Source: http://ics-tax.com/new-tax-court-case-taxpayer-failed-to-meet-definition-of-designer-under-179d-energy-efficient-commercial-building-deduction-allocation-rule/
Timestamp: 2019-04-26 16:35:01+00:00

Document:
A recent court case denied a taxpayer the Energy Efficient Commercial Building Deduction under IRC §179D since it could not substantiate that it was the “Designer” under the incentive’s allocation rule.
The §179D Deduction is a Federal tax incentive designed to promote taxpayers to construct energy efficient buildings as well as encourage building owners to make improvements to existing structures that reduce energy and power costs. The §179D Deduction provides a maximum deduction of up to $1.80 per square foot of the building’s floor area and applies to interior lighting systems, heating, cooling, ventilation, hot water systems or building envelope.
A designer is a person that creates the technical specifications for installation of energy efficient commercial building property (or partially qualifying commercial building property for which a deduction is allowed under §179D). A designer may include, for example, an architect, engineer, contractor, environmental consultant or energy services provider who creates the technical specifications for a new building or an addition to an existing building that incorporates energy efficient commercial building property (or partially qualifying commercial building property for which a deduction is allowed under § 179D). A person that merely installs, repairs, or maintains the property is not a designer.
The IRS recently released Chief Counsel Memorandum 2018-005, which provides further clarification. Click here to learn more about this Memorandum.
In this case, the taxpayer installed energy efficient lights for several public buildings. Here, the court found that the taxpayer failed to demonstrate that the taxpayer’s role was more than an installer and that it was involved in the design of the lighting system.
Many professional service providers lack the expertise to properly analyze the complex tax rules and engineering requirements for the §179D Deduction. For a tax incentive requiring both a thorough knowledge of the tax code and engineering principles, it is essential to hire a fully qualified and experienced team that includes CPAs, attorneys, and professional engineers.

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