In any year the assessed value of your tangible personal property exceeds $25,000, you are required to file a return. Taxpayers who lease, lend or rent property must also file a return.
How Do I File a TPP Return? Complete a Tangible Personal Property Tax Return (Form DR-405) and submit it to your local property appraiser by April 1. Report all property located in the county on January 1. You must file a single return for each site in the county where you transact business.
Ing to the IRS, tangible personal property is any sort of property that can be touched or moved. It includes all personal property that isn't considered real property or intangible property such as patents, copyrights, bonds or stocks.
Complete this form if you own property used for commercial purposes that is not included in the assessed value of your business' real property. This may include office furniture, computers, tools, supplies, machines, and leasehold improvements. Return this to your property appraiser's office by April 1.
A taxpayer may be waived from filing the Tangible Personal Property Tax Return (DR-405) if: The prior year value was less than $25,000. The current value remains less than $25,000 (i.e. no new purchases over the past year).
Tangible personal property can be subject to ad valorem taxes, meaning the amount of tax payable depends on each item's fair market value. In most states, a business that owned tangible property on January 1 must file a tax return form with the property appraisal office no later than April 1 in the same year.
“Tangible personal property” exists physically (i.e., you can touch it) and can be used or consumed. Clothing, vehicles, jewelry, and business equipment are examples of tangible personal property.
The Circuit Courts in Florida are the trial courts of general jurisdiction. The Domestic Relations Division of the Circuit Court hears civil cases involving dissolution of marriage, name changes and injunctions for domestic and repeat violence.
Section 193.052, Florida Statutes, requires that all Tangible Personal Property be reported each year to the Property Appraiser's Office. The Tangible Personal Property Tax Return (DR-405) is the application for the exemption of up to $25,000 for tangible personal property.