An accounting method is a set of rules used to determine when and
how income and expenses are reported. Your accounting method includes
not only your overall method of accounting, but also the accounting
treatment you use for any material item.
You choose an accounting method when you file your first tax
return. If you later want to change your accounting method, you must
get IRS approval. See Change in Accounting Method, later.
No single accounting method is required of all taxpayers. You must
use a system that clearly shows your income and expenses and you must
maintain records that will enable you to file a correct return. In
addition to your permanent books of account, you must keep any other
records necessary to support the entries on your books and tax
returns.
You must use the same accounting method from year to year. An
accounting method clearly shows income only if all items of gross
income and expenses are treated the same from year to year.
If you do not regularly use an accounting method that clearly shows
your income, your income will be figured under the method that, in the
opinion of the IRS, does.
Methods you can use.
Subject to the preceding rules, you can compute your taxable income
under any of the following accounting methods.
- Cash method.
- Accrual method.
- Special methods of accounting for certain items of income
and expenses.
- Combination (hybrid) method using elements of two or more of
the above.
The cash and accrual methods of accounting are explained later.
Special methods.
This publication does not discuss special methods of accounting for
certain items of income or expenses. For information on reporting
income using one of the long-term contract methods, see section 460
and its regulations. Publication 535,
Business Expenses,
discusses methods for deducting amortization and depletion. The
following publications also discuss special methods of reporting
income or expenses.
- Publication 225,
Farmer's Tax Guide.
- Publication 537,
Installment Sales.
- Publication 946,
How To Depreciate Property.
Combination (hybrid) method.
Generally, you can use any combination of cash, accrual, and
special methods of accounting if the combination clearly shows income
and you use it consistently. However, the following restrictions
apply.
- If an inventory is necessary to account for your income, you
must use an accrual method for purchases and sales. See, however,
Cash Method of Accounting for Qualifying Taxpayers, later.
You can use the cash method for all other items of income and
expenses. See Inventories, later.
- If you use the cash method for figuring your income, you
must use the cash method for reporting your expenses.
- If you use an accrual method for reporting your expenses,
you must use an accrual method for figuring your income.
- Any combination that includes the cash method is treated as
the cash method.
Business and personal items.
You can account for business and personal items using different
accounting methods. For example, you can figure your business income
under an accrual method, even if you use the cash method to figure
personal items.
Two or more businesses.
If you operate two or more separate and distinct businesses, you
can use a different accounting method for each. No business is
separate and distinct, however, unless a complete and separate set of
books and records is maintained for the business.
If you use different accounting methods to create or shift profits
or losses between businesses (for example, through inventory
adjustments, sales, purchases, or expenses) so that income is not
clearly reflected, the businesses will not be considered separate and
distinct.
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