[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-8]

[Page 532-535]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.263A-8  Requirement to capitalize interest.

    (a) In general--(1) General rule. Capitalization of interest under 
the avoided cost method described in Sec. 1.263A-9 is required with 
respect to the production of designated property described in paragraph 
(b) of this section.
    (2) Treatment of interest required to be capitalized. In general, 
interest that is capitalized under this section is treated as a cost of 
the designated property and is recovered in accordance with Sec. 
1.263A-1(c)(4). Interest capitalized by reason of assets used to produce 
designated property (within the meaning of Sec. 1.263A-11(d)) is added 
to the basis of the designated property rather than the bases of the 
assets used to produce the designated property. Interest capitalized 
with respect to designated property that includes both components 
subject to an allowance for depreciation or depletion and components not 
subject to an allowance for depreciation or depletion is ratably 
allocated among, and is treated as a cost of, components that are 
subject to an allowance for depreciation or depletion.
    (3) Methods of accounting under section 263A(f). Except as otherwise 
provided, methods of accounting and other computations under Sec. Sec. 
1.263A-8 through 1.263A-15 are applied on a taxpayer, as opposed to a 
separate and distinct trade or business, basis.
    (4) Special definitions--(i) Related person. Except as otherwise 
provided, for purposes of Sec. Sec. 1.263A-8 through 1.263A-15, a 
person is related to a taxpayer if their relationship is described in 
section 267(b) or 707(b).
    (ii) Placed in service. For purposes of Sec. Sec. 1.263A-8 through 
1.263A-15, placed in service has the same meaning as set forth in Sec. 
1.46-3(d).
    (b) Designated property--(1) In general. Except as provided in 
paragraphs (b)(3) and (b)(4) of this section, designated property means 
any property that is produced and that is either:
    (i) Real property; or
    (ii) Tangible personal property (as defined in Sec. 1.263A-2(a)(2)) 
which meets any of the following criteria:
    (A) Property with a class life of 20 years or more under section 168 
(long-lived property), but only if the property is not property 
described in section 1221(l) in the hands of the taxpayer or a related 
person,
    (B) Property with an estimated production period (as defined in 
Sec. 1.263A-12) exceeding 2 years (2-year property), or
    (C) Property with an estimated production period exceeding 1 year 
and an estimated cost of production exceeding $1,000,000 (1-year 
property).
    (2) Special rules--(i) Application of thresholds. The thresholds 
described in paragraphs (b)(l)(ii)(A), (B), and (C) of this section are 
applied separately for each unit of property (as defined in Sec. 
1.263A-10).
    (ii) Relevant activities and costs. For purposes of determining 
whether property is designated property, all activities and costs are 
taken into account if they are performed or incurred by, or for, the 
taxpayer or any related persons and they directly benefit or are 
incurred by reason of the production of the property.
    (iii) Production period and cost of production. For purposes of 
applying the classification thresholds under paragraphs (b)(l)(ii) (B) 
and (C) of this section to a unit of property, the taxpayer is required, 
at the beginning of the production period, to reasonably estimate the 
production period and the total cost of production for the unit of 
property. The taxpayer must maintain contemporaneous written records 
supporting the estimates and classification. If the estimates are 
reasonable based on the facts in existence at the beginning of the 
production period, the taxpayer's classification of the property is not 
modified in subsequent periods, even if the actual length of the 
production period or the actual cost of production differs from the 
estimates. To be considered reasonable, estimates of the production 
period and the total cost of production must include anticipated expense 
and time for delay, rework, change orders, and technological, design or 
other problems. To the extent that several distinct activities related 
to the production of the property are expected to occur simultaneously, 
the period during which these distinct activities occur is not counted 
more than once. The bases of assets used to produce a unit of property

[[Page 533]]

(within the meaning of Sec. 1.263A-11(d)) and any interest that would 
be required to be capitalized if a unit of property were designated 
property are disregarded in making estimates of the total cost of 
production for purposes of this paragraph (b)(2)(iii).
    (3) Excluded property. Designated property does not include:
    (i) Timber and evergreen trees that are more than 6 years old when 
severed from the roots, or
    (ii) Property produced by the taxpayer for use by the taxpayer other 
than in a trade or business or an activity conducted for profit.
    (4) De minimis rule--(i) In general. Designated property does not 
include property for which--
    (A) The production period does not exceed 90 days; and
    (B) The total production expenditures do not exceed $1,000,000 
divided by the number of days in the production period.
    (ii) Determination of total production expenditures. For purposes of 
determining whether the condition of paragraph (b)(4)(i)(B) of this 
section is met with respect to property, the cost of land, the adjusted 
basis of property used to produce property, and interest that would be 
capitalized with respect to property if it were designated property are 
excluded from total production expenditures.
    (c) Definition of real property--(1) In general. Real property 
includes land, unsevered natural products of land, buildings, and 
inherently permanent structures. Any interest in real property of a type 
described in this paragraph (c), including fee ownership, co-ownership, 
a leasehold, an option, or a similar interest is real property under 
this section. Real property includes the structural components of both 
buildings and inherently permanent structures, such as walls, 
partitions, doors, wiring, plumbing, central air conditioning and 
heating systems, pipes and ducts, elevators and escalators, and other 
similar property. Tenant improvements to a building that are inherently 
permanent or otherwise classified as real property within the meaning of 
this paragraph (c)(1) are real property under this section. However, 
property produced for sale that is not real property in the hands of the 
taxpayer or a related person, but that may be incorporated into real 
property by an unrelated buyer, is not treated as real property by the 
producing taxpayer (e.g., bricks, nails, paint, and windowpanes).
    (2) Unsevered natural products of land. Unsevered natural products 
of land include growing crops and plants, mines, wells, and other 
natural deposits. Growing crops and plants, however, are real property 
only if the preproductive period of the crop or plant exceeds 2 years.
    (3) Inherently permanent structures. Inherently permanent structures 
include property that is affixed to real property and that will 
ordinarily remain affixed for an indefinite period of time, such as 
swimming pools, roads, bridges, tunnels, paved parking areas and other 
pavements, special foundations, wharves and docks, fences, inherently 
permanent advertising displays, inherently permanent outdoor lighting 
facilities, railroad tracks and signals, telephone poles, power 
generation and transmission facilities, permanently installed 
telecommunications cables, broadcasting towers, oil and gas pipelines, 
derricks and storage equipment, grain storage bins and silos. For 
purposes of this section, affixation to real property may be 
accomplished by weight alone. Property may constitute an inherently 
permanent structure even though it is not classified as a building for 
purposes of former section 48(a)(1)(B) and Sec. 1.48-1. Any property 
not othewise described in this paragraph (c)(3) that constitutes other 
tangible property under the principles of former section 48(a)(1)(B) and 
Sec. 1.48-1(d) is treated for the purposes of this section as an 
inherently permanent structure.
    (4) Machinery--(i) Treatment. A structure that is property in the 
nature of machinery or is essentially an item of machinery or equipment 
is not an inherently permanent structure and is not real property. In 
the case, however, of a building or inherently permanent structure that 
includes property in the nature of machinery as a structural component, 
the property in the nature of machinery is real property.

[[Page 534]]

    (ii) Certain factors not determinative. A structure may be an 
inherently permanent structure, and not property in the nature of 
machinery or essentially an item of machinery, even if the structure is 
necessary to operate or use, supports, or is otherwise associated with, 
machinery.
    (d) Production--(1) Definition of produce. Produce is defined as 
provided in section 263A(g) and Sec. 1.263A-2(a)(1)(i).
    (2) Property produced under a contract--(i) Customer. A taxpayer is 
treated as producing any property that is produced for the taxpayer (the 
customer) by another party (the contractor) under a contract with the 
taxpayer or an intermediary. Property produced under a contract is 
designated property to the customer if it is real property or tangible 
personal property that satisfies the classification thresholds described 
in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section. If property produced under a 
contract will become part of a unit of designated property produced by 
the customer in the customer's hands, the property produced under the 
contract is designated property to the customer.
    (ii) Contractor. Property produced under a contract is designated 
property to the contractor if it is real property, 2-year property, or 
1-year property and the property produced under the contract is not 
excluded by reason of paragraph (d)(2)(v) of this section.
    (iii) Definition of a contract. For purposes of this paragraph 
(d)(2), contract has the same meaning as under Sec. 1.263A-
2(a)(1)(ii)(B)(2).
    (iv) Determination of whether thresholds are satisfied. In the case 
of tangible personal property produced under a contract, the customer 
and the contractor each determine under this paragraph (d)(2), whether 
the property satisfies the classification thresholds described in 
paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section. Thus, tangible personal property 
may be designated property with respect to either, or both, the customer 
and the contractor. The provisions of paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of this 
section are modified as set forth in this paragraph (d)(2)(iv) for 
purposes of determining whether tangible personal property produced 
under a contract is 2-year property or 1-year property.
    (A) Customer. In determining a customer's estimated cost of 
production, the customer takes into account costs and payments that are 
reasonably expected to be incurred by the customer, but does not take 
into account costs incurred (or to be incurred) by an unrelated 
contractor. In determining the customer's estimated length of the 
production period, the production period is treated as beginning on the 
earlier of the date the contract is executed or the date that the 
customer's accumulated production expenditures for the unit are at least 
5 percent of the customer's total estimated production expenditures for 
the unit. The customer, however, may elect to treat the production 
period as beginning on the date the sum of the accumulated production 
expenditures of the contractor (or contractors if more than one 
contractor is producing components for the unit of property) and of the 
customer are at least 5 percent of the customer's estimated production 
expenditures for the unit.
    (B) Contractor. In determining a contractor's estimated cost of 
production, the contractor takes into account only the costs that are 
reasonably expected to be incurred by the contractor, without any 
reduction for payments from the customer. In determining the 
contractor's estimated length of the production period, the production 
period is treated as beginning on the date the contractor's accumulated 
production expenditures (without any reduction for payments from the 
customer) are at least 5 percent of the contractor's total estimated 
accumulated production expenditures.
    (v) Exclusion for property subject to long-term contract rules. 
Property described in paragraph (b) of this section is designated 
property with respect to a contractor only if--
    (A) The contract is not a long-term contract (within the meaning of 
section 460(f)); or
    (B) The contract is a home construction contract (within the meaning 
of section 460(e)(6)(A)) with respect to which the requirements of 
section 460(e)(1)(B) (i) and (ii) are not met.
    (3) Improvements to existing property--(i) In general. Any 
improvement to

[[Page 535]]

property described in Sec. 1.263(a)-1(b) constitutes the production of 
property. Generally, any improvement to designated property constitutes 
the production of designated property. An improvement is not treated as 
the production of designated property, however, if the de minimis 
exception described in paragraph (b)(4) of this section applies to the 
improvement. In addition, paragraph (d)(3)(iii) of this section provides 
an exception for certain improvements to tangible personal property. 
Incidental maintenance and repairs are not treated as improvements under 
this paragraph (d)(3). See Sec. 1.162-4.
    (ii) Real property. The rehabilitation or preservation of a standing 
building, the clearing of raw land prior to sale, and the drilling of an 
oil well are activities constituting improvements to real property and, 
therefore, the production of designated property. Similarly, the 
demolition of a standing building generally constitutes an activity that 
is an improvement to real property and, therefore, the production of 
designated property. See the exceptions, however, in paragraphs (b)(3) 
and (b)(4) of this section.
    (iii) Tangible personal property. If the taxpayer has treated a unit 
of tangible personal property as designated property under this section, 
an improvement to such property constitutes the production of designated 
property regardless of the remaining useful life of the improved 
property (or the improvement) and, except as provided in paragraph 
(b)(4) of this section, regardless of the estimated length of the 
production period or the estimated cost of the improvement. If the 
taxpayer has not treated a unit of tangible personal property as 
designated property under this section, an improvement to such property 
constitutes the production of designated property only if the 
improvement independently meets the classification thresholds described 
in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section.

[T.D. 8584, 59 FR 67198, Dec. 29, 1994; 60 FR 16574, Mar. 31, 1995]