Ind. Admin. Code tit. 50, r. 4.2-4-3
Authority: IC 6-1.1-31-1
Affected: IC 6-1.1-1-11; IC 6-1.1-3
Sec. 3. (a) Depreciable personal property that has not been retired from use must be reported for personal property assessment purposes whether or not the cost of the property has been:
the taxpayer's books and records.
(b) Any fully depreciated personal property that:
(2) is:
must be reported in the return at its original acquisition cost or its cost basis. The cost of the property must be clearly shown as an adjustment in the space provided on the tax return as provided in section 4 of this rule.
(c) "Permanently retired depreciable personal property" means depreciable personal property that has been removed from service on the assessment date, and is awaiting disposition and must be scheduled to be scrapped, removed, or disposed of and will be considered to be permanently retired providing the taxpayer actually scraps or sells such property. The term includes the following:
(1) Depreciable personal property that is:
(3) In order to qualify for this adjustment, a taxpayer will need to substantiate that the property was:
(d) Permanently retired depreciable personal property should be valued at its net scrap or net sale value. The valuation of this property:
(e) Depreciable personal property recorded on the books and records at a nominal or no value must be recorded at its actual acquisition cost determined by reference to the insurable value or other reliable information in the year of acquisition for Indiana property tax assessment purposes. This category of property includes, but is not limited to, bulk purchase or the acquisition of a going business concern.
(f) Computers are made up of the following three (3) elements:
Computers (including hardware and operational software) must be reported at the actual acquisition cost regardless of how this property may be valued on the taxpayers' books and records.
(g) Computers are made up of the following elements:
(1) Hardware, composed of:
(2) Operational software. The operational program:
(h) If the value recorded on the books and records reflects charges for customer support services such as educational services, maintenance, or application software that relate to future periods and not to the value of the tangible personal property, the charges may be deducted as nonassessable intangible personal property (to the extent that a separate charge or value can be identified).
(i) The true tax value at the time of acquisition of computer application software may be identified using the following:
(1) An independent, professional appraisal:
(j) The allocation of interest incurred during construction and installation must be made (capitalized) for personal property tax purposes regardless of the fact that Section 263 of the Internal Revenue Code is not applicable in certain cases.
(Department of Local Government Finance; 50 IAC 4.2-4-3; filed Dec 7, 1988, 9:35 a.m.: 12 IR 840, eff Mar 1, 1989; reinstated by IC 6-1.1-3-22, eff Jul 1, 2003; filed Jul 31, 2006, 8:30 a.m.: 20060830-IR-050050252FRA; filed Feb 26, 2010, 2:43 p.m.: 20100324-IR-050090576FRA; filed Nov 2, 2020, 9:34 a.m.: 20201202-IR-050190636FRA; readopted filed Oct 21, 2025, 9:19 a.m.: 20251112-IR-050240632RFA)