Fla. Admin. Code R. 12C-1.013
(b) Depreciation adjustment.
1. If Election A was made pursuant to Section 220.03(5)(b), F.S., and depreciable assets were placed in service between January 1, 1981 and December 31, 1981, a depreciation adjustment must be computed for these assets. The adjustment is for the difference, if any, between the depreciation deducted for federal purposes for these assets and the depreciation allowable for these assets under the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect on January 1, 1980.
2. If Election B was made pursuant to Section 220.03(5)(c), F.S., and depreciable assets were placed in service between January 1, 1981 and December 31, 1986, a depreciation adjustment must be computed for these assets. The adjustment is for the difference, if any, between the depreciation deducted for federal purposes for these assets and the depreciation allowable for these assets under the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect on January 1, 1980.
(c) Consolidated return adjustment.
1. No consolidated income adjustment is allowed unless an election was properly made under Section 220.131(1), F.S., to file a consolidated return on the same basis as consolidated returns were filed prior to July 19, 1983. Such election must have been made within 90 days of December 20, 1984, or upon filing the taxpayer’s first return after December 20, 1984.
2. If this election was properly made, an adjustment will be required where the membership of the Florida affiliated group included in the Florida consolidated return differs from the membership in the federal affiliated group included in the federal consolidated return. The federal taxable income for the Florida affiliated group must be computed. The computation of the consolidated income of the Florida affiliated group must be made under the procedures, including all intercompany adjustments and eliminations, as are required by s. 1502, I.R.C. An adjustment is required for the difference, if any, between the income of the Florida and federal affiliated groups.
(d) 1. Where municipal bonds are acquired at market discount, and the discount is not considered to be tax-exempt interest for federal tax purposes, then for Florida tax purposes there will be no requirement for the discounted amount to be added back to federal taxable income. Premiums paid are considered to be an expense associated with exempt interest for purposes of Section 220.13(1)(a)2., F.S.
2. Subsection 1288(a), I.R.C., and Rev. Chapter 73-112 which is incorporated by reference in Rule 12C-1.0511, F.A.C., describes the position of the Internal Revenue Service. This treatment provides, to the extent the discount on state or municipal obligations is original issue discount, it is treated as tax-exempt interest. Therefore, corporations will be required for Florida tax purposes to add back the original issue discount as exempt interest in the same manner as provided by s. 1272, I.R.C., which is incorporated by reference in Rule 12C-1.0511, F.A.C.
(14) Adjustments for excess s. 179, I.R.C., expense, special 50 percent bonus depreciation (s. 168(k), I.R.C.), and deferred cancellation of indebtedness income.
(a) Additions Required:
1. For tax years that begin after December 31, 2007, and before January 1, 2015, taxpayers are required to add back the amount of the federal deduction claimed under s. 179, I.R.C., that exceeds $128,000, except for tax years beginning in 2010, in which case taxpayers are required to add back the amount of the federal deduction claimed under s. 179, I.R.C., that exceeds $250,000. All amounts in excess of $128,000 ($250,000 for tax years beginning in 2010) are required to be added back, including amounts carried over from previous tax years under s. 179(b)(3)(B), I.R.C. The increased overall investment limitation contained in s. 179(b)(2), I.R.C., is the same for Florida as it is for federal income tax purposes.
2. Taxpayers are required to add back the amount of the federal deduction claimed as bonus depreciation under s. 168(k), I.R.C., for assets placed in service after December 31, 2007, and before January 1, 2027.
3. For indebtedness acquired after December 31, 2008, and before January 1, 2010, taxpayers are required to add back the gross amount of cancellation of indebtedness income that is deferred under s. 108(i), I.R.C. (relating to business indebtedness discharged by the reacquisition of a debt instrument). The deferral of the deduction for original issue discount in debt for debt exchanges required by s. 108(i)(2), I.R.C., is also required for Florida corporate income tax purposes.
(b) Subtractions allowed for special 50 percent bonus depreciation and s. 179, I.R.C., expense previously added back:
1. In each of the seven tax years commencing with the year the addition is made under Section 220.13(1)(e), F.S., taxpayers may subtract one-seventh of the amount of excess s. 179, I.R.C., expense and one-seventh of the special 50 percent bonus depreciation that is added back under Section 220.13(1)(e), F.S.
2. The total amount that may be subtracted over the seven-year period should equal, but may not exceed, the amounts of s. 179, I.R.C., expense and special 50 percent bonus depreciation that have been added back to Florida taxable income under Section 220.13(1)(e), F.S.
3. Subtractions may be transferred to the surviving company in a merger or acquisition. Otherwise, if a taxpayer ceases to do business during the seven-year period, it may not accelerate, transfer, or otherwise utilize a subtraction.
(c) Subtractions for cancellation of indebtedness deferred under s. 108(i), I.R.C.:
1. Taxpayers may subtract the income required to be added back under Section 220.13(1)(e)3., F.S., when the deferred cancellation of indebtedness income is recognized for federal income tax purposes. The subtraction may not exceed the amount of income from deferred cancellation of indebtedness that is added back under Section 220.13(1)(e)3., F.S.
2. Cancellation of indebtedness income is included in the tax base, but it is excluded from the apportionment formula by all taxpayers under Section 220.15(5)(a), F.S.
(15) Net Operating Losses.
(g) 1. When a corporation which was a member of an affiliated group that filed a consolidated return ceases to be a member of the affiliated group or is granted permission to file a separate return according to the provisions of Section 220.131, F.S., and Rule 12C-1.0131, F.A.C., the portion of any consolidated net operating loss attributable to that member will be determined as follows: The consolidated net operating loss is multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the separate net operating loss of such corporation, and the denominator of which is the sum of the separate net operating losses of all members of the group in such year having such losses. The net operating loss carryover that is allocated to that corporation is based on the consolidated apportionment factor in effect for the year of the loss.
2. Example 1. ABC affiliated group filed a consolidated Florida return in 1992. The consolidated apportionment factor was .300000. The incomes (losses) of the members were as follows:
| A | B | C | Consolidated | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Federal Taxable | ||||
| Income (Loss) | $(5,000) | $500 | $(1,500) | $(6,000) |
| Florida Additions | -0- | -0- | -0- | -0- |
| Florida Subtractions | -0- | -0- | -0- | -0- |
| Total | $(5,000) | $500 | $(1,500) | $(6,000) |
| Apportioned Loss | $(1,800) | |||
| A’s portion: | $(5,000) $(6,000) .300000 = $ (1,385) | |||
| (6,500) | ||||
| B’s portion: | $0 $ (6,000) .300000 = $ 0 | |||
| C’s portion: | $(1,500) $ (6,000) .300000 = $ (415) | |||
| (6,500) |
3. Example 2: ABC affiliated group filed a consolidated Florida return in 1992. The consolidated apportionment factor was .300000. The incomes (losses) of the members were as follows:
| A | B | C | Consolidated | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Federal Taxable | ||||
| Income (Loss) | $(5,000) | $500 | $(1,500) | $(6,000) |
| Florida Additions | 1,000 | -0- | -0- | 1,000 |
| Florida Subtractions | -0- | -0- | -0- | -0- |
| Total | $(4,000) | $500 | $(1,500) | $(5,000) |
| Apportioned Loss | $(1,500) | |||
| A’s portion: | $(4,000) $(5,000) .300000 = $ (1,091) | |||
| (5,500) | ||||
| B’s portion: | $0 $ (5,000) .300000 = $ 0 $(1,500) $(5,000) .300000 = $(409) | |||
| C’s portion: | ||||
| (5,500) |
4. Example 3: ABC affiliated group filed a consolidated Florida return in 1992. The consolidated apportionment factor was .300000. The incomes (losses) of the members were as follows:
| A | B | C | Consolidated | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Federal Taxable | ||||
| Income (Loss) | $ (5,000) | $ 500 | $ (1,500) | $ (6,000) |
| Florida Additions | -0- | 1000 | 1,000 | 2,000 |
| Florida Subtractions | 1,000 | -0- | -0- | 1,000 |
| Total | $(6,000) | $1,500 | $(500) | $(5,000) |
| Apportioned Loss | $(1,500) | |||
| A’s portion: | $(6,000) $ (5,000) .300000 = $ (1,385) | |||
| 6,500 | ||||
| B’s portion: | $ 0 $ (5,000) .300000 = $ 0 | |||
| C’s portion: | $ ( 500) $ (5,000) .300000 = $ (115) | |||
| (6,500) |
It should be noted that the reason the subtraction is allowed to increase the NOL allocated to A is that subtractions are allowed to the extent of additions in calculating the net operating loss carryover. Therefore, all of the subtraction was allowed in computing the consolidated NOL carryover.
5. Example 4: ABC affiliated group filed a consolidated Florida return in 1992. The consolidated apportionment factor was .300000. The income (losses) of the members were as follows:
| A | B | C | Consolidated | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Federal Taxable | ||||
| Income (Loss) | $(5,000) | $500 | $(1,500) | $(6,000) |
| Florida Additions | -0- | -0- | -0- | -0- |
| Florida Subtractions | -0- | -0- | (2,000) | -0- |
| Total | $(5,000) | $500 | $(1,500) | $(6,000) |
| Apportioned Loss | $(1,800) | |||
| A’s portion: | $(5,000) $ (6,000) .300000 = $ (1,385) | |||
| 6,500 | ||||
| B’s portion: | $ 0 $ (6,000) .300000 = $ 0 | |||
| C’s portion: | $ (1,500) $ (6,000) .300000 = $ ( 415) | |||
| (6,500) |
The subtractions for C are not included within the calculation of the allocation of the NOL because the subtractions may not increase the consolidated NOL.
| Regular tax | AMT | |
|---|---|---|
| Tentative apportioned adjusted federal income | $1,500,000 | $2,500,000 |
| NOL carryforward available | (2,000,000) | (2,000,000) |
| Adjusted federal income apportioned to Florida | $(500,000) | $500,000 |
The taxpayer would not have any NOL carryover available for use in subsequent years since the $2,000,000 of NOL carryover was already allowed for Florida tax purposes against the 1991 alternative minimum taxable income.
(m) 1. A taxpayer may be allowed a net operating loss carryforward for Florida tax purposes from a year the corporation has federal and Florida alternative minimum tax due. The Florida net operating loss carryforward for Florida tax purposes will be limited to the amount of net operating loss carryforward available without the application of alternative minimum tax calculation.
2. Example: For 1991, the taxpayer’s regular federal taxable income was $(100,000). Due to federal alternative minimum tax adjustments and preference items the taxpayer paid federal alternative minimum tax. The taxpayer was required for Florida purposes to calculate both regular and alternative minimum tax. Florida additions to taxable income for regular tax purposes were $50,000. For Florida purposes, the taxpayer would be allowed a net operating loss carryover of $50,000 to subsequent tax years, even though Florida AMT was paid in 1991.
(16) Net Capital Loss Carryovers.
(b) 1. The Florida portion of a federal net capital loss carryforward is determined by the Florida apportionment factor in effect for the year the loss occurred.
2. If a corporation that was a member of an affiliated group that filed a consolidated return ceases to be a member of the affiliated group or is granted permission to file a separate return according to the provisions of Section 220.131, F.S. and Rule 12C-1.0131, F.A.C., the portion of any consolidated net capital loss attributable to that member is an amount equal to the consolidated net capital loss multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the separate net capital loss of such corporation, and the denominator of which is the sum of the separate net capital losses of all members of the group in such year having such losses. The net capital loss carryover that is allocated to that corporation is based on the consolidated apportionment factor in effect for the year of the loss.
(17) Excess Charitable Contributions.
(b) 1. The Florida portion of a federal excess charitable contribution carryforward is determined by the Florida apportionment factor in effect for the year the excess occurred.
2. If a corporation that was a member of an affiliated group that filed a consolidated return ceases to be a member of the affiliated group or is granted permission to file a separate return according to the provisions of Section 220.131, F.S., and Rule 12C-1.0131, F.A.C., the portion of any excess charitable contribution carryforward attributable to that member is an amount equal to the consolidated excess charitable contribution multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the separate excess charitable contribution of such corporation, and the denominator of which is the sum of the separate excess charitable contributions of all members of the group in such year having such excess. The excess charitable contribution carryover that is allocated to that corporation is based on the consolidated apportionment factor in effect for the year of the excess.
(18) Excess Contribution Deduction.
(b) 1. The Florida portion of a federal excess contributions carryforward is determined by the Florida apportionment factor in effect for the year the excess occurred.
2. When a member of an affiliated group that filed a consolidated return is no longer included in the consolidated return of that affiliated group, the excess contributions carryover that is allocated to that corporation is based on the consolidated apportionment factor in effect for the year of the contribution.
(19) Florida Alternative Minimum Tax.
(b) 1. For taxable years beginning before January 1, 2018, a corporation subject to the Florida Income Tax Code may be required to pay an alternative minimum tax. Florida AMT is equal to 3.3 percent of the Florida alternative minimum taxable income. Corporations required to pay federal AMT must compute the amount of regular Florida corporate income tax and the amount of Florida AMT that may be due. The corporation is liable for whichever amount is greater.
2. A taxpayer is not liable for the Florida AMT unless liable for the federal AMT. A taxpayer who is part of an affiliated group that filed a federal consolidated return and was not liable for federal AMT is not liable for Florida AMT when filing on a separate return basis. The entity is not subject to Florida AMT regardless of the amounts of federal tax preference items contained in the separate return. A corporation that is part of an affiliated group that filed a consolidated return for federal income tax purposes, and paid the federal AMT, must compute Florida AMT, even if it files a separate return for Florida. This requirement applies even if the individual corporation would not have been subject to federal AMT if a separate return had been filed.
3. The computation of the Florida alternative minimum taxable income is similar to the computation of the regular Florida taxable income. The primary difference is the starting point for the computation. Florida uses federal alternative minimum taxable income as the starting point in determining Florida AMT, after allowance of the federal exclusion amount provided in s. 55(d)(2), I.R.C.
4. The adjustments, additions, and subtractions provided in Section 220.13, F.S., are applied to the Florida alternative minimum taxable income amount to arrive at adjusted federal income. The tax base is adjusted by the same type of adjustments, additions, and subtractions that are made to the regular federal taxable income when the regular Florida corporate income tax is computed. Because different amounts may be included within the base (the “starting point”), there may be differences in the amounts of the adjustments, additions, and subtractions.
5. An addition that must be made when computing the Florida AMT is for the amount of interest that is exempt for federal income tax purposes. Section 220.13(1)(a)2., F.S., requires interest excluded from federal taxable income under s. 103(a), I.R.C., less the associated expenses, be added to the taxpayer’s federal taxable income. However, this subparagraph excludes 60 percent of the amounts already included in the federal alternative minimum taxable income, including interest on private activity bonds issued after August 7, 1986. If the federal Adjusted Current Earnings adjustment includes interest exempt under s. 103(a), I.R.C., there is an exclusion of 60 percent of the amount included in the federal Adjusted Current Earnings adjustment.
6.a. An addition is required when computing the Florida AMT for the federal net operating loss (NOL) deduction. When computing adjusted federal taxable income on the Florida corporate income/franchise tax return for regular Florida tax purposes, the taxpayer must add back the amount of the regular federal NOL deduction. When computing adjusted federal taxable income on the Florida return for Florida AMT purposes, the taxpayer is only required to add back the amount of the federal AMT NOL deduction.
b. The Florida NOL deduction allowed, for purposes of AMT, is the Florida portion of the federal loss apportioned to Florida as provided in this section. The Florida Income Tax Code does not create a separate NOL for AMT purposes.
c. The Florida Income Tax Code does not limit the amount of the NOL deduction to 90 percent of the alternative minimum taxable income before the NOL deduction.
d. The amount of the Florida NOL carryover is reduced by the amount of the NOL deduction used in computing the Florida corporate income tax, whether AMT or regular corporate income tax is finally determined to be due.
e. As with regular Florida corporate income tax, the use of an NOL carryover is not optional. It will be deemed used if it is available.
f. Cross reference: subsection 12C-1.013(15), F.A.C.
7. A possible adjustment when computing Florida AMT is the depreciation adjustment for Election A and Election B taxpayers. If there is an adjustment that is required when computing federal AMT to the depreciation expense for property placed in service between January 1, 1981, and December 31, 1986, then the amount of adjustment required is different when Florida AMT is computed.
8. The Florida Income Tax Code allows the income tax credits listed in Section 220.02(8), F.S. to be used against the amount of Florida AMT due. The use of a tax credit against Florida AMT is not optional and will be deemed used if it is available.
9. If the Florida AMT is paid, an alternative minimum tax credit is allowed by Section 220.186, F.S., in subsequent years. Cross reference: Rule 12C-1.0186, F.A.C.
Rulemaking Authority 213.06(1), 220.51 FS., Section 3, Chapter 2009-192, L.O.F. Law Implemented 220.02(3), 220.03(5), 220.13, 220.131(1), 220.43(1), (3) FS. History–New 10-20-72, Amended 1-19-73, 10-20-73, 10-8-74, 4-21-75, 5-10-78, 11-13-78, 12-18-83, Formerly 12C-1.13, Amended 12-21-88, 12-7-92, 5-17-94, 10-19-94, 3-18-96, 10-2-01, 4-14-09, 6-28-10, 7-20-11, 1-10-17, 1-8-19, 12-12-19, 10-27-22.