              Closely related to your trade or business when it became partly or totally worthless. 
                        
                      A debt is closely related to your trade or business if your primary motive for incurring the debt is business related. Bad
                        debts of a corporation
                        are always business bad debts.
                        
                      
                        
                      Credit sales.
                                Business bad debts are mainly the result of credit sales to customers. Goods that have been sold, but not yet paid
                        for, and services that have been
                        performed, but not yet paid for are recorded in your books as either accounts receivable or notes receivable. After a reasonable
                        period of time, if
                        you have tried to collect the amount due, but are unable to do so, the uncollectible part becomes a business bad debt.
                        
                         
                                 Accounts or notes receivable valued at fair market value (FMV) when received are deductible only at that value, even
                        though the FMV may be less
                        than the face value. If you purchased an account receivable for less than its face value, and the receivable subsequently
                        becomes worthless, the most
                        you are allowed to deduct is the amount you paid to acquire it.
                        
                         
                        You can claim a bad debt deduction only if the amount owed to you was previously included in gross income. This applies to
                        amounts owed to you from
                        all sources of taxable income, including sales, services, rents, and interest.
                        
                         Accrual method.
                                If you use the accrual method of accounting, generally, you report income as you earn it. You can only claim a bad
                        debt deduction for an
                        uncollectible receivable if you have previously included the entire uncollectible amount in income.
                        
                         
                                If you qualify, you can use the nonaccrual-experience method of accounting discussed later. Under this method, you
                        do not have to accrue income
                        that, based on your experience, you do not expect to collect.
                        
                         Cash method.
                                If you use the cash method of accounting, generally, you report income when you receive payment. You cannot claim
                        a bad debt deduction for amounts
                        owed to you because you never included those amounts in income. For example, a cash basis architect cannot claim a bad debt
                        deduction if a client
                        fails to pay the bill because the architect's fee was never included in income.
                        
                         Debts from a former business.
                                If you sell your business but retain its receivables, these debts are business debts because they arose out of your
                        trade or business. If any of
                        these receivables subsequently become worthless, the loss is still a business bad debt.
                        
                         Debt acquired from a decedent.
                                The character of a loss from debts of a business acquired from a decedent is determined in the same way as debts sold
                        by a business. The executor
                        of the decedent's estate treats any loss from the debts as a business bad debt if the debts were closely related to the decedent's
                        trade or business
                        when they became worthless. Otherwise, a loss from these debts becomes a nonbusiness bad debt for the decedent's estate.
                        
                         Liquidation.
                                If you liquidate your business and some of your accounts receivable become worthless, they become business bad debts.
                        
                         
                        
                           
                              
                                 Types of Business Bad Debts The following are situations that may result in a business bad debt.
                           
                         Loans to clients and suppliers.
                                   If you loan money to a client, supplier, employee, or distributor for a business reason and subsequently, after making
                           attempts to collect, the
                           loan receivable becomes worthless, you have a business bad debt.
                           
                            Debts of political parties.
                                   If a political party (or other organization that accepts contributions or spends money to influence elections) owes
                           you money and the debt becomes
                           worthless, you can claim a bad debt deduction only if you use an accrual method of accounting and meet all the following tests.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    The debt arose from the sale of goods or services in the ordinary course of your trade or business.
                                    More than 30% of your receivables accrued in the year of the sale were from sales to political parties.
                                    You made substantial and continuing efforts to collect on the debt. Loan or capital contribution.
                                   You cannot claim a bad debt deduction for a loan you made to a corporation if, based on the facts and circumstances,
                           the loan is actually a
                           contribution to capital.
                           
                            Debts of an insolvent partner.
                                   If your business partnership breaks up and one of your former partners becomes insolvent, you may have to pay more
                           than your pro rata share. If you
                           pay any part of the insolvent partner's share of the debts, you can claim a bad debt deduction for the amount you paid that
                           is attributable to the
                           insolvent partner's share.
                           
                            Business loan guarantee.
                                   If you guarantee a debt that subsequently becomes worthless, the debt can qualify as a business bad debt if all the
                           following requirements are met.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    You made the guarantee in the course of your trade or business.
                                    You have a legal duty to pay the debt.
                                    You made the guarantee before the debt became worthless. You meet this requirement if you reasonably expected you would not
                                       have to pay the
                                       debt without full reimbursement from the issuer.
                                    
                                    You receive reasonable consideration for making the guarantee. You meet this requirement if you made the guarantee in accord
                                       with normal
                                       business practice or for a good faith business purpose.
                                     Example. Jane Zayne owns the Zayne Dress Company. She guaranteed payment of a $20,000 note for Elegant Fashions, a dress outlet that
                              is not a “related
                                 person.” Elegant Fashions is one of Zayne's largest clients. Elegant Fashions later defaulted on the loan. As a result, Ms. Zayne
                              paid the
                              remaining balance of the loan in full to the bank.
                              
                            She can claim a business bad debt deduction only for the amount she paid, since her guarantee was made in the course of her
                              trade or business for a
                              good faith business purpose. She was motivated by the desire to retain one of her better clients and keep a sales outlet.
                              
                           Deductible in the year paid.
                                   If you make a payment on a loan you guaranteed, you can deduct it in the year paid, unless you have rights against
                           the borrower.
                           
                            Rights against a borrower.
                                   When you make payment on a loan you guaranteed, you may have the right to take the place of the lender. The debt is
                           then owed to you. If you have
                           this right, or some other right to demand payment from the borrower, you cannot claim a bad debt deduction until these rights
                           become partly or totally
                           worthless.
                           
                            Joint debtor.
                                    If two or more debtors jointly owe you money, your inability to collect from one does not enable you to deduct a
                           proportionate amount as a bad
                           debt.
                           
                            Sale of mortgaged property.
                                   If mortgaged or pledged property is sold for less than the debt, the unpaid, uncollectible balance of the debt is
                           a bad debt.
                           
                            
                     
                        
                           
                              When a Debt Becomes Worthless
                               You do not have to wait until a debt is due to determine whether it is worthless. A debt becomes worthless when there is no
                        longer any chance the
                        amount owed will be paid.
                        
                      It is not necessary to go to court if you can show that a judgment from the court would be uncollectible. You must only show
                        that you have taken
                        reasonable steps to collect the debt. Bankruptcy of your debtor is generally good evidence of the worthlessness of at least
                        a part of an unsecured and
                        unpreferred debt.
                        
                      Property received for debt.
                                If you receive property in partial settlement of a debt, reduce the debt by the FMV of the property received. You
                        can deduct the remaining debt as
                        a bad debt if and when it becomes worthless.
                        
                         
                                If you later sell the property, any gain on the sale is due to the appreciation of the property. It is not a recovery
                        of a bad debt. For
                        information on the sale of an asset, see Publication 544.
                        
                         
                     
                        
                           
                              How To Claim a Business Bad Debt
                               There are two methods to claim a business bad debt.
                        
                      Generally, you must use the specific charge-off method. However, you may use the nonaccrual-experience method if you meet
                        the requirements
                        discussed later under Nonaccrual-Experience Method.
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              
                                 Specific Charge-Off Method If you use the specific charge-off method, you can deduct specific business bad debts that become either partly or totally
                           worthless during the tax
                           year.
                           
                         Partly worthless debts.
                                   You can deduct specific bad debts that become partly uncollectible during the tax year. Your tax deduction is limited
                           to the amount you charge off
                           on your books during the year. You do not have to charge off and deduct your partly worthless debts annually. You can delay
                           the charge off until a
                           later year. However, you cannot deduct any part of a debt after the year it becomes totally worthless.
                           
                            Significantly modified debt.
                                    An exception to the charge-off rule exists for debt which has been significantly modified and on which the holder
                           recognized gain. For more
                           information, see Regulations section 1.166-(3)(a)(3).
                           
                            Deduction disallowed.
                                   Generally, you can claim a partial bad debt deduction only in the year you make the charge-off on your books. If,
                           under audit, the IRS does not
                           allow your deduction and the debt becomes partly worthless in a later tax year, you can deduct the amount you charge off in
                           that year plus the
                           disallowed amount charged-off in the earlier year. The charge off in the earlier year, unless reversed on your books, fulfills
                           the charge-off
                           requirement for the later year.
                           
                            Totally worthless debts.
                                   If a debt becomes totally worthless in the current tax year, you can deduct the entire amount, less any amount deducted
                           in an earlier tax year when
                           the debt was only partly worthless.
                           
                            
                                   You do not have to make an actual charge-off on your books to claim a bad debt deduction for a totally worthless debt.
                           However, you may want to do
                           so. If you do not and the IRS later rules the debt is only partly worthless, you will not be allowed a deduction for the debt
                           in that tax year. A
                           deduction of a partly worthless bad debt is limited to the amount actually charged off.
                           
                            Filing a claim for refund.
                                   If you did not deduct a bad debt on your original return for the year it became worthless, you can file a claim for
                           a credit or refund. If the bad
                           debt was totally worthless, you must file the claim by the later of the following dates.
                           
                            
                                   If the claim is for a partly worthless bad debt, you must file the claim by the later of the following dates.
                           
                            You may have longer to file the claim if you were unable to manage your financial affairs due to a physical or mental impairment.
                           Such an
                           impairment requires proof of existence. See Code section 6511(h).
                           
                            
                                   For details and more information about filing a claim, see Publication 556. Use one of the following forms to file
                           a claim.
                           
                            
                              
                               Table 10-1.  Forms Used To File a  Claim 
                                    
                                    
                                       
                                          | IF you filed as a... | THEN file... |  
                                          | Sole proprietor or farmer | Form 1040X |  
                                          | Corporation | Form 1120X |  
                                          | S corporation | Form 1120S (check box H(4))
 |  
                                          | Partnership | Form 1065 (check box G(5))
 |  
                        
                           
                              
                                 Nonaccrual-Experience Method If you use an accrual method of accounting and qualify under the rules explained in this section, you can use the nonaccrual-experience
                           method for
                           bad debts. Under this method, you do not accrue service related income you expect to be uncollectible.
                           
                         Generally, you can use the nonaccrual-experience method for accounts receivable for services you performed only if:
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 The services are provided in the fields of accounting, actuarial science, architecture, consulting, engineering, health, law,
                                    or the
                                    performing arts, or
                                 
                                 You meet the $5 million gross receipts test for all prior years. 
                           
                         Service related income.
                                   You can use the nonaccrual-experience method only for amounts earned by performing services. You cannot use this method
                           for amounts owed to you
                           from activities such as lending money, selling goods, or acquiring receivables or other rights to receive payment.
                           
                            Gross receipts test.
                                    You meet the gross receipts test if your average annual gross receipts for the 3 prior tax years does not exceed
                           $5,000,000.
                           
                            Interest or penalty charged.
                                   Generally, you cannot use the nonaccrual-experience method for amounts due on which you charge interest or a late
                           payment penalty. However, do not
                           treat a discount offered for early payment as the charging of interest or a penalty if both the following apply.
                           
                            Methods available.
                                   You can use any of the following nonaccrual-experience methods.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Revenue-based moving average method.
                                    Actual experience method.
                                    Modified Black Motor method.
                                    Modified moving average method.
                                    Alternative nonaccrual-experience method.  Apply the nonaccrual-experience method separately to each account receivable.
                           
                            
                                   Generally, you cannot change from one method to another without IRS approval. You may be able to obtain automatic
                           consent to change your method of
                           accounting. See Regulations section 1.448-2 for more information on obtaining consent to change to a nonaccrual-experience
                           method (other than one of
                           the safe harbor methods) or to change from one method to another.
                           
                            
                                   For more information about the nonaccrual-experience method, including the $5 million gross receipts test, see Code
                           section 448(d)(5) and
                           Regulations section 1.448-2.
                           
                            
                     If you claim a deduction for a bad debt on your income tax return and later recover (collect) all or part of it, you may have
                        to include all or
                        part of the recovery in gross income. The amount you include is limited to the amount you actually deducted. However, you
                        can exclude the amount
                        deducted that did not reduce your tax. Report the recovery as “Other income” on the appropriate business form or schedule.
                        
                      See  Recoveries in Publication 525 for more information.
                        
                      Net operating loss (NOL) carryover.
                                If a bad debt deduction increases an NOL carryover that has not expired before the beginning of the tax year in which
                        the recovery takes place, you
                        treat the deduction as having reduced your tax. A bad debt deduction that contributes to a net operating loss helps lower
                        taxes in the year to which
                        you carry the net operating loss. See Publication 536 for more information about net operating losses.
                        
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