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Section 179 on Steroids: Scaling Your Business Faster with New Expensing Limits

The Game Changed in 2026

The One Big Beautiful Bill rewrote the playbook for small business tax planning. Section 179 expensing limits jumped from $1,160,000 to $2,560,000 for 2026. That's not a typo. Business owners can now write off over $2.5 million in qualifying purchases immediately: no waiting, no multi-year depreciation schedules.

This matters for one reason: cash flow. When you're scaling, every dollar counts. The faster you reduce your tax bill, the faster you reinvest in growth.

What Section 179 Actually Does

Section 179 lets you deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment and property in the year you buy it. Instead of spreading a $500,000 machinery purchase over seven years, you claim the entire $500,000 deduction this year.

Qualifying assets include:

  • Manufacturing equipment
  • Office furniture and computers
  • Business vehicles (with limitations)
  • Software
  • Machinery and tools

If you bought it for business use and it wears out over time, it likely qualifies.

Business owners examining new manufacturing equipment eligible for Section 179 tax deductions

The Numbers That Matter

Let's break down the new limits:

Maximum deduction: $2,560,000

Phase-out threshold: $4,090,000 in total purchases

Complete phase-out: $6,650,000

Here's how it works. Purchase $3 million in equipment? Claim the full $2,560,000 deduction. Purchase $5 million? You exceed the phase-out threshold by $910,000, reducing your available deduction to approximately $1,650,000.

For a business owner in the 37% federal tax bracket, maximizing the full $2.56 million deduction saves roughly $947,200 in federal taxes alone. Add state and local savings, and the number climbs higher.

Why This Accelerates Scaling

Cash flow determines how fast you grow. Traditional depreciation ties up tax benefits over multiple years. Section 179 frontloads them.

Example: You purchase $2 million in new machinery.

  • Old way: Deduct $285,714 annually over seven years through standard depreciation.
  • Section 179 way: Deduct the full $2 million in year one.

That's a $740,000 federal tax savings in year one (at 37% bracket) versus $105,714 spread over seven years. The difference funds hiring, marketing, inventory: whatever your business needs now.

Business owner reviewing tax savings calculations and financial planning documents

Strategic Combinations

Section 179 works alongside bonus depreciation. After exhausting your Section 179 limit, remaining qualifying property gets 100% bonus depreciation.

Scenario: You invest $3.5 million in assets.

  1. Apply $2,560,000 to Section 179
  2. Apply remaining $940,000 to bonus depreciation
  3. Deduct the entire $3.5 million in year one

This one-two punch maximizes first-year deductions. Prioritize Section 179 for assets ineligible for bonus depreciation, then use bonus depreciation for everything else.

Critical Limitations

Taxable Income Cap

Section 179 cannot exceed your net taxable income for the year. Make $1.5 million? Your deduction caps at $1.5 million, regardless of asset purchases.

The good news: unused amounts carry forward indefinitely. Purchase $2.56 million in equipment but only have $1 million in taxable income? Claim $1 million now, carry the remaining $1.56 million to next year.

Vehicle Restrictions

Heavy SUVs between 6,001 and 14,000 pounds cap at $32,000 under Section 179. The full cost still qualifies for bonus depreciation, but Section 179 alone won't cover expensive vehicles.

Passenger cars face even lower limits: $20,400. Plan accordingly if fleet expansion is on your roadmap.

Small business owner with commercial vehicle fleet for Section 179 deduction

Business Use Requirement

Property must serve business purposes more than 50% of the time. Use a vehicle 60% for business? Deduct 60% of its cost. Claiming personal use as business use triggers audits.

Phase-Out Strategy

The phase-out structure requires planning. Once total purchases exceed $4,090,000, your available deduction shrinks dollar-for-dollar.

At $5 million in purchases:

  • Excess: $910,000 above threshold
  • Available deduction: $1,650,000 ($2,560,000 – $910,000)

At $6,650,000 or more:

  • Section 179 completely phases out
  • Bonus depreciation still applies

If you're approaching the threshold, consider timing. Defer some purchases to next year to preserve this year's full deduction, or accelerate purchases to maximize deductions before phase-out.

What to Buy Now

The increased limits favor significant investments:

Manufacturing equipment: Upgrade production lines, industrial machinery, specialized tools.

Technology infrastructure: Servers, network systems, enterprise software, cybersecurity equipment.

Commercial vehicles: Trucks, vans, delivery vehicles for operations (within caps).

Office expansion: Furniture, computers, phone systems, security equipment.

Renewable energy systems: Solar panels, energy-efficient HVAC, LED lighting upgrades.

Business team planning equipment purchases and Section 179 tax strategy

Avoid delaying necessary purchases. The higher limits won't last forever, and business formation services can help structure purchases strategically before year-end.

Documentation Requirements

Claim Section 179 correctly:

  1. Form 4562: Report all Section 179 deductions here
  2. Asset details: Purchase date, description, cost, business use percentage
  3. Receipts and invoices: Keep everything. The IRS will ask.
  4. Depreciation schedules: Track basis for future disposition

Poor documentation kills deductions during audits. Set up systems now.

Planning for 2027 and Beyond

The One Big Beautiful Bill made many provisions permanent, but tax law changes. Lock in savings while limits are high.

Work backwards from your growth goals. Need $500,000 for expansion? Calculate equipment purchases that generate sufficient tax savings to fund it. Need $2 million? The math changes.

Entrepreneur in renovated office space with new business equipment and technology

Small business tax planning isn't reactive: it's strategic. Section 179 becomes a growth lever when you plan purchases around it.

Next Steps

Review your business formation services structure. LLCs, S-corps, and C-corps all access Section 179 differently. Sole proprietors face income limitations partnerships avoid.

Calculate 2026 taxable income projections. Know your cap before purchasing assets you can't fully deduct.

List necessary equipment and technology upgrades. Prioritize purchases that serve immediate operational needs while maximizing deductions.

The $2,560,000 limit is a tool. Use it before the year ends. Contact MCG Service to structure your purchases strategically and ensure compliance.


MCG Service provides comprehensive tax planning and business consulting services. Schedule a consultation to maximize your Section 179 benefits and scale your business efficiently.

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