Welcome To Josh's Blog O' Thoughts: Taxes

Tax Credits For Energy Efficient Products Now Include Geothermal

Friday, February 27, 2009. 4:05 pm. Posted by Josh.

Generally speaking, I've always found the energy efficiency federal income tax credits a bit confusing. To my knowledge, there are at least the two different tax credits available to home owners: the Nonbusiness Energy Property Credit and the Residential Energy Efficient Property Credit.


Nonbusiness Energy Property Credit

This tax credit allows you to recoup some of the money you spent to perform energy efficient upgrades to your home. The catch is that it must be an upgrade that is performed and not a new installation. For example, if you have your old windows replaced with new Energy Star windows, you should be able to take a credit, but if you build a new house, you won't be able to take the credit even if the windows used are Energy Star. Other items that are available for credits include insulation, lighting, heating and cooling, water heaters, and windows and doors. Every item has a maximum credit that can be taken. View the Energy Star website for more information.

What makes this credit even more confusing is that the credit expired at the end of 2007, but was then reinstated in October 2008 not to take effect in 2009.

From the 2008 Federal 1040 Booklet:
The credit for nonbusiness energy property has expired and does not apply for 2008. Form 5695 is now used only to claim the residential energy efficient property credit.

This means that you will NOT be able to take this credit for any energy efficient upgrades you made in 2008. So it really won't be usable on this year's tax return, but if you make any upgrades in 2009, you should be able to claim a credit for them when you file next year.


Residential Energy Efficient Property

This tax credit is available for installations of various Energy Star qualified, high-efficiency products. Items covered under this credit include solar energy systems, wind energy systems, fuel cells, and (as of October 2008) geothermal systems. The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 that was passed in October 2008 not only reinstated the Nonbusiness Energy Property Credit (see above), but also expanded the Residential Energy Efficient Property credit to include geothermal systems. Even better, this credit can be used for new construction, AND can be taken for products installed in 2008! This is great news for people who installed a geothermal system in 2008.

This credit generally allows you to get back up to 30% of the investment expense in these systems. This year, the credit for each is capped at $2,000, but from what I understand, the cap will be removed starting next year allowing you to take a full 30% credit. This is even better news for people planning on installing a geothermal system in the next 7 years (expires in 2016).

To take the credit on line 53 of your 1040, you also need to file form 5696 with your return. Your total credit from this form may also be limited by your income or by some of the other credits you may be taking. Please review the instructions for more information.


I Am Taking The Credit

If you followed my blog closely, you would have seen that my family built a new home in 2007/2008 with the completion being in Jan 2008. You also would have noticed that we had a geothermal system put in for our heating and cooling solution. Since the house was completed and put into use in 2008, the installation date of the geothermal system is considered to be 2008. Therefore, I can take this credit on my 2008 return. I can get a credit of up to 30% with a cap of $2,000. This means that the total qualified expenses of the product and installation only needed to clear $6,666 to get me the full $2,000 (it easily cleared this mark). And since a tax credit drops straight to the bottom line, I’m happily I’m getting an extra two grand back from Uncle Sam this year.


Reference


Federal Form 1040 Instructions
Federal Form 5696 and Instructions
Energy Star Website
GeoExchange Website
WaterFurnace Website
About.com Energy Tax Credits
Wikipedia Article - Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008
The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008

Disclaimer

I am not a tax professional, so this information should not be taken as tax advice. I'm simply stating my understanding of the situation.

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Posted in: Building Our House , Energy Efficiency , Taxes , Tips
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Tax Reporting For Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP)

Monday, March 24, 2008. 1:31 pm. Posted by Josh.

I recently discovered that there are special tax laws regarding gains made from selling stock acquired through an Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP). Below is the result of my research to understand these laws.

Normal Stock Transactions

In a normal stock transaction, you report a capital gain and pay tax on any money you make on the sale of the stock beyond what it cost you to buy the stock:
Capital Gain = Total Sale - Total Cost

If you were selling a batch of stock that was all purchased at the same time at the same price, this calculation can be very simple. However, it can become complex when you sell a batch of shares that have multiple purchase dates and prices. Most brokerages will keep track of this information and just tell you what your gain is for that sale thus facilitating tax reporting.

Aside from calculating your gain, the other thing you have to look at is how long the shares were held. If there were held for less than a year (short term), it will be taxed differently than shares held longer than a year (long term). Again, your brokerage's year end report should break this down for you.

Tax Reporting For ESPPs

An Employee Stock Purchase Plan is a program offered by your employer that allows you to purchase shares of the company's stock often at a discounted price. The program will usually have an offer period during which you will have a payroll deduction that goes into a holding account. When the offer period is over, the money in that account is converted to stock.

When you sell the stock, you will have a gain or a loss based on what you paid for the stock and what you sold it for. On the surface, this appears to be just another regular stock transaction, but as I found out, there is a significant difference. The difference is that the amount of discount you received when purchasing the stock will have to be reported as ordinary income (not capital gains).

Consider a plan where you get a 10% discount on your stock. At the end of the offer period, the market price for a share is $10. With your 10% discount, you pay $9 per share. If you bought 100 shares, you just got a discount of $100 ( (10 - 9) * 100 ). That $100 should be reported as ordinary income, and instead of using $9 per share as your cost basis for your shares, you use $10 per share.

The above example is overly simplified to demonstrate the principle. However, the actual law is quite a bit more confusing. Different rules apply if you sell your shares after holding them for at least two years (Qualified Distribution) than if you hold for less than two years (Disqualified Distribution) so we will examine each separately.

Disqualified Distribution

In a disqualified distribution, you held your shares less than two years. If you held less than one year, they are also a short-term gain.

To calculate the total amount of discount that must be reported as ordinary income, you must take the market price on the day the shares were purchased, minus the actual price paid (the discounted price), times the number of shares:
Discount = (Market Price Per Share - Discounted Price Per Share) * Number of Shares

The discount amount should be included in your ordinary income (Wages, Tips, etc). For a disqualified disposition, your employer should INCLUDE this in the box 1 (wages) of your W-2. Mine did, and in box 14 (other), they listed ESPP DISQ DISP and the amount of the discount that was ALREADY included in my box 1.

If you used the actual discounted price as the cost basis, you would be double taxed on the discount amount as it will be included in both your ordinary income AND your capital gains income. When you do your capital gains worksheet (Schedule D), you should use the Market Price as the cost basis of these shares thus avoiding the double taxation.

Qualified Distribution

A qualified distribution is a sale of shares held more than two years. This automatically means it is also a long term capital gain since it has been held for more than one year. The rules for a qualified distribution are slightly different than for a disqualified one.

First, you still have to calculate the amount of discount that your received on your shares. However, this is done by taking the LESSER of two calculations.

First, calculate the actual gain based off of the discounted price:
Actual Gain = (Sell Price Per Share - Discounted Purchase Price Per Share) * Number Of Shares

Second, calculate the discount based off the offering price (this is the market price per share on the beginning of the offer date):
Discount = Market Price on Offer Date * Discount Rate% * Number of Shares

Take the smaller of these two numbers and this is the amount that you must report as ordinary income. However, unlike a disqualified disposition, the amount is most likely NOT already reported by your employer in box 1 of your W-2. That means that you must manually add this to your income (wages, salaries, tips, etc).

Again, you need to adjust the cost basis of your shares upward by the amount you reported as ordinary income so that you are not double-taxed on that amount.

Summary

Overall, the wording of the laws is fairly complex. It took me many hours of research to get to a point where I now have a pretty good understanding of what to do for these types of transactions. I have put together a spreadsheet to help me do my ESPP reporting. You can download it here and use it to help you in your own reporting.

I dedicate these two ESPP Tax Calculations files to the public domain so feel free to use them any way you wish.
ESPP Tax Calculations.ods - Open Document Spreadsheet format for OpenOffice.org
ESPP Tax Calculations.xls - MS Excel spreadsheet



Links

TurboTax Page Regarding ESPP
Fairmark Page Regarding ESPP Qualified Distributions
IRS Publication 525 - PDF File 1.1MB


Disclaimer

I am not a tax professional, so this information should not be taken as tax advice. I'm simply stating how I have handled the situation.

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Posted in: Finance , Taxes , Tips
This article has been viewed 6521 times.
Comments: 22

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