Discover the tax deductions and limitations associated with website costs.
Find out if you qualify for a deduction for software developed internally.
Learn more about deductions associated with having a third party run your website.
Discover deductions associated with start-up expenses, including website development.
The business use of websites is widespread. But surprisingly, the IRS hasn’t yet issued formal guidance on when Internet business website costs can be deducted.
Fortunately, established rules that generally apply to the deductibility of business costs, and IRS guidance that applies to software costs, provide business taxpayers launching a website with some guidance as to the proper treatment of the costs. Fiducial is here to help you navigate this issue for your business.
Hardware or software?
Let’s start with the hardware you may need to operate a website. The costs involved fall under the standard rules for depreciable equipment. Specifically, once these assets are up and running, you can deduct 100% of the cost in the first year they’re placed in service (before 2023). This favorable treatment is allowed under the 100% first-year bonus depreciation break.
In later years, you can probably deduct 100% of these costs in the year you placed the assets in service under the Section 179 first-year depreciation deduction privilege. However, Sec. 179 deductions are subject to several limitations.
For tax years beginning in 2020, the maximum Sec. 179 deduction is $1.04 million, subject to a phaseout rule. Under the rule, the deduction phases out if more than a specified amount of qualified property is placed in service during the year. The threshold amount for 2020 is $2.59 million.
There’s also a taxable income limit. Under it, your Sec. 179 deduction can’t exceed your business taxable income. In other words, Sec. 179 deductions can’t create or increase an overall tax loss. However, any Sec. 179 deduction amount that you can’t immediately deduct is carried forward and can be deducted in later years (to the extent permitted by the applicable limits).
Similar rules apply to purchased off-the-shelf software. However, software license fees and purchased software costs differ in treatment for tax purposes. Payments for leased or licensed software used for your website are currently deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses.
Did your business develop the software internally?
An alternative position is that your software development costs represent currently deductible research and development costs under the tax code. To qualify for this treatment, you must pay or incur the costs by December 31, 2022.
A more conservative approach would be to capitalize the costs of internally developed software. Then you would depreciate them over 36 months.
If your website is primarily for advertising, you can also currently deduct internal website software development costs as ordinary and necessary business expenses.
Are you paying a third party to run you business website?
Some companies hire third parties to set up and run their websites. In general, payments to third parties are currently deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses.
What about before business begins?
Start-up expenses can include website development costs. You can generally deduct up to $5,000 of otherwise deductible expenses incurred before your business commences in the year business commences. However, if your start-up expenses exceed $50,000, the $5,000 current deduction limit chips away. Above this amount, you must capitalize some, or all, of your start-up expenses and amortize them over 60 months, starting with the month that business commences.
Need Help?
Fiducial can help you determine the appropriate treatment of website costs for federal income tax purposes. Have questions or want more information? Call Fiducial at 1-866-FIDUCIAL or make an appointment at one of our office locations. Ready to book an appointment now? Click here. Know someone who might need our services? We love referrals.