Copyright 2008 Central Leasing LLC, All Rights Reserved
Copyright 2008 Central Leasing LLC, All Rights Reserved

*Lease, or a finance lease, may deduct up to $100,000 from its taxable income during calendar year 2003. A
*special advantage of this program is that the business does not need to spend $100,000 during this year in
*order to claim the deduction. The only requirement to claim the full deduction is to enter a lease agreement
*during 2003. Smaller leases are eligible for the deduction on a dollar-for-dollar basis.

lessee has the option to return the equipment at the conclusion of the lease without further obligation. The lessee
may also have the option to purchase the equipment at its fair market value or to continue leasing the equipment
from the leasing company. The lessee does not own the equipment; it is not recorded on the company’s balance
sheet as either an asset or a long-term liability. Instead, the leased equipment is generally treated as an off-balance
sheet operating expense and is therefore 100 percent tax deductible.

of your cash expenses by claiming depreciation on the equipment and any interest paid on it, according
the IRS’ determination of the “useful life” of that equipment. Depreciation for long-lasting equipment, however,
can be
spread over five to seven years. The same equipment on an FMV lease can be expensed 100 percent during
whatever lease term you select. For example, if you enter into a 36-month FMV lease on equipment that would
otherwise have to be depreciated over five years, you will have written off all of its value (less residual) in just
three years instead of five.

Minimum Tax (AMT), which often places an additional tax burden on small- to medium-sized businesses
that use equipment depreciation to significantly lower their tax liability. Such companies are now subject to a
review that may classify some depreciation write-offs as “tax preferences” and require the companies to pay
AMT in addition to the taxes they already owe. Owning or purchasing too much equipment, while traditionally a
strategy for lowering traditional tax liability, can now trigger the addition of new added taxes. The good news
is that equipment lease payments that are treated as rentals do not qualify as tax preference items and have
no adverse effect on AMT liability.
Tax Advantages