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| Proposed revenue procedure
clears up ambiguities. |
From The Tax Adviser:
When
Are Advance Payments Includible in Income?
n IRS proposed revenue procedure will allow
certain taxpayers using the accrual method of accounting
to defer inclusion of specified advance payments in gross
income. CPAs should examine notice 2002-79 in case the
rules become final so as to be able to advise eligible
clients.
BACKGROUND
IRC section 451 provides
that an item of gross income is reported in the tax year
in which a taxpayer receives it. Under regulations
section 1.451-1(a), income is includible in gross income
under the accrual method when all the events have
occurred that fix the right to receive it and the amount
can be determined with reasonable accuracy. In the
absence of a contingency affecting a taxpayers
right to income, the test is satisfied when the earliest
of these has occurred: (1) the income is received, (2)
the income is due or (3) the required performance or
events have taken place.
In certain circumstances, revenue
procedure 71-21 allows accrual-method taxpayers to defer
inclusion of payments received (or amounts due and
payable) in one tax year if attributable to services to
be performed by the end of the next.
However, taxpayers and the IRS
frequently disagree about whether advance payments are
for services, nonservices or a mixture of both. Payments
for nonservices and certain mixtures of services and
nonservices do not qualify for deferral. In addition, it
is unclear whether advance payments received under a
series of agreements or a renewable agreement are within
the procedures scope.
PROPOSED
PROCEDURE
The proposed guidance
would expand revenue procedure 71-21s scope to
include advance payments (1) for certain nonservices and
mixed services/nonservices and (2) received under an
agreement or series of agreements with a term extending
beyond the end of the next succeeding year. It applies to
accrual-method taxpayers that receive advance payments
properly includible in income under section 451 in the
year received but included for financial reporting
purposes in a subsequent year. The procedure explains the
meaning of advance payment in this context.
Under the proposed procedure, a
taxpayer may report in taxable income either (1) the full
amount of advance payments in the year received (the
full-inclusion method) or (2) such payments in the year
received, to the extent included for financial-reporting
purposes, with the remainder reported in the next
succeeding tax year (the deferral method). A taxpayer
cannot defer income to a tax year later than the next
succeeding tax year. Advance payments need not relate to
services expected to be provided in the next succeeding
year to be deferred.
ACCOUNTING-METHOD
CHANGE
Generally, a taxpayer that
wants to change its treatment of advance payments to
either the full-inclusion or deferral method may obtain
automatic consent under revenue procedure 2002-9 (as
modified by revenue procedure 2002-19, announcement
2002-17 and revenue procedure 2002-54), ignoring section
4.02.
If made final, the procedure would be
effective for tax years ending on or after its date of
publication.
For more information, see The Tax
Clinic, edited by David Madden, in the June 2003 issue of
The Tax Adviser.
Lesli Laffie,
editor
The Tax Adviser
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