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Carryover Allocations and the 10% Test IPED Housing Tax Credits 101 July 24-25, 2008 Faith K. Bruins, Esq.

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Presentation on theme: "Carryover Allocations and the 10% Test IPED Housing Tax Credits 101 July 24-25, 2008 Faith K. Bruins, Esq."— Presentation transcript:

1 Carryover Allocations and the 10% Test IPED Housing Tax Credits 101 July 24-25, 2008 Faith K. Bruins, Esq.

2 Federal Placement in Service Deadlines General Rule: A Project must generally be placed in service in the year that the low income housing tax credit is allocated by the tax credit agency. Carryover Exception: A Project which receives a valid carryover allocation must be placed in service no later than the end of the second calendar year after the year that the carryover allocation is made. To meet the exception, the Project must receive a valid carryover allocation agreement and satisfy the 10% Test in a timely manner.

3 The 10 Requirements for a Valid Carryover Allocation 1.The credit dollar amount allocated to the building; 2.The name, address, and taxpayer identification number of the building owner; 3.The address of the building (or if none exists, a specific description of its location); 4.The date the building is expected to be placed in service; 5.The taxpayers total reasonably expected basis in the project as of the close of the second calendar year after the allocation year;

4 The 10 Requirements for a Valid Carryover Allocation (contd) 6.The taxpayers basis in the project at the close of the calendar year in which the allocation is made and the percentage that this amount bears to the total reasonably expected basis; 7.The name and address of the state tax credit agency; 8.The taxpayer identification number of the state tax credit agency; 9.The date of the carryover allocation; and 10.The building identification number assigned to the building.

5 Satisfying the 10% Test Federal Rule: 10% of the reasonably expected basis in the project (as of the close of the second calendar year) must be paid or incurred by the later of (i) the end of the calendar year for which the credit allocation is made, or (ii) six (6) months after the date of the carryover. Jan 2007Feb 2007Mar 2007Apr2007May 2007Jun2007Jul 2007Aug2007Sep2007Oct2007Nov2007Dec 2007 Due Date

6 Satisfying the 10% Test Federal Rule: 10% of the reasonably expected basis in the project (as of the close of the second calendar year) must be paid or incurred by the later of (i) the end of the calendar year for which the credit allocation is made, or (ii) six (6) months after the date of the carryover. Jan 2007Feb 2007Mar 2007Apr2007May 2007Jun2007Jul 2007Aug2007Sep2007Oct2007Nov2007Dec 2007Jan 2008Feb 2008Mar 2008Apr2008May 2008Jun2008Jul 2008Aug2008Sep2008Oct2008Nov2008Dec 2008 Due Date

7 Satisfying the 10% Test States may impose stricter standards as long as the terms do not violate the Federal credit rules. 10% test is a cliff test.

8 Defining Reasonably Expected Basis For 10% Test Purposes Reasonably expected basis means the adjusted basis of land and depreciable property (whether or not it is included in eligible basis). Basis attributable to non-residential rental property (e.g., commercial property, site improvements) may be includable in carryover allocation basis even though it is not included in eligible basis. Costs may be incurred by taxpayer prior to the calendar year of the carryover allocation. QCT/DDA increases not included in 10% test calculations.

9 Common 10% Test Expenditures Acquisition cost for land and buildings Construction costs (e.g., construction materials, permits, etc.) Development fee Fees for services (e.g., architect, contractor, engineer) Construction financing fees and construction period interest

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11 USES OF FUNDS10% TEST ELIGIBLE Construction Costs Hard Costs: Construction Costs excluding LI, PP Land Improvements Personal Property Builders Profit and Overhead Soft Costs: Development Fee Architect and Engineering Fees Survey Construction Financing: Construction Loan Interest Construction Loan Expenses Construction Loan Financing Fee Other: Construction Insurance Tax Credit Agency Fees Permanent Financing: Permanent Loan Expenses Permanent Loan Financing Fee Organizational Costs: Legal and Accounting Costs Acquisition Costs: Land (w/associated Title & Recording) Reserves: Operating Reserve Replacement Reserve EXH. 2 – SOURCES AND USES OF FUNDS NO YES YES* NO YES YES* YES NO

12 10% Test Review Examples of Supporting Documentation and Tax Considerations

13 Acquisition of Land/Buildings Documentation Recorded deed to entity receiving carryover allocation Title insurance policy Settlement statement Purchase money note/mortgage Other financing documents (including evidence of at least 10% cash down payment) Appraisal

14 Construction Costs Documentation Construction contract Invoices/draw requests for all costs Lumber and materials: review storage contracts, evidence of insurance, down payment and promissory note for any unpaid balance

15 Developer Fees Documentation Development Agreement – Review the written development agreement in place on 10% test deadline date – Scope of work is limited to eligible services – Agreement must include benchmarks for earning fee – Confirm that benchmarks are satisfied to properly include development fee in 10% test calculation – Amount of fee in 10% test must be reasonable in light of the facts – Services must have been performed, and there must be acknowledgment of services rendered

16 Fees for Services Documentation Written agreements (such as architect/engineering contracts) describing services and fees Invoices and work product for services rendered (such as environmental reports and market studies) Statements of legal/accounting costs must be related to the actual acquisition/construction of the Project (not for syndication, partnership formation or permanent loans)

17 Construction Financing Fees and Construction Period Interest Documentation Evidence of obligation to pay, such as loan agreement or promissory note and interest statements Note: Issues with construction/permanent loans

18 Additional Consideration: Incurring the Costs Entity receiving the carryover allocation must be the entity that incurred the costs. If the entity incurs an expense without actually paying the cost, the entity must be an accrual basis taxpayer (the election to be on the accrual basis is made on the entitys first tax return). If the entity that incurred a cost is not the entity which has received tax credit allocation (e.g., the GP or developer), the parties should execute a Reimbursement Agreement before the 10% test deadline obligating the entity receiving the allocation to reimburse the entity that incurred the cost.

19 Thank You


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