This is insurance you’d get if you worked for someone else, like Sears or Wal-Mart. They usually pay for it, but your at a much less wage than if you were self employed.
This area is often misunderstood and results in having to pay penalties and interest to the IRS. When you sell equipment that has been fully depreciated, you have a taxable gain to report. For example, you purchase a tractor for $80,000 and you own the tractor long enough to claim $80,000 in depreciation. You now have an adjusted basis of zero. You then sell the tractor for $40,000; you now have a $40,000 taxable gain. Many truckers and their tax preparers think that in this situation there would be a $40,000 loss since they paid $80,000 for the truck and sold for $40,000. That is not the case as illustrated by the example we have just given you. A benefit to trading equipment instead of selling is that the gain on equipment that is traded is not reportable to the IRS (i.e. no taxable gain); however, it does lower the basis on the new equipment. There is also a benefit to selling equipment (i.e. not trading) and reporting the gain. Your tax advisor can explain this to you.
If you happen to run into financial trouble and your truck is repossessed, you can still have a gain if the balance of the loan is greater than the truck’s adjusted basis. What happens if you turn your truck in or it was repossessed and you owed $20,000? The IRS says that any loan forgiveness is a taxable event. When the property is repossessed or abandoned, the taxpayer generally reports the transaction as if it is a sale. The amount realized on the sale of the property is determined by whether the debt was non-recourse or recourse. The borrower is personally liable to pay any amount of the debt not covered by the value of the property. The amount realized is the smaller of the debt cancelled or the fair market value of the transferred property. Report the income from cancellation of a debt as business income. The only time you would not have to report a gain for a loan forgiveness is if you filed for bankruptcy or if you’re insolvent. |