Whether property is damaged by a natural disaster or taken without an owner’s consent, businesses must be prepared to minimize economic harm and maximize financial relief by referring to Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) for involuntary conversions.
Also referred to as involuntary exchanges, the tax code recognizes four kinds of involuntary conversions to property that is:
- destroyed by weather, fire or other hazards;
- stolen;
- condemned (taken by the government for public use); or
- disposed of under the threat of condemnation
- If the asset loss (building) occurs in one year, and the monetary proceeds (cash) are received the following year, the assets lost should be recorded as a disposition from the books.
- Monetary proceeds should not be recorded unless the value is determinable (i.e., the insurance company has communicated the value of proceeds to be received).
- If the monetary proceeds are in excess of the total loss, the incremental benefit cannot be recognized until the cash is received.
- The asset loss, monetary proceeds received and property rebuild should be treated as three separate transactions. For example: