Direct Investing · Taxes

Oil & gas write-offs: the income-tax layer, in full

This is the deep dive on Layer 1 of the three tax layers: the federal (and state) income-tax treatment of oil & gas investments. The IDC election, percentage depletion, seven-year depreciation, the working-interest exception, lease bonus taxation, AMT, and the K-1 realities — with code sections, the timing rules that sponsors build programs around, and a worked $100,000 example.

By Casmir Mason — CFO, Pheasant oil & gas entities
Updated July 2026
Educational — not tax advice
The short version

Four provisions carry the load. IDCs (§263(c)): 60–85% of a well's cost, deductible in year one if you elect to expense — with a 90-day spud rule for December prepayments. Tangible costs: depreciated over 7 years (MACRS). Percentage depletion (§613A): 15% of gross production income annually for independent producers and royalty owners, capped at 1,000 bbl/d, 100% of property income, and 65% of taxable income. The working-interest exception (§469(c)(3)): hold the interest without limited liability and losses offset active income — hold it as an LP or LLC member and they don't. Everything reverses eventually: production income is ordinary, and §1254 recaptures deductions on sale.

The write-off map

Every dollar you put into a drilling deal lands in one of three tax buckets, and the bucket determines the schedule: intangible drilling costs (expense now, if elected), tangible equipment (depreciate over 7 years), and leasehold/acquisition costs (recover through depletion as the property produces). A competent sponsor tells you the split in the offering documents; a competent investor checks that the K-1 matches it. Everything else on this page is the fine print on those three buckets, plus the rules that decide whose return the deductions are actually useful on.

The IDC election — IRC §263(c)

Intangible drilling and development costs are the expenditures of drilling that leave nothing behind to sell: site surveying and preparation, road building to the location, rig mobilization, the drilling contractor's day rates, labor, fuel, water, mud and chemicals, cementing, and completion services — including hydraulic fracturing, which is why the IDC share of a modern shale well runs high. Under §263(c) and Treas. Reg. §1.612-4, an operator or working-interest owner may elect to deduct these in full in the year incurred instead of capitalizing them. The election is made on your first return reporting the costs and is binding for all future wells — which for an individual investor is a formality handled by the preparer, but it must actually be made.

In practice, IDCs run 60–85% of total well cost depending on the play and how much of the budget is completion services versus equipment. That range — not a promoter's "100% deductible" — is the honest number. What does not qualify: lease bonuses and acquisition costs (depletable basis), equipment (depreciable), and operating costs after completion (ordinary expenses in their own right).

Integrated majors get a haircut; you don't. Integrated producers must capitalize 30% of IDCs and amortize over 60 months (§291(b)). Independent producers and individual investors get the full election — one of the few places the code favors the small player. There is also a voluntary 60-month amortization election (§59(e)), used mainly to manage AMT or preserve deductions for higher-income years.

IDC timing: who deducts, and when

Two timing questions decide whether the deduction actually lands where the pitch deck says it will:

  • General partner vs. limited partner. The IDC deduction flows to whoever bears the cost — but its usability depends on §469 (below). An investor-GP in a drilling partnership can generally use the deduction against active income in year one. The same dollars held as an LP produce a passive loss that may sit suspended for years. Same well, same deduction, radically different value.
  • The year-end prepayment rule. A cash-basis investor can deduct IDCs prepaid before December 31 if (1) the well is spudded within 90 days after year-end, (2) the prepayment has a business purpose (turnkey contracts typically qualify), and (3) it is a true payment, not a refundable deposit. December closings exist because of this rule. The risk is operational: if the rig doesn't turn by the deadline, your deduction moves to next year — and your Roth conversion or bonus-offset plan moves with it. Get the spud schedule in writing and ask what happens contractually if it slips.

Tangible costs: seven-year MACRS

The equipment share of the budget — casing, tubing, rods, pumps, separators, tank batteries, wellhead gear — is capitalized and depreciated as 7-year MACRS property. Depending on the year's law, bonus depreciation or §179 expensing may accelerate much of this into year one as well; the percentages have moved repeatedly in recent years, so check the current-year rule rather than assuming. Either way, tangible costs are recovered — the question is schedule, not eligibility. On your K-1, verify the IDC/tangible split against the offering memorandum; a sponsor quietly reclassifying tangible dollars as IDC is a red flag for the whole relationship.

Worked example: $100,000 into a drilling program

A $100,000 investor-GP subscription; 75% IDC / 20% tangible / 5% fees & leasehold; top 37% federal bracket; enough active income to absorb the loss; no AMT. Illustrative only:

LineAmountTax treatment
Subscription$100,000
Intangible drilling costs (75%)$75,000Deducted year one (§263(c))
Tangible equipment (20%)$20,0007-yr MACRS (~$2,860/yr straight-line equivalent; faster with bonus)
Leasehold & syndication (5%)$5,000Depletable basis / nondeductible
Year-one deduction (IDC + first-year MACRS)~$77,900vs. active income (§469(c)(3))
Federal tax reduction, year one (37%)~$28,800
Net capital at risk after year-one savings~$71,200
Ongoing: production incomevariesOrdinary income, less 15% depletion & LOE
On sale of the interestvariesGain ordinary to extent of prior IDC/depletion (§1254)

The deduction converts roughly 29% of the capital into a near-term tax refund — real money, but a deferral plus rate arbitrage, not a gift. The well still has to work. And notice what the table assumes: GP status, active income to absorb it, no AMT, on-schedule spud. Each assumption has its own section on this page because each one fails for somebody every December.

Depletion — §613A: percentage vs. cost

Once production starts, depletion recognizes that you're selling off the asset itself. Each year, for each property, you compute both methods and take the larger:

  • Cost depletion (§611–612): unrecovered basis × (units produced ÷ estimated remaining reserves). Ends at zero basis. This is the only flavor available for lease bonuses and for interests that fail §613A's tests.
  • Percentage depletion (§613A): a flat 15% of gross income from the property — allowed to continue after basis reaches zero, which is what makes it one of the most generous provisions in the code over a long-lived well.

Percentage depletion belongs to independent producers and royalty owners only (integrated companies lost it in 1975), and three limits contain it: it applies to your first 1,000 barrels per day of average production (6,000 mcf gas-equivalent) — irrelevant to individuals; it cannot exceed 100% of the taxable income from the property computed before depletion; and your total percentage depletion cannot exceed 65% of overall taxable income, with the excess carrying forward. A small investor's practical experience: the K-1 or Schedule E worksheet shows 15% of gross coming off, year after year, quietly sheltering a sixth of lifetime revenue.

The working-interest exception — §469(c)(3)

The 1986 passive-loss rules killed most tax shelters by trapping losses from activities you don't materially participate in. Oil & gas kept one carve-out, and it drives the structure of every retail drilling program: a working interest held directly or through an entity that does not limit your liability is not a passive activity — no material-participation test required. Consequences:

  • Investor-GP: IDC and operating losses offset wages, bonus, and business income. This is the configuration the worked example assumes.
  • LP or LLC member: liability is limited, so the exception is off; losses are passive and usable only against passive income, often suspended for years.
  • The standard conversion: programs put investors in as GPs during drilling (deduction usable), then convert to LP interests once wells are completed (liability window closed). Post-conversion losses are passive, but income from the well generally remains non-passive — you cannot use a converted program to absorb other passive losses. Ask your CPA to model the conversion year before subscribing.

The exception is rented with real liability: during the GP phase, a blowout claim can in principle reach beyond your investment. Verify the operator's insurance limits before you sign — this is the price of the deduction, and it is not theoretical in every case.

Lease bonuses and royalty-owner taxation

If you're on the other side of the lease — a mineral owner rather than a drilling investor — the income-tax picture is simpler and less generous:

  • Lease bonus: ordinary income in the year received, reported on Schedule E. No percentage depletion — §613A(d)(5) excludes bonuses and advance royalties. Cost depletion only if you have basis (inherited minerals often do, via the step-up).
  • Royalty income: ordinary income on Schedule E, reduced by 15% percentage depletion, plus any severance and ad valorem taxes withheld (deductible — see the severance and ad valorem guides). Not subject to self-employment tax for a non-operating owner.
  • Selling minerals or royalties: generally capital gain if held over a year — with basis adjustments for depletion taken, and the buyer's price often reflects the tax difference between selling and continuing to collect. Our royalties guide covers the trade.

The AMT preference on large IDC deductions

The alternative minimum tax treats "excess IDCs" as a preference item (§57(a)(2)) — roughly, IDC deductions beyond 65% of your net oil & gas income can be added back. Independent producers get relief: the preference is excused except to the extent it would reduce alternative minimum taxable income by more than 40% (§57(a)(2)(E)). Post-2018 exemption levels mean few taxpayers hit AMT in a normal year — but a six-figure IDC deduction stacked on a Roth conversion is not a normal year. If your deduction is large relative to income, have your CPA run the AMT projection before you wire, and remember the §59(e) 60-month election exists precisely as the escape valve.

State income-tax conformity

The federal treatment is only half of Layer 1. States diverge in three ways: conformity — most states start from federal taxable income and inherit the IDC deduction and depletion, but some decouple and require addbacks or slower recovery of IDCs, and state depletion computations can differ from §613A; sourcing — the producing state will generally expect a nonresident return on income sourced there (Texas and Wyoming spare you, having no personal income tax; other states don't); and credits — your home state usually credits tax paid to the producing state, but imperfectly. The result is that identical wells in different states produce different after-tax outcomes for the same investor. Price that in, and confirm the conformity rules for your specific state pairing with a preparer who has seen oil & gas returns.

K-1s and filing practicalities

  • Expect the K-1 in late March or later. Plan on filing an extension, permanently.
  • Check the boxes that matter: the IDC amount (often in Box 13 with a supplemental statement), the IDC/tangible split versus the offering documents, and depletion information (frequently left to the partner to compute — your preparer needs the gross income and basis detail from the supplemental pages).
  • Basis and at-risk tracking is yours. Deductions are limited to basis and at-risk amounts (§465); a big year-one IDC deduction consumes most of both.
  • Multi-state footprints multiply returns. A program drilling in three states can mean three nonresident filings. Budget the prep fees as a real cost of the asset class.
  • Records outlive the well. Depletion taken, basis remaining, and IDC claimed all feed the §1254 recapture computation whenever you sell — decades later. Keep every K-1.

The honest caveats

  • Run every deal at zero tax benefit first. Losing $100,000 to save $28,800 is losing $71,200. The deduction is the tiebreaker for a good well, never the thesis.
  • Deferral, not forgiveness. Production income is ordinary; §1254 recaptures deductions at exit. The genuine benefit is time value plus depletion's post-basis generosity.
  • The other two layers still apply. Severance and ad valorem taxes come out of gross revenue before your income-tax math starts — the three-layers overview shows how they stack.
  • This page is education, not advice. The interaction of §263(c), §613A, §469, §1254, §57, and your state on one return is specialist territory. The sidebar links go to the primary law so you and your CPA can read it directly.

Frequently asked questions

In a typical drilling program, 60–85% of the well cost is intangible drilling costs, deductible in the year incurred under IRC §263(c). The tangible equipment balance is depreciated over seven years. So a $100,000 working-interest investment commonly produces a $65,000–$80,000 first-year deduction — subject to your basis, the passive-loss rules, and potentially AMT.
Expenditures incident to drilling that have no salvage value: site surveying and preparation, rig mobilization, drilling contractor day rates, labor, fuel, water, drilling mud and chemicals, cementing services, and completion labor including hydraulic fracturing services. Items with salvage value — casing, tubing, pumps, tanks, wellhead equipment — are tangible costs and must be depreciated instead. Lease acquisition costs qualify for neither; they go into depletable basis.
A cash-basis investor can generally deduct IDCs prepaid before December 31 if the well is spudded within 90 days after the close of the tax year, the prepayment has a business purpose, and it is not a refundable deposit. Year-end drilling programs are built around this rule — but if the rig doesn't turn by the deadline, the deduction slips a year, so get the drilling schedule in writing.
Cost depletion recovers your actual basis in proportion to reserves produced and stops when basis reaches zero. Percentage depletion is a flat 15% of gross income from the property each year and can continue after basis is fully recovered — which is why it can exceed your total investment over a long-lived well. You compute both each year, property by property, and take the larger, subject to percentage depletion's limits.
No. Percentage depletion is not allowed on lease bonuses, advance royalties, or any amount payable without regard to actual production under IRC §613A(d)(5). A lessor with basis in the minerals may be able to claim cost depletion against a bonus, but most individual lessors simply report the bonus as ordinary income in the year received.
Not uniformly. Most states start from federal taxable income, which carries the IDC deduction and depletion through automatically — but several decouple: some require IDC addbacks with multi-year recovery, and state depletion rules can differ from §613A. Producing states will also expect a nonresident return for income sourced there. Confirm conformity in both your home state and the producing state before you count the state-level benefit.