Tax·Luxury

Part III · Structures · No. 03

Yacht charter business

A vessel placed in a charter business is depreciable property generating ordinary deductions. A vessel that is nominally chartered but operated as the owner's pleasure boat is a hobby — generating no deductible loss. The line between the two is documentation, hours of charter, and demonstrated profit motive.

What the structure is

A yacht charter business is a trade or business operating one or more vessels for compensated charter. The owner-entity makes the vessel available to third parties for compensation; expenses are deducted under §162; depreciation is taken under §168; revenue is reported as ordinary or rental income depending on the form of charter; and the vessel's eventual sale produces §1231 gain (or §1245 ordinary recapture to the extent of prior depreciation).

The tax problem it addresses

A bare luxury vessel held personally produces:

The same vessel placed in a bona fide charter business produces:

The economic transformation can be substantial. The price of the transformation is genuine commercial operation.

Mechanics

An operating charter business typically requires:

The applicable statutes and authorities

Substance and audit risk

Charter businesses are recurring §183 audit targets. The Tax Court has decided dozens of yacht-charter hobby-loss cases. The recurring fact pattern: an owner places a yacht in nominal charter; the yacht is used primarily by the owner and family; few third-party charters; chronic losses; absence of credible business plan. The court applies the §1.183-2 factors and frequently finds the activity is not engaged in for profit.

Successful charter-business defenses share characteristic facts:

Material participation under §469 requires meeting one of seven tests (most commonly the 500-hour test or facts-and-circumstances regular-substantial-continuous test). Where the owner does not materially participate, charter losses are passive and limited to passive income.

Cost and complexity

Formation: charter operating entity, business plan, broker agreements. Modest at the entity-formation level; substantial in operational set-up.

Ongoing: crew employment cost, marketing, charter broker commissions (typically 15-20% of gross charter revenue), insurance at commercial rates, maintenance to commercial standards, separate accounting and tax compliance.

Commercial operation transforms what would be a passive luxury asset into an operating business with all the attendant obligations.

Common combinations

Recent developments

The phase-down of §168(k) bonus depreciation from 100% to 20% over 2022-2026 has materially changed the after-tax economics of new charter-yacht acquisition. Where 100% bonus produced full first-year write-off on a multi-million-dollar acquisition, 20% bonus plus standard MACRS produces a more attenuated first-year deduction.

State sales-tax enforcement has continued to scrutinize commercial-exemption claims. The Florida Department of Revenue regularly audits commercial-exemption certificates, requiring documentation of actual charter activity meeting the statutory threshold.

Crew-employment compliance has tightened under flag-state codes (the MLC 2006 Maritime Labour Convention) and U.S. social-security agreements with flag states.

Primary Sources

  1. 26 U.S.C. §§162, 167, 168, 183, 274, 280F, 469.
  2. Treas. Reg. §1.183-2 (factors for profit motive).
  3. Rev. Proc. 87-56 (class lives — water transportation).
  4. Florida Statutes §212.08(7)(a) (commercial vessel exemption).
  5. California Revenue and Taxation Code §6368 (commercial deep-sea vessel).
  6. IRS Publication 535, Business Expenses.
  7. Maritime Labour Convention 2006 (ILO).

Reviewed May 2026