N.J. Admin. Code § 18:7-8.5

Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 9, May 6, 2024
Section 18:7-8.5 - Business allocation factor; property fraction derived from average values
(a) The percentage of the taxpayer's real and tangible personal property within New Jersey is determined by dividing the average value of such property within New Jersey by the average value of real and tangible personal property within and outside New Jersey.
1. Average values in both the numerator and denominator shall be determined without deduction of any encumbrance.
(b) The term "taxpayer's real and tangible personal property" shall include property owned, leased, rented, or used by the taxpayer during the period covered by the return and shall exclude property not yet in service or removed from service during that period. Property or equipment under construction (exclusive of inventory work in progress) is excluded from the property fraction until it is completed.
(c) The average values used in determining the property fraction of the allocation factor are normally based on book value with respect to property owned, including property on consignment (consignor). Leased or rented property is valued at eight times its annual rent, including any amounts (such as taxes) paid or accrued in addition to or in lieu of rent during the period covered by the return. Subrents do not reduce annual rents, but rather enter into the determination of the receipts fraction. Property that is used which is neither owned, leased or rented should be valued at book value but if the books do not disclose a fair value or disclose a minimal value then that property should be shown at fair value, which for this purpose would be market value, including, but not limited to, loaned property, bailments, etc. Property on consignment held by the consignee is considered property used. Leasehold improvements are treated as owned by the taxpayer. The numerator and the denominator shall take into account depreciation disallowed at 18:7-5.2 where the taxpayer accounts for its property on a Federal income tax basis on its books.
(d) The overriding objective is a fair and reasonable apportionment of entire net income by weighing the allocation factor for the portion of the real and tangible personal property owned, leased, rented, or used in this State.

Example 1: Taxpayer is the lessor of equipment. Consistent with generally accepted accounting principles it accounts for its capital leases as completed sales. Consistent with principles of tax accounting, it accounts for that same leasing as net rental income which is reported as entire net income.

That entire net income is apportioned by use of the allocation factor which must include the property fraction. That property fraction must reflect the percentage of the taxpayer's real and tangible personal property within New Jersey, including the leased property, despite the fact that the property no longer appears on the books of the corporation in order to effect a fair and reasonable apportionment of entire net income.

Example 2: Taxpayer is engaged in long term construction contracting. It has elected to recognize income for tax purposes on the completed contract method of accounting. It recognizes income on a contract in a tax year where its property was removed to other taxing jurisdictions to work on unrelated construction in progress.

That property fraction must reflect the average value of the taxpayer's real and tangible personal property inside the State and everywhere during the period of construction to fairly and reasonably apportion the entire net income reported for the period covered by the return.

N.J. Admin. Code § 18:7-8.5

Amended by 49 N.J.R. 1694(a), effective 6/19/2017