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Content about Capital expenditure

April 26, 2012

ARDMORE, Pa. — Are certain expenditures currently deductible or must they be capitalized

ARDMORE, Pa. — In an effort to resolve the controversy over whether certain expenditures made by a drycleaning business are currently deductible as repair expenses, or whether they must be capitalized and deducted over the life of the underlying business asset, the Internal Revenue Service has finally released new regulations.

The IRS’s long-awaited expanded regulations for determining whether an expense must be capitalized because it betters or improves tangible business property or equipment, restores it, or adapts it to a new and different use, will have a significant impact on every drycleaning business that acquires, produces, or improves its tangible property. 

In addition to clarifying and expanding the current rules, the new regulations create “bright-line” tests for applying the repair-or-capitalize standards, provides guidance for accounting for—and disposing of—repaired property, as well as clarifying other aspects of the repair/capitalize dilemma.

December 3, 2008

CHICAGO — Drycleaners expect to keep equipment and supply costs steady in the upcoming year, according to the StatShot panel, a group of industry operators tapped by AmericanDrycleaner.com to contribute financial information anonymously for use at the site.

Nationwide, operators said they expect their plants’ capital expenditures on equipment and supplies to increase an average of 3.2% — about the same rate as inflation. Half (50%) of respondents will try to keep capital expenditures flat, regardless of any price increases in ongoing expenses.

March 31, 2008

CHICAGO — Most drycleaners will try to keep equipment and supply costs steady this year, according to the StatShot panel, a group of industry operators tapped by AmericanDrycleaner.com to contribute financial information anonymously for use at the site.

Nationwide, operators said they expect their plants’ capital expenditures on equipment and supplies to increase 1.25%. Respondents in the Midwest led the increases with an expected 8.75% uptick in costs this year.