Quick definitions

Section 179: Lets you immediately expense up to $1,160,000 of qualifying property in the year you put it in service (2025 cap). Limited by your business taxable income — you can't use it to create a loss.

Bonus depreciation: Lets you immediately expense a percentage of the cost. In 2023 it was 80%, 2024 was 60%, 2025 is 40%, 2026 will be 20%, 2027 is zero. Can create a loss.

The 2025 phase-down is the key context

Bonus depreciation is dying

Through the TCJA sunset, bonus depreciation drops 20 percentage points each year. 2025 = 40%. 2026 = 20%. 2027 = 0%. If Congress doesn't extend it (uncertain), Section 179 becomes the dominant accelerated-deduction tool going forward.

Side-by-side on a $20,000 equipment purchase

MethodYear 1 deductionNotes
Section 179 (full)$20,000Limited to business taxable income
Bonus depreciation 2025 (40%)$8,000 + ~$1,714 regular dep. = $9,714Can create a loss
Regular MACRS only (5-year)$4,000 (20%)Full cost recovered over 5 years

When Section 179 wins

When bonus depreciation wins

The catch with Section 179: income limit

You can't use Section 179 to create a net operating loss. If your business income before the deduction is $15,000 and you 179'd $20,000 of equipment, only $15,000 deducts. The remaining $5,000 carries forward to next year.

Bonus depreciation has no such limit. It can drive your business to a loss that offsets other income (like a W-2 job).

Combining them (yes, you can)

The standard playbook: use Section 179 first, up to the taxable income limit. Then apply bonus depreciation to what's left over. Then regular MACRS on any remaining basis.

Example: $50,000 machine, $30,000 business income

Section 179: $30,000 (capped at income)
Remaining basis: $20,000
Bonus 40%: $8,000
Regular MACRS on $12,000 (5-year, half-year): $2,400
Total Year 1 deduction: $40,400

Vehicles: the luxury auto limits

Both 179 and bonus are capped for passenger vehicles. For 2025, the Year 1 cap (with bonus) is roughly $20,400. SUVs over 6,000 lbs GVWR have a higher Section 179 cap of $30,500 but don't escape the luxury auto rules entirely.

The "heavy SUV loophole" is real but smaller than the Instagram finance accounts claim.

How to decide, fast

  1. Did the purchase exceed your business's profit for the year? → Use bonus first (Section 179 would be limited)
  2. Otherwise, prefer Section 179 (simpler, larger deduction in most cases)
  3. If the asset is mixed-use and under 50% business, Section 179 is off the table — bonus only
  4. Real estate improvements (HVAC, roof, new interior)? Compare carefully — rules differ by property type

We cross-check your Section 179 and bonus entries.

Picking the wrong method (or leaving Section 179 unclaimed) can cost 5–15% of a large equipment purchase.