[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.263A-10]

[Page 548-553]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.263A-10  Unit of property.

    (a) In general. The unit of property as defined in this section is 
used as the

[[Page 549]]

basis to determine accumulated production expenditures under Sec. 
1.263A-11 and the beginning and end of the production period under Sec. 
1.263A-12. Whether property is 1-year or 2-year property under Sec. 
1.263A-8(b)(1)(ii) is also determined separately with respect to each 
unit of property as defined in this section.
    (b) Units of real property--(1) In general. A unit of real property 
includes any components of real property owned by the taxpayer or a 
related person that are functionally interdependent and an allocable 
share of any common feature owned by the taxpayer or a related person 
that is real property even though the common feature does not meet the 
functional interdependence test. When the production period begins with 
respect to any functionally interdependent component or any common 
feature of the unit of real property, the production period has begun 
for the entire unit of real property. See, however, paragraph (b)(5) of 
this section for rules under which the costs of a common feature or 
benefitted property are excluded from accumulated production 
expenditures for one or more measurement dates. The portion of land 
included in a unit of real property includes land on which real property 
(including a common feature) included in the unit is situated, land 
subject to setback restrictions with respect to such property, and any 
other contiguous portion of the tract of land other than land that the 
taxpayer holds for a purpose unrelated to the unit being produced (e.g., 
investment purposes, personal use purposes, or specified future 
development as a separate unit of real property).
    (2) Functional interdependence. Components of real property produced 
by, or for, the taxpayer, for use by the taxpayer or a related person 
are functionally interdependent if the placing in service of one 
component is dependent on the placing in service of the other component 
by the taxpayer or a related person. In the case of property produced 
for sale, components of real property are functionally interdependent if 
they are customarily sold as a single unit. For example, the real 
property components of a single-family house (e.g., the land, 
foundation, and walls) are functionally interdependent. In contrast, 
components of real property that are expected to be separately placed in 
service or held for resale are not functionally interdependent. Thus, 
dwelling units within a multi-unit building that are separately placed 
in service or sold (within the meaning of Sec. 1.263A-12(d)(1)) are 
treated as functionally independent of any other units, even though the 
units are located in the same building.
    (3) Common features. For purposes of this section, a common feature 
generally includes any real property (as defined in Sec. 1.263A-8(c)) 
that benefits real property produced by, or for, the taxpayer or a 
related person, and that is not separately held for the production of 
income. A common feature need not be physically contiguous to the real 
property that it benefits. Examples of common features include streets, 
sidewalks, playgrounds, clubhouses, tennis courts, sewer lines, and 
cables that are not held for the production of income separately from 
the units of real property that they benefit.
    (4) Allocation of costs to unit. Except as provided in paragraph 
(b)(5) of this section, the accumulated production expenditures for a 
unit of real property include, in all cases, the costs that directly 
benefit, or are incurred by reason of the production of, the unit of 
real property. Accumulated production expenditures also include the 
adjusted basis of property used to produce the unit of real property. 
The accumulated costs of a common feature or land that benefits more 
than one unit of real property, or that benefits designated property and 
property other than designated property, is apportioned among the units 
of designated property, or among the designated property and property 
other than designated property, in determining accumulated production 
expenditures. The apportionment of the accumulated costs of the common 
feature (allocable share) or land (attributable land costs) generally 
may be made using any method that is applied on a consistent basis and 
that reasonably reflects the benefits provided. For example, an 
apportionment based on relative costs to be incurred,

[[Page 550]]

relative space to be occupied, or relative fair market values may be 
reasonable.
    (5) Treatment of costs when a common feature is included in a unit 
of real property--(i) General rule. Except as provided in this paragraph 
(b)(5), the accumulated production expenditures of a unit of real 
property include the costs of functionally interdependent components 
(benefitted property) and an allocable share of the cost of common 
features throughout the entire production period of the unit. See Sec. 
1.263A-12, relating to the production period of a unit of property.
    (ii) Production activity not undertaken on benefitted property--(A) 
Direct production activity not undertaken--(1) In general. The costs of 
land attributable to a benefitted property may be treated as not 
included in accumulated production expenditures for a unit of real 
property for measurement dates prior to the first date a production 
activity (direct production activity), including the clearing and 
grading of land, has been undertaken with respect to the land 
attributable to the benefitted property. Thus, the costs of land 
attributable to a benefitted property (as opposed to land attributable 
to the common features) with respect to which no direct production 
activities have been undertaken may be treated as not included in the 
accumulated production expenditures of a unit of real property even 
though a production activity has begun on a common feature allocable to 
the unit.
    (2) Land attributable to a benefitted property. For purposes of this 
paragraph (b)(5)(ii), land attributable to a benefitted property 
includes all land in the unit of real property that includes the 
benefitted property other than land for a common feature. (Thus, land 
attributable to a benefitted property does not include land attributable 
to a common feature.)
    (B) Suspension of direct production activity after clearing and 
grading undertaken--(1) General rule. This paragraph (b)(5)(ii)(B) may 
be used to determine the accumulated production expenditures for a unit 
of real property, if the only production activity with respect to a 
benefitted property has been clearing and grading and no further direct 
production activity is undertaken with respect to the benefitted 
property for at least 120 consecutive days (i.e., direct production 
activity has ceased). Under this paragraph (b)(5)(ii)(B), the 
accumulated production expenditures attributable to a benefitted 
property qualifying under this paragraph (b)(5)(ii)(B) may be excluded 
from the accumulated production expenditures of the unit of real 
property even though production continues on a common feature allocable 
to the unit. For purposes of this paragraph (b)(5)(ii)(B), production 
activity is considered to occur during any time which would not qualify 
as a cessation of production activities under the suspension period 
rules of Sec. 1.263A-12(g).
    (2) Accumulated production expenditures. If this paragraph 
(b)(5)(ii)(B) applies, accumulated production expenditures attributable 
to the benefitted property of the unit of real property may be treated 
as not included in the accumulated production expenditures for the unit 
starting with the first measurement period beginning after the first day 
of the 120 consecutive day period, but must be included in the 
accumulated production expenditures for the unit beginning in the 
measurement period in which direct production activity has resumed on 
the benefitted property. Accumulated production expenditures with 
respect to common features allocable to the unit of real property may 
not be excluded under this paragraph (b)(5)(ii)(B).
    (iii) Common feature placed in service before the end of production 
of a benefitted property. To the extent that a common feature with 
respect to which all production activities to be undertaken by, or for, 
a taxpayer or a related person are completed is placed in service before 
the end of the production period of a unit that includes an allocable 
share of the costs of the common feature, the costs of the common 
feature are not treated as included in accumulated production 
expenditures of the unit for measurement periods beginning after the 
date the common feature is placed in service.
    (iv) Benefitted property sold before production completed on common 
feature. If a unit of real property is sold before common features 
included in the unit

[[Page 551]]

are completed, the production period of the unit ends on the date of 
sale. Thus, common feature costs actually incurred and properly 
allocable to the unit as of the date of sale are excluded from 
accumulated production expenditures for measurement periods beginning 
after the date of sale. Common feature costs properly allocable to the 
unit and actually incurred after the sale are not taken into account in 
determining accumulated production expenditures.
    (v) Benefitted property placed in service before production 
completed on common feature. Where production activities remain to be 
undertaken on a common feature allocable to a unit of real property that 
includes benefitted property, the costs of the benefitted property are 
not treated as included in the accumulated production expenditures for 
the unit for measurement periods beginning after the date the benefitted 
property is placed in service and all production activities reasonably 
expected to be undertaken by, or for, the taxpayer or a related person 
with respect to the benefitted property are completed.
    (6) Examples. The principles of paragraph (b) of this section are 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. B, an individual, is in the trade or business of 
constructing custom-built houses for sale. B owns a 10-acre tract upon 
which B intends to build four houses on 2-acre lots. In addition, on the 
remaining 2 acres B plans to construct a perimeter road that benefits 
the four houses and is not held for the production of income separately 
from the sale of the houses. In 1995, B begins constructing the 
perimeter road and clears the land for one house. Under the principles 
of paragraph (b)(1) of this section, each planned house (including 
attributable land) is part of a separate unit of real property (house 
unit). Under the principles of paragraph (b)(3) of this section, the 
perimeter road (including attributable land) constitutes a common 
feature with respect to each planned house (i.e., benefitted property). 
In accordance with paragraph (b)(1), the production period for all four 
house units begins when production commences on the perimeter road in 
1995. In addition, under the principles of paragraph (b)(4) of this 
section, the accumulated production expenditures for the four house 
units include the allocable costs of the road. In addition, for the 
house with respect to which B has cleared the land, the accumulated 
production expenditures for the house unit include the land costs 
attributable to the house. See paragraph (b)(5)(i) of this section. 
However, the accumulated production expenditures for each of the three 
house units that include a house for which B has not yet undertaken a 
direct production activity do not include the land costs attributable to 
the house. See paragraph (b)(5)(ii) of this section.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as Example 1, except that B 
undertakes no further direct production activity with respect to the 
house for which the land was cleared for a period of at least 120 days 
but continues constructing the perimeter road during this period. In 
accordance with paragraph (b)(5)(ii)(B) of this section, B may exclude 
the accumulated production expenditures attributable to the benefitted 
property from the accumulated production expenditures of the house unit 
starting with the first measurement period that begins after the first 
day of the 120 consecutive day period. B must include the accumulated 
production expenditures attributable to the benefitted property in the 
accumulated production expenditures for the house unit beginning with 
the measurement period in which direct production resumes on the 
benefitted property. The house unit will continue to include the 
accumulated production expenditures attributable to the perimeter road 
during the period in which direct production activity was suspended on 
the benefitted property.
    Example 3. (i) D, a corporation, is in the trade or business of 
developing commercial real property. D owns a 20-acre tract upon which D 
intends to build a shopping center with 150 stores. D intends to lease 
the stores. D will also provide on the 20 acres a 1500-car parking lot, 
which is not held by D for the production of income separately from the 
stores in the shopping center. Additionally, D will not produce any 
other common features as part of the project. D intends to complete the 
shopping center in phases and expects that each store will be placed in 
service independently of any other store.
    (ii) Under paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this section, each store 
(including attributable land) is part of a separate unit of real 
property (store unit). The 1500-car parking lot is a common feature 
benefitting each store, and D must include an allocable share of the 
parking lots in each store unit. See paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(3). In 
accordance with paragraph (b)(5)(i), D includes in the accumulated 
production expenditures for each store unit during each store unit's 
production period: the costs capitalized with respect to the store 
(including attributable land costs in accordance with paragraph (b)(5) 
of this section) and an allocable share of the parking lot costs 
(including attributable land costs in accordance with paragraph (b)(5) 
of this section). Under paragraph (b)(4), the portion of the parking lot 
costs

[[Page 552]]

that is included in the accumulated production expenditures of a store 
unit is determined using a reasonable method of allocation.
    Example 4. X, a real estate developer, begins a project to construct 
a condominium building and a convenience store for the benefit of the 
condominium. X intends to separately lease the convenience store. 
Because the convenience store is held for the production of income 
separately from the condominium units that it benefits, the convenience 
store is not a common feature with respect to the condominium building. 
Instead, the convenience store is a separate unit of property with a 
separate production period and for which a separate determination of 
accumulated production expenditures must be made.
    Example 5. (i) In 1995, X, a real estate developer, begins a project 
consisting of a condominium building and a common swimming pool that is 
not held for the production of income separately from the condominium 
sales. The condominium building consists of 10 stories, and each story 
is occupied by a single condominium. Production of the swimming pool 
begins in January. No direct production activity is undertaken on any 
condominium until September, when direct production activity commences 
on each condominium. On December 31, 1995, 1 condominium that was 
completed in December has been sold, 3 condominiums that were completed 
in December have not been sold, and 6 condominiums are only partially 
complete; additionally, the swimming pool is completed. X is a calendar 
year taxpayer that uses a full taxable year as the computation period, 
and quarterly measurement dates.
    (ii) Under paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this section, each 
condominium (including attributable land) is part of a separate unit of 
real property. Under the principles of paragraph (b)(3) of this section, 
the swimming pool is a common feature with respect to each condominium 
and under paragraph (b)(4) of this section the cost of the swimming pool 
is allocated equally among the condominiums.
    (iii) Under paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the production period 
of each of the 10 condominium units begins in January when production of 
the swimming pool begins. On X's March 31, 1995, and June 30, 1995, 
measurement dates, the accumulated production expenditures for each 
condominium unit include the allocable costs of the swimming pool, but 
not the land costs attributable to the condominium because no direct 
production activity has been undertaken on the condominium. See 
paragraph (b)(5)(ii)(A) of this section. On X's September 30, 1995, and 
December 31, 1995, measurement dates, the accumulated production 
expenditures for each unit include the allocable costs of the swimming 
pool, and the costs of the condominium (including attributable land 
costs) because a direct production activity has commenced on the 
condominium. See paragraph (b)(5)(i) of this section.
    (iv) The production period for the condominium unit that includes 
the condominium that is sold as of the end of 1995 ends on the date the 
condominium is sold. See paragraph (b)(5)(iv) of this section. The 
production period of each unit that is ready to be held for sale ends 
when all production activities have been completed on the unit, in this 
case on December 31, 1995, the date that the swimming pool included in 
the unit is completed. See Sec. 1.263A-12(d). Accordingly, interest 
capitalization ceases for each such unit that is sold or ready to be 
held for sale as of the end of 1995 (including each unit's allocable 
share of the completed swimming pool).
    (v) The production periods for the condominium units that include 
the condominiums that are only partially complete at the end of 1995 
continue after 1995. The accumulated production expenditures for each 
partially completed condominium unit continue to include the costs of 
the condominium (including attributable land costs) in addition to the 
costs of an allocable share of the completed swimming pool (including 
attributable land costs).
    Example 6. Assume the same facts as in Example 5, except that the 
swimming pool is only partially complete as of the end of 1995. Under 
these facts, X capitalizes no interest during 1996 for the 1 unit that 
includes the condominium sold during 1995 (including the costs of the 
allocable share of the swimming pool). See paragraph (b)(5)(iv) of this 
section. However, with respect to the 6 condominiums that are partially 
complete and the 3 condominiums that are completed but unsold, interest 
capitalization continues after the end of 1995. The accumulated 
production expenditures for each of these 9 units include the costs of 
an allocable share of the swimming pool. See paragraph (b)(5)(i) of this 
section. In determining the costs of an allocable share of the swimming 
pool included in the accumulated production expenditures for each of the 
9 units, X includes all costs of the swimming pool properly allocable to 
each unit, including those cost incurred as of the date of the sale of 
unit 1 that may have been used under applicable administrative 
procedures (e.g., Rev. Proc. 92-29, 1992-1 C.B. 748) in determining the 
basis of unit 1 solely for purposes of computing gain or loss on the 
sale of unit 1. See Sec. 601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b) of this chapter.
    Example 7. (i) Assume the same facts as in Example 5, except that X 
intends to lease rather than sell the condominiums and the completed 
swimming pool is placed in service for depreciation purposes on December 
31, 1995. Additionally, assume that all 10 condominiums are partially 
completed at the end of 1995.

[[Page 553]]

    (ii) Under these facts, because the swimming pool is a common 
feature that is placed in service separately from the condominiums that 
it benefits, under paragraph (b)(5)(iii) of this section, the 
accumulated production expenditures of each of the condominium units do 
not include the costs of the allocable share of the swimming pool after 
1995.

    (c) Units of tangible personal property. Components of tangible 
personal property are a single unit of property if the components are 
functionally interdependent. Components of tangible personal property 
that are produced by, or for, the taxpayer, for use by the taxpayer or a 
related person, are functionally interdependent if the placing in 
service of one component is dependent on the placing in service of the 
other component by the taxpayer or a related person. In the case of 
tangible personal property produced for sale, components of tangible 
personal property are functionally interdependent if they are 
customarily sold as a single unit. For example, if an aircraft 
manufacturer customarily sells completely assembled aircraft, the unit 
of property includes all components of a completely assembled aircraft. 
If the manufacturer also customarily sells aircraft engines separately, 
any engines that are reasonably expected to be sold separately are 
treated as single units of property.
    (d) Treatment of installations. If the taxpayer produces or is 
treated as producing any property that is installed on or in other 
property, the production activity and installation activity relating to 
each unit of property generally are not aggregated for purposes of this 
section. However, if the taxpayer is treated as producing and installing 
any property for use by the taxpayer or a related person or if the 
taxpayer enters into a contract requiring the taxpayer to install 
property for use by a customer, the production activity and installation 
activity are aggregated for purposes of this section.

[T.D. 8584, 59 FR 67207, Dec. 29, 1994; 60 FR 16574, 16575, Mar. 31, 
1995]