[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 6]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.460-2]

[Page 206-208]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.460-2  Long-term manufacturing contracts.

    (a) In general. Section 460 generally requires a taxpayer to 
determine the income from a long-term manufacturing contract using the 
percentage-of-completion method described in Sec. 1.460-4(b) (PCM). A 
contract not completed in the contracting year is a long-term 
manufacturing contract if it involves the manufacture of personal 
property that is--
    (1) A unique item of a type that is not normally carried in the 
finished goods inventory of the taxpayer; or
    (2) An item that normally requires more than 12 calendar months to 
complete (regardless of the duration of the contract or the time to 
complete a deliverable quantity of the item).
    (b) Unique--(1) In general. Unique means designed for the needs of a 
specific customer. To determine whether an item is designed for the 
needs of a specific customer, a taxpayer must consider the extent to 
which research, development, design, engineering, retooling, and similar 
activities (customizing activities) are required to manufacture the item 
and whether the item could be sold to other customers with little or no 
modification. A contract may require the taxpayer to manufacture more 
than one unit of a unique item. If a contract requires a taxpayer to 
manufacture more than one unit of the same item, the taxpayer must 
determine whether that item is unique by considering the customizing 
activities that would be needed to produce only the first unit. For the 
purposes of this paragraph (b), a taxpayer must consider the activities 
performed on its behalf by a subcontractor.
    (2) Safe harbors. Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(1) of this section, 
an item is not unique if it satisfies one or more of the safe harbors in 
this paragraph (b)(2). If an item does not satisfy one or more safe 
harbors, the determination of uniqueness will depend on the facts and 
circumstances. The safe harbors are:
    (i) Short production period. An item is not unique if it normally 
requires 90 days or less to complete. In the case of a contract for 
multiple units of an item, the item is not unique only if it normally 
requires 90 days or less to complete each unit of the item in the 
contract.
    (ii) Customized item. An item is not unique if the total allocable 
contract costs attributable to customizing activities that are incident 
to or necessary for the manufacture of the item do not exceed 10 percent 
of the estimated total allocable contract costs allocable to the item. 
In the case of a contract for multiple units of an item, this comparison 
must be performed on the first unit of the item, and the total allocable 
contract costs attributable to customizing activities that are incident 
to or necessary for the manufacture of the first unit of the item must 
be allocated to that first unit.
    (iii) Inventoried item. A unique item ceases to be unique no later 
than when the taxpayer normally includes similar items in its finished 
goods inventory.

[[Page 207]]

    (c) Normal time to complete--(1) In general. The amount of time 
normally required to complete an item is the item's reasonably expected 
production period, as described in Sec. 1.263A-12, determined at the 
end of the contracting year. Thus, in general, the expected production 
period for an item begins when a taxpayer incurs at least five percent 
of the costs that would be allocable to the item under Sec. 1.460-5 and 
ends when the item is ready to be held for sale and all reasonably 
expected production activities are complete. In the case of components 
that are assembled or reassembled into an item or unit at the customer's 
facility by the taxpayer's employees or agents, the production period 
ends when the components are assembled or reassembled into an operable 
item or unit. To the extent that several distinct activities related to 
the production of the item are expected to occur simultaneously, the 
period during which these distinct activities occur is not counted more 
than once. Furthermore, when determining the normal time to complete an 
item, a taxpayer is not required to consider activities performed or 
costs incurred that would not be allocable contract costs under section 
460 (e.g., independent research and development expenses (as defined in 
Sec. 1.460-1(b)(9)) and marketing expenses). Moreover, the time 
normally required to design and manufacture the first unit of an item 
for which the taxpayer intends to produce multiple units generally does 
not indicate the normal time to complete the item.
    (2) Production by related parties. To determine the time normally 
required to complete an item, a taxpayer must consider all relevant 
production activities performed and costs incurred by itself and by 
related parties, as defined in Sec. 1.460-1(b)(4). For example, if a 
taxpayer's item requires a component or subassembly manufactured by a 
related party, the taxpayer must consider the time the related party 
takes to complete the component or subassembly and, for purposes of 
determining the beginning of an item's production period, the costs 
incurred by the related party that are allocable to the component or 
subassembly. However, if both requirements of the exception for 
components and subassemblies under Sec. 1.460-1(g)(1)(ii) are 
satisfied, a taxpayer does not consider the activities performed or the 
costs incurred by a related party when determining the normal time to 
complete an item.
    (d) Qualified ship contracts. A taxpayer may determine the income 
from a long-term manufacturing contract that is a qualified ship 
contract using either the PCM or the percentage-of-completion/
capitalized-cost method (PCCM) of accounting described in Sec. 1.460-
4(e). A qualified ship contract is any contract entered into after 
February 28, 1986, to manufacture in the United States not more than 5 
seagoing vessels if the vessels will not be manufactured directly or 
indirectly for the United States Government and if the taxpayer 
reasonably expects to complete the contract within 5 years of the 
contract commencement date. Under Sec. 1.460-1(e)(3)(i), a contract to 
produce more than 5 vessels for which the PCM would be required cannot 
be severed in order to be classified as a qualified ship contract.
    (e) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules of this 
section:

    Example 1. Unique item and classification. In December 2001, C 
enters into a contract with B to design and manufacture a new type of 
industrial equipment. C reasonably expects the normal production period 
for this type of equipment to be eight months. Because the new type of 
industrial equipment requires a substantial amount of research, design, 
and engineering to produce, C determines that the equipment is a unique 
item and its contract with B is a long-term contract. After delivering 
the equipment to B in September 2002, C contracts with B to produce five 
additional units of that industrial equipment with certain different 
specifications. These additional units, which also are expected to take 
eight months to produce, will be delivered to B in 2003. C determines 
that the research, design, engineering, retooling, and similar 
customizing costs necessary to produce the five additional units of 
equipment does not exceed 10 percent of the first unit's share of 
estimated total allocable contract costs. Consequently, the additional 
units of equipment satisfy the safe harbor in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of 
this section and are not unique items. Although C's contract with B to 
produce the five additional units is not completed within the 
contracting year, the contract is not a long-term contract since the 
additional units of equipment are

[[Page 208]]

not unique items and do not normally require more than 12 months to 
produce. C must classify its second contract with B as a non-long term 
contract, notwithstanding that it classified the previous contract with 
B for a similar item as a long-term contract, because the determination 
of whether a contract is a long-term contract is made on a contract-by-
contract basis. A change in classification is not a change in method of 
accounting because the change in classification results from a change in 
underlying facts.
    Example 2. 12-month rule--related party. C manufactures cranes. C 
purchases one of the crane's components from R, a related party under 
Sec. 1.460-1(b)(4). Less than 50 percent of R's gross receipts 
attributable to the sale of this component comes from sales to unrelated 
parties; thus, the exception for components and subassemblies under 
Sec. 1.460-1(g)(1)(ii) is not satisfied. Consequently, C must consider 
the activities of R as R incurs costs and performs the activities rather 
than as C incurs a liability to R. The normal time period between the 
time that both C and R incur five percent of the costs allocable to the 
crane and the time that R completes the component is five months. C 
normally requires an additional eight months to complete production of 
the crane after receiving the integral component from R. C's crane is an 
item of a type that normally requires more than 12 months to complete 
under paragraph (c) of this section because the production period from 
the time that both C and R incur five percent of the costs allocable to 
the crane until the time that production of the crane is complete is 
normally 13 months.
    Example 3. 12-month rule--duration of contract. The facts are the 
same as in Example 2, except that C enters into a sales contract with B 
on December 31, 2001 (the last day of C's taxable year), and delivers a 
completed crane to B on February 1, 2002. C's contract with B is a long-
term contract under paragraph (a)(2) of this section because the 
contract is not completed in the contracting year, 2001, and the crane 
is an item that normally requires more than 12 calendar months to 
complete (regardless of the duration of the contract).
    Example 4. 12-month rule--normal time to complete. The facts are the 
same as in Example 2, except that C (and R) actually complete B's crane 
in only 10 calendar months. The contract is a long-term contract because 
the normal time to complete a crane, not the actual time to complete a 
crane, is the relevant criterion for determining whether an item is 
subject to paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
    Example 5. Normal time to complete. C enters into a multi-unit 
contract to produce four units of an item. C does not anticipate 
producing any additional units of the item. C expects to perform the 
research, design, and development that are directly allocable to the 
particular item and to produce the first unit in the first 24 months. C 
reasonably expects the production period for each of the three remaining 
units will be 3 months. This contract is not a contract that involves 
the manufacture of an item that normally requires more than 12 months to 
complete because the normal time to complete the item is 3 months. 
However, the contract does not satisfy the 90-day safe harbor for unique 
items because the normal time to complete the first unit of this item 
exceeds 90 days. Thus, the contract might involve the manufacture of a 
unique item depending on the facts and circumstances.

[T.D. 8929, 66 FR 2230, Jan. 11, 2001; 66 FR 18191, Apr. 6, 2001]