The adopted amendment to the Energy Act (Act No. 87/2025 Coll.) also abolishes, among others, the provisions of § 30b of the Income Taxes Act, which stipulated a special method of depreciating solarsolar power plants (or their technological part). According to this provision, the technological part of a solarsolar power plant used for electricity production from solar radiation was depreciated using the straight-line method over a period of 240 months without the possibility of interrupting the depreciation. How will the depreciation possibilities change due to the amendment?
Newly, tax depreciation for solarsolar power plants will be applied in a “standard” manner, i.e., the taxpayer will classify the individual parts of the solar power plant into the appropriate depreciation group and choose either the straight-line or accelerated depreciation method, with the possibility of interrupting the depreciation (exceptions, such as for taxpayers who are recipients of investment incentives, naturally still apply).
In connection with the abolition of § 30b of the Income Taxes Act and the application of the general rules contained in the Income Taxes Act for the depreciation of solar power plants, which are linked to other regulations, e.g., the Building Act, the Civil Code, the CZSO classification, certain uncertainties arise in practice regarding the breakdown of a solar power plant into its technological and construction parts and their classification into the appropriate depreciation groups.
The current approach tends towards classifying the technological part of a solar power plant according to the nature of the individual assets (solar panels, switchboards, rectifiers, inverters, etc.) in the second or third depreciation group with a depreciation period of 5 or 10 years. The construction part of the solar power plant, which will constitute a separate constructure, will be classified in the fourth depreciation group and will therefore be depreciated over a period of 20 years. This applies, for example, to solar power plants that are built separately in open areas. However, if the construction part represents a technical improvement to an existing building (for example, a solar power plant on the roof of an existing building), it will be depreciated depending on the depreciation period of that building, i.e., 20, 30, or 50 years. A temporary structure will be an exception and will be depreciated using the straight-line method over its duration limited by the building authority.
Given that many questions arise in this area, methodological information is expected from the tax administration, which should include a proposal on how to resolve these situations and possibly confirm the procedure described above.
The abolition of § 30b of the Income Taxes Act essentially returns the depreciation of solar power plants to the legal status that applied to this asset before its introduction, i.e., before January 1, 2011. The addition of § 30b to the Income Taxes Act was justified at the time of its adoption by the need to eliminate the indirect support for electricity generation from ecological sources, especially solar installations, which was understood as unjustified and therefore the tax regime for these sources was tighten. One of these measures was the extension of the depreciation period and the introduction of the obligation to apply tax depreciation for defined tangible assets used for electricity production from solar radiation -technological parts (i.e., the impossibility of interrupting tax depreciation).
According to the amending proposal that proposed this new regulation, the reason for the abolition of this paragraph is primarily to support the development of renewable energy sources, within which the existing specially established method of depreciating solar power plants appears unsystematic and discriminatory. According to the proposers, the excessively long depreciation period and the inability to choose an accelerated depreciation regime currently result in solar power plant operators being unjustifiably disadvantaged compared to entrepreneurs in other sectors of the economy, including operators of other electricity sources.
The new depreciation rules will be effective from August 1, 2025, and will be applied to all assets for which depreciation begins from this date. According to the transitional provisions for tangible assets used for electricity production from solar radiation listed in the abolished § 30b of the Income Taxes Act, for which straight-line depreciation (over 240 months) has already begun, this depreciation method will continue until the disposal of the asset. An exception is assets for which depreciation began between July 1, 2024, and July 31, 2025. For these assets, the taxpayer can choose whether to use the straight-line depreciation according to the abolished § 30b of the Income Taxes Act, or whether to depreciate them using the newly introduced standard method, either straight-line or accelerated, depending on their classification in the appropriate depreciation group.