Business Deductions for Rent and Lease Payments

Rent is the payment for using property that the taxpayer does not own. Rent is tax-deductible if the rental serves a business purpose. Rent paid for personal use is not deductible.

Businesses usually rent equipment and property because it requires less cash, which helps small businesses with insufficient credit for large purchases, and because rent can usually be deducted in the tax year when it is paid rather than being amortized or depreciated over several years, as would be necessary for purchases of equipment or property. Fees for safety deposit and post office boxes are also deductible as rent.

Net leases are leases that include rent for space + the payment of associated costs, such as property taxes and insurance, utilities, trash collection, and sewer and water. Net leases are deductible as rent that includes the associated costs: there is no separate deduction for property taxes, insurance, utilities, or the other associated costs.

If a taxpayer rents his home and uses a home office for his business, then the percentage of the rent = area of the business ÷ area of the house is deductible, but limited by business income.

To be deductible, rents must be reasonable, but this rule will only apply if the lessor and lessee are related, since an arms-length transaction is presumed to be reasonable. The lessor and the lessee are deemed related if they are part of the same family or related through the control of business entities.

If a taxpayer rents to his own corporation, then the corporation may deduct the rental payments as business expenses, but the taxpayer cannot treat the income as passive income that can be used to offset other passive losses because that is specifically prohibited.

Gift-Leasebacks

If property has already been depreciated, a business owner could give the property to her children and have them lease it back to her, which can be beneficial if the children are in a lower tax bracket. This gives income to the children while also providing an annual deduction for the business. However, it must be a bona fide transaction:

Example: a lawyer transfers property to his children, then rents the property back from them to protect against malpractice lawsuits.

Conditional Sales Contracts

Any rent payments leading to ownership or equity are not deductible. If there is an option to buy with a rental or lease, then whether it is actually a lease or a purchase of property is determined by whether the lease agreement is actually a conditional sales contract, in which case the payments are nondeductible. A conditional sales contract allows the taxpayer to acquire either equity or title in the property after paying a certain amount. If it is not clear from the contract whether the agreement is a lease or a conditional sales contract, then another determining factor is intent, which can be inferred from any of the following factors: