1 / 55

SMALL BUSINESS TAX WORKSHOP

SMALL BUSINESS TAX WORKSHOP. PETER J CHUDYK, JD, CPA SHAREHOLDER MALONEY + NOVOTNY LLC. What form of business will you use?. Legal/Liability Issues Reporting Issues Ownership Issues Limitations due to type of Business being conducted. Choice of Entities. Sole Proprietor

jamese
Download Presentation

SMALL BUSINESS TAX WORKSHOP

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SMALL BUSINESS TAX WORKSHOP PETER J CHUDYK, JD, CPA SHAREHOLDER MALONEY + NOVOTNY LLC

  2. What form of business will you use? • Legal/Liability Issues • Reporting Issues • Ownership Issues • Limitations due to type of Business being conducted

  3. Choice of Entities • Sole Proprietor • Limited Liability Company • Partnership • General • Limited • Corporation • C Corporation • S Corporation

  4. Tax Implications • Choice of Entity • Pass Through • Sole Proprietorship • LLC • Partnerships • S Corporation • Entity pays tax • C Corporation

  5. Choice of Entity • Domestic Only (United States) • International • Payroll • Health Insurance • Product Liability • Tax Implications

  6. Tax Rates • Pass Through Entities • Owners taxed on the income • Maximum rate 2012 ---35% • Maximum rate 2013---39.6% plus • C Corporation • Entity pays Tax • Maximum rate 2012—35% • Double Tax Potential

  7. Tax Analysis of Entity Choice • Double Tax Corporate Entity • Taxable Income of Entity • Dividends • 2012 Maximum Rate- 15% • 2013 Maximum Rate- 39.6% plus

  8. Tax Analysis Choice of Entity • Calculate Tax Consequences • Ultimate proceeds on sale of business • Asset Sale • Stock Sale

  9. Sale of Assets • Example: • Owner Invest $20,000 in Entity • Land Bought in 2008 for $20,000 • Sold in 2013 for $120,000 • Entity Liquidated and proceeds distributed to the owner • How much will he/she receive?

  10. Sale of Assets • C Corporation • Gain at entity level • $100,000 ($120,000 less $20,000) time 35% • No capital gain rates for C corporations • Corporate Tax $35,000 • Liquidation Proceeds - $85,000 (120,000 – 85,000) • Gain to Shareholder - $65,000 taxed at 20% • Net Proceeds $72,000 (85,000 – 13,000)

  11. Sale of Assets • Pass Through Entity- • Gain at Entity Level Taxed to Individual Owner • Capital Gain $100,000 ($100,000 less $20,000) • Tax Rate LTCG—20% (2013?) • Tax $20,000 • No Additional Federal Tax • Net Proceeds to Owner $100,000 (120,000 – 20,000)

  12. Tax Impact on Entity Selection • Type of Income being Generated • Time Horizon until Monetization • Flexibility allowed in ownership • FICA/Medicare/Health Care Impact • W-2 versus Self Employed Status

  13. Entity • Sole Proprietorship • Ownership • Federal ID • Tax Reporting • Schedule C • Self Employment Tax • Expenses • Audit Risk

  14. Entity • Partnership LLC • Pass Through Entity • Flexibility in Ownership • Flexibility in Income Allocation • FICA/Medicare/Health Care Issues • Expenses • Income shift • Estate/Gift Tax Planning

  15. Entity • Partnership LLC • Tax Reporting • Form 1065 • K-1 to each Partner • Passive/Active Activity • FICA Medicare Health Care Issues

  16. Entity • S Corporation • Legally a Corporation • Taxed as a Pass Through Entity • Ownership Limitations • Income Shift • Estate Gift Tax Planning

  17. Entity • S Corporation • Tax Reporting • Form 1120S • Shareholder receives K-1 • FICA Medicare Health Care Issues • Reasonable Compensation Issue--IRS

  18. Entity • C Corporation • Legally a Corporation • Entity Taxed • Double Tax Potential • Current Tax Rate 35% • Proposed Reduction by Tax Reform

  19. Entity • C Corporation • Tax Reporting • Form 1120 • Wage to Owner • Reasonable Compensation Issues • Excess Accumulation

  20. Accounting Methods • How do you account for your profit or loss • Basic Rule- All income is taxable unless specifically excluded, no deductions are allowed unless specifically allowed.

  21. Accounting Methods • Cash Basis- Income is recognized when received, with limited exceptions, and expenses are deductible when paid, again with limited exceptions. • Almost all individuals are on a cash basis • Many small business are on the cash basis

  22. Accounting Methods • Accrual Basis- Income is recognized when earned and expenses are recognized when the liability has become fixed and determinable • Certain Taxpayers Must be on the Accrual Basis

  23. Accounting Methods • Issues for Revenue Recognition—Cash or Accrual • Timing • Deposits • Installment Sales • Completed Contract Method

  24. Accounting Methods • Issues for Recognizing Expenses- Cash or Accrual • Compensation • Retirement Plan Contributions • Vacation Pay • Reserves • Obsolete • Warranty • Bad Debt

  25. Accounting Methods • Issues for Recognizing Expenses- Cash or Accrual • Inventory • Start Up Expenses • Organization Expenses

  26. Inventory Methods • Basic Rule lower the inventory, higher the cost sales and the lower taxable income • FIFO • First in First Out • Lower of Cost or Market • LIFO • Last in Last Out

  27. Inventory Methods • Issues • Pricing/Costing • Obsolete • Overhead • Section 263A

  28. Accounting Period • Can’t exceed 12 Months • Elected on First Return Filed • Most individuals automatically file on calendar year. • Large deferral benefit for pass through entity that elected January 31 year end. • Income is reported by owner on their tax return within which the pass through entity’s year ends. • Unfortunately Congress changed that.

  29. Accounting Period • Calendar Year – Preferred by Congress • Individuals- almost all • Trusts • S Corporations- with limited exceptions • Partnerships or Entities Taxed as Partnerships • Dictated by the accounting period of principal Owners

  30. Accounting Periods • Fiscal Year End (Non Calendar) • C Corporations • Potential benefit for October 31 year end

  31. Not all Expenses are Deductible • Personal Expenses • Life Insurance Premiums • Certain Entertainment Expenses • Personal • Country Club Dues • Logue Sky Box Fees • 50% of Entertainment

  32. Not All Expenses are Deductible • Hobby Losses – (Form 5213) • An Activity is presumed to be carried on for a profit if • if it produced a profit in 3 of last 5 years • Activities that consist primarily of breeding, training, showing or racing horses, the presumption is met if • It produces a profit in at least 2 of the last 7 years

  33. Not all Expenses are Currently Deductible • Capital Expenses • Business Start-Up Costs • Business Assets • Land, Building, Machinery (PPE) • Franchise Rights, patents (intangibles) • Improvements • Adds value or appreciable lengthen the time you can use the asset

  34. Not All Expenses are Currently Deductible • Personal vs. Business Expenses • Business Use of your Home • Business portion used exclusively and regularly • That portion must be: • Your principal place of business, or • A place where you meet with patients, clients or customer in your normal course of business, or • A separate structure (not attached to your home) used in connection with your business.

  35. Not all Expenses are Currently Deductible • Business Use of Your Car • If you use it exclusively for business, you can deduct your car expenses • If you use it only partially for business • Must divide your expenses based on actual mileage • You can deduct: • Actual Expenses • Mileage (55.5 cents per mile 2012)

  36. Not All Expenses are Currently Deductible • Inventory • Material • Direct Labor • Overhead

  37. Business Expenses • Reimbursement Plan • Non Accountable Plan • Fixed amount per month • Compensation and the Employee deducts the business portion on his return • Form 2106 and inherent limitation Schedule A • Accountable Plan • As the name implies, Employee accounts to his Employer • No taxable income to the Employee for the Business Portion

  38. Business Expenses • Meals and Entertainment (Accountable Plan) • Only 50% of any otherwise deductible business related meal and entertainment expenses you reimburse your employees (even if you reimburse them 100%) is deductible. • 50% applies to meals • While traveling away from home on business • Entertaining business customers

  39. Business Expenses • Meals and Entertainment • Taxes and Tips are included in the 50% • Cover charges for admission, rent paid to host a dinner or cocktail party, or amount you pay for parking at a sports arena—all subject to the 50% • Transportation cost to the business entertainment activity– not subject to the 50%

  40. Business Expenses • Meals and Entertainment • Substantiation • Receipts • Who, what/why, when, and where • Not Deductible • Loge Fees • Country Club Dues • Personal Expenses

  41. Business Expenses • Wages • Employee, versus • Independent Contractor • Wages Must be • Reasonable • For Services Performed

  42. Business Expenses • Wages • Bonuses • Life Insurance • Owner/Beneficiary company- not deductible • Owner/Beneficiary employee- compensation and deductible • Education Expenses • Qualified Education Assistance Program

  43. Business Expenses • Wages • Vacation Pay • Deductible, generally, only in the tax year the employee receives it • Sick Pay • Periodic • Lump Sum

  44. Business Expenses • Rent Expense • Amount you pay for the use of property which you do not own • Unreasonable rent – not deductible • Rent your own home and use part of it for business- you may be able to deduct the business portion • Lease cancelation payments- generally deductible

  45. Business Expenses • Interest Expense • The allocation of the loan proceeds and the related interest is not generally affected by the use of property. • Tracing Rules what is the loan used for • Business, • Personal, or • Investment Activities

  46. Business Expenses • Interest • The easiest way to trace disbursements to specific uses is to keep the proceeds of a particular loan separate from any other funds. • Allocation Period • Begins on the date the proceeds are used, and ends on the earlier of • The date the loan is repaid • The date the loan is reallocated to another use

  47. Business Expenses • Interest Expense • Interest you can Deduct • Business • Investment • Mortgage Interest • Limitations no more than two residences • $1 million limit • $1oo,ooo secured line of credit

  48. Business Expenses • Interest • Non Deductible (not an exhaustive list) • Interest on Income Tax • Penalties • Interest on loans from life insurance policies • Personal –credit card debt

  49. Business Expenses • Income Taxes • Federal Income Tax is not deductible • A Corporation or Partnership can deduct state and local income tax imposed on them as business expenses • An individual cannot- that portion is deductible on Schedule A – typically gets lost due to Alternative Minimum Tax

  50. Business Expenses • Depreciation Expense • Capitalization Threshold • Bonus Depreciation • 2012 – 50% immediate write-off of qualifying property • 2013 – N/A • Section 179 • 2012 Limit is lesser of $139,000 or taxable income • 2013 limit is lesser of $25,000 or taxable income

More Related