Deductions · Depreciation

Section 179 vs bonus depreciation for contractor equipment

Buy a $50,000 piece of equipment, and the IRS lets you deduct it over five to seven years — or with the right election, deduct most of it in year one. Two accelerated methods exist. They overlap, they differ, and the choice affects your tax bill substantially.

The short version
  • Section 179 lets you expense full cost of qualifying equipment in year one, up to $2.56M (2026).
  • Bonus depreciation lets you expense a percentage in year one. Back to 100% — permanently. The 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act restored full bonus depreciation for qualifying property acquired after January 19, 2025.
  • Section 179 cannot create a loss. Bonus depreciation can.
  • Section 179 elected per item. Bonus depreciation automatic unless you opt out.
  • Most contractors use both: Section 179 first, then bonus, then regular depreciation.

Buy a $40,000 utility trailer. Without acceleration, you’d depreciate over 5 years — $8,000/year. With acceleration, you can deduct most or all of $40,000 in year one. For a contractor in a 30% combined bracket, that’s $12,000 in immediate tax savings instead of $2,400.

Section 179

An election that says “treat this equipment purchase as immediate expense, not multi-year depreciation.” For 2026, up to $2,560,000 in Section 179 deductions (the One Big Beautiful Bill Act doubled the old limit; phase-out begins at $4,090,000 of purchases).

What qualifies: tangible personal property used more than 50% in business (trucks, trailers, tools, computers, office furniture), off-the-shelf software, certain qualified improvements to non-residential real property, SUVs and trucks with GVWR over 6,000 lbs (capped at $32,000 in 2026).

Critical limit: Section 179 cannot create or increase a business loss. If you have $80k net income and try to take $120k in Section 179, you can only take $80k — the rest carries forward.

Bonus depreciation

You can deduct a percentage of qualifying property in year one. Bonus depreciation can create a loss (preserved as NOL). Bonus depreciation is automatic — opt out if you don’t want it.

Using them together

The IRS lets you stack: Section 179 first (within loss limit) → bonus depreciation on remaining cost → regular MACRS on what’s left.

Example: contractor buys $200,000 equipment. Net business income before depreciation: $250,000. Section 179 election: $200,000 expensed entirely year one. Done. Alternative without Section 179: 100% bonus on $200k = the full $200,000 in year one. With bonus back at 100%, the two methods tie on the math here — the difference is control: 179 is elected per item, bonus applies class-wide unless you opt out.

But if net income is only $50k: Section 179 maxes at $50k. Bonus depreciation still deducts the full $200k, creating a $150k loss that can offset other income. Bonus wins.

Heavy SUVs and trucks (the contractor sweet spot)

The “luxury auto” depreciation caps limit first-year deductions on a passenger vehicle to about $20,200 (2026, with bonus) unless the vehicle has GVWR over 6,000 pounds. Then it escapes the caps.

For a $90,000 work truck used 90% for business: Section 179: $32,000 (SUV cap). 100% bonus depreciation on the remaining $49,000: all of it. Year-one deduction: the full $81,000 business-use basis. Compare to a non-qualifying passenger vehicle: about $20,200.

Vehicles that qualify

F-150 SuperCrew (some trims over 6,000 lbs), F-250/F-350, Chevy Silverado 2500/3500, Ram 2500/3500, Ford Transit cargo vans, Mercedes Sprinter, Chevy Express. Check the door-jamb sticker for actual GVWR.

State conformity matters

Federal Section 179 and bonus depreciation are not always honored at the state level. California allows Section 179 up to only $25,000 and doesn’t allow bonus depreciation at all. Check your specific state.

The strategic decision

For most contractors in profitable years: Section 179 first up to your income, then bonus on the rest. For loss or low-income years: skip Section 179, rely on bonus depreciation (loss has value through NOL carryforwards).

Foad Nabi, EA
Enrolled Agent · Founder, Help With Tax

Foad is a federally licensed Enrolled Agent who writes about tax and bookkeeping for small businesses.