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- @Q01
- ┌────────────────────────────────────┐
- │ ARE LOSSES INCURRED BY MY BUSINESS │
- │ LIMITED BY THE PASSIVE LOSS RULES? │
- └────────────────────────────────────┘
-
- As a general rule, tax losses and tax credits generated by a
- business may be used to offset other income of the owner(s)
- of the business, in the case of a sole proprietorship,
- partnership, of S corporation. Or, in the case of a C
- corporation, such losses or credits may, in many cases, be
- used to offset other income of the corporation, such as
- portfolio income or active business income.
-
- However, if the losses or credits are considered to be from
- "passive activities," there are severe limits on the use of
- such losses or credits to offset current income other than
- income from "passive activities."
-
- QUESTION: Is your business set up as a "C corporation"?
- @YN
- 01\Q02
- 02\Q11
-
- @Q02
-
- CONCLUSION: Then you will not be able to offset losses or
- credits generated by your corporation against your personal
- income. This is always true in the case of a C corporation,
- whether or not the losses or credits it incurs are "passive"
- in nature. The key questions in your case are (1) Whether
- your corporation has any "passive" losses or credits and (2)
- whether your corporation is considered to be a "personal
- service corporation" or a "closely-held C corporation."
-
- (Note: A "passive" activity, for purposes of the question
- below, is a trade or business carried on by a corporation,
- where the major shareholders do not "materially participate"
- in the activity. If any one or more shareholders owning
- more than 50% of the stock "materially participate" in the
- activity, it is not considered a "passive activity.") (Most
- rental activities are automatically "passive.")
-
- QUESTION: Does your C corporation generate any losses or
- credits that are from "passive activities"?
- @YN
- 01\Q04
- 02\Q03
-
- @Q03
-
- CONCLUSION: Then you do not need to be concerned about
- the usability of "passive" losses or credits, since your
- corporation does not have any such losses or credits.
- Therefore, any losses or credits your corporation generates
- from a trade or business should, in general, be allowable as
- an offset against income from any other trades or businesses
- it carries on, or against "portfolio income" such as taxable
- interest or dividend income.
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q04
-
- TENTATIVE CONCLUSION: Then your C corporation may be
- limited, under the passive activity loss rules, in its
- ability to currently utilize such losses or credits, IF it
- is either: (a) a "personal service corporation"; or (b) a
- "closely-held C corporation."
-
- For a C corporation to be a "personal service corporation,"
- the corporation's principal activity must consist of the
- performance of personal services. Personal services would
- cover a wide range of activities, including professional
- services such as law, medicine, dentistry, accounting,
- architectural and engineering services, actuarial sciences,
- and the like. It would also cover areas such as consulting
- services, the incorporated professional athlete or
- entertainer, and miscellaneous other service businesses,
- such as an incorporated salesperson.
-
- QUESTION: Does your corporation perform personal
- services as its principal activity?
- @YN
- 01\Q08
- 02\Q05
-
- @Q05
-
- CONCLUSION: Your company is not a "personal service
- corporation" for purposes of the passive loss rules, and
- thus is not fully subject to the passive activity loss
- limitations.
-
- However, your company may be a "closely held C corporation"
- that is partially subject to the passive loss rules,
- depending on its stock ownership. (See below)
-
- QUESTION: Did 5 or fewer individuals (directly or
- indirectly) own more than 50% (in value)
- of the stock of the corporation during
- the last half of the tax year?
-
- @YN
- 01\Q06
- 02\Q07
-
- @Q06
-
- FURTHER CONCLUSION: While your corporation is not considered
- a "personal service corporation," and thus is not fully
- subject to the passive loss restrictions, it is considered
- to be a "closely held C corporation," and thus is partially
- subject to the passive loss rules. That is, it may offset
- passive activity losses against its "net active income,"
- but not against its "portfolio income."
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q07
-
- FURTHER CONCLUSION: Your C corporation is not a "personal
- service corporation" (within the meaning of the passive loss
- rules), and is also not considered a "closely held C
- corporation." This means, if the above conclusions are
- both correct, that your corporation is not subject to ANY
- of the passive loss restrictions. Thus, losses incurred by
- your corporation on passive activity investments should be
- fully available to offset against either portfolio income
- or other income ("net active income") of the corporation,
- without restriction.
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q08
-
- SERVICES MUST BE "SUBSTANTIALLY PERFORMED" BY SHAREHOLDER
- EMPLOYEES: To be deemed a "personal service corporation,"
- the personal services performed by the corporation must be
- "substantially performed" by employees who own stock in the
- corporation. To determine whether the services to customers
- and clients are "substantially" performed by employee-owners,
- the Income Tax Regulations say that more than 20% of the
- corporation's compensation expense attributable to its
- service activities have to be attributable to personal
- services performed by its employee-owners. If it is clear
- that over 20% of the cost of performing services (of the
- types described in the previous question) are attributable
- to services performed by owners, you should answer "Y"
- ("YES") to the following question. If it is clear that less
- than 20% of such compensation costs are attributable to
- services rendered by employee-owners, then answer "N" ("NO").
-
- QUESTION: Are the services rendered by the corporation
- "substantially" performed by its employee-owners?
- @YN
- 01\Q09
- 02\Q05
-
- @Q09
-
- STOCK OWNERSHIP REQUIREMENT: A corporation cannot be
- treated as a "PSC" for tax purposes unless employees own
- more than 10% of its stock (by value), directly or
- indirectly.
-
- QUESTION: Do employee-owners own (directly or indirectly)
- more than 10% of the stock of your corporation,
- by value?
-
- @YN
- 01\Q10
- 02\Q05
-
- @Q10
-
- CONCLUSION: It appears from your responses that your C
- corporation may be a "personal service corporation" under
- the definitions used in the passive activity loss rules
- and for determining whether a C corporation is restricted
- in its choice of a fiscal tax year.
-
- If so, this means that if your corporation has losses from
- "passive activities," it may not generally offset those
- losses against its "net active income" (business income,
- generally) or against its "portfolio income" (income from
- dividends, interest, annuities, certain royalties, etc.).
-
- However, such losses (or credits) can be used to offset
- other passive income of your corporation. Also, when you
- finally dispose of a passive activity (by selling off such
- a business, for instance), the corporation should than be
- allowed to deduct any "suspended" passive losses related to
- that activity which it had accumulated over the years, but
- had not been able to utilize because of the passive loss
- limitations.
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q11
-
- "Passive" losses or credits of unincorporated businesses,
- or of S corporations, generally cannot be used to offset
- income of the owners of the business to whom such business
- losses are allocated, unless there is passive income against
- which such losses can be offset.
-
- Note: A "passive" activity, is a trade or business that
- is carried on by a business, where you, as sole proprietor,
- partner, or S corporation shareholder, do not "materially
- participate" in such activity. However, if you, individually,
- are considered to "materially participate" in the activity
- in question, it is not a passive activity with regard to YOU
- (even if it is so, for your fellow partners or S corporation
- shareholders). (Note also that most rental activities are
- automatically considered to be passive in nature, regardless
- of your "material participation." However, AFTER 1993, REAL
- ESTATE PROFESSIONALS CAN "materially participate.")
- QUESTION: Does this unincorporated business generate any
- losses or credits from "passive activities"?
- @YN
- 01\Q13
- 02\Q12
-
- @Q12
-
- CONCLUSION: Then this consulting session may not be relevant
- to your situation. Since your business is not generating
- any "passive" losses or credits, you are not subject to the
- restrictions on utilization of passive losses.
-
- (Unless you HAD passive losses in prior years which have
- been suspended and carried over. In that case, you will
- not generally be able to deduct those "suspended" prior year
- passive losses until you generate passive income against
- which the suspended losses can be offset, or until you
- dispose of the activity, by sale or in certain other ways,
- and are allowed to offset the accumulated suspended losses
- against non-passive income in the year of the disposition.)
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q13
-
- There are special, especially strict, rules on deducting
- passive losses from certain "publicly-traded partnerships."
- (Most such partnerships are limited partnerships, whose
- units trade much like common stocks of corporations.)
-
- QUESTION: Is the business in question a publicly-traded
- partnership?
-
- @YN
- 01\Q14
- 02\Q15
-
- @Q14
-
- CONCLUSION: Then your ability to deduct any passive losses
- from such a publicly traded partnership will be EXTREMELY
- limited. As a practical matter, so long as you own your
- interest in such partnership, you will not be able to
- utilize any passive losses from it against other income,
- EVEN AGAINST OTHER PASSIVE INCOME, with one very limited
- exception: You may only carry such losses forward as
- "suspended losses"; then, if the same partnership later
- generates net passive income, only then may you offset the
- suspended losses against the passive income of that same
- partnership.
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q15
-
- In general, such "passive" losses will not be currently
- deductible for you, unless you have other "passive income"
- which they can be used to offset. However, there is a limited
- exception for passive losses from certain real estate rental
- activities, for some individuals who have adjusted gross
- incomes of less than $100,000 (phasing out at income levels
- between $100,000 and $150,000, or in the case of low income
- housing projects, between $200,000 and $250,000). Under this
- exception, an individual who is deemed to "actively
- participate" (this isn't the same as "material participation")
- in the rental activity is allowed to offset up to $25,000 a
- year of passive rental losses against other taxable income
- (or the "credit equivalent" of such deductions, in the case
- of low-income housing credits.
-
- QUESTION: Does the "passive activity" in question
- consist of rental real estate?
-
- @YN
- 01\Q17
- 02\Q16
-
- @Q16
-
- CONCLUSION: Then it appears that your passive losses from
- your sole proprietorship, partnership or S corporation
- business may not be currently deductible, unless you have
- other "passive income" against which such losses can be
- offset (other than "passive income" from "publicly-traded
- partnerships").
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q17
-
- To qualify for the right to offset such rental real estate
- losses against non-passive income, you must "actively
- participate" in the management of the property. Part of
- the definition of "active participation" is that you must
- own at least 10% of the property in question, either
- directly, or as a 10% or more partner in a partnership.
-
- (An ownership interest as a limited partner is not counted
- towards the 10% ownership requirement.)
-
- (Note that there is NO "active participation" test required
- for investors in low-income housing activities that qualify
- under special provisions of the tax code.)
-
- QUESTION: Do you meet the "active participation"
- requirements described above (if applicable)?
-
- @YN
- 01\Q18
- 02\Q16
-
- @Q18
-
- CONCLUSION: Then, in any year in which your "adjusted gross
- income" is less than $150,000 ($250,000 in the case of
- certain low-income housing), you may be able to offset all
- or some portion of your net rental losses against other,
- non-passive income, on your individual income tax return.
- The maximum such passive loss that you may deduct in one
- year is limited to the lesser of:
-
- . $25,000; or
-
- . $25,000, reduced by half the amount your adjusted
- gross income exceeds $100,000 ($200,000 in the case
- of low-income housing, if acquired before 1990).
-
- Thus, for each dollar of adjusted gross income you have
- above $100,000 (or $200,000, for low-income housing
- acquired before 1990), the maximum $25,000 loss allowable
- for the year is reduced by 50 cents.
-
- ┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
- │ EXAMPLE OF PHASE-OUT OF THE $25,000 │
- │ LIMIT ON PASSIVE LOSSES FOR "ACTIVE │
- │ PARTICIPATION" RENTAL REAL ESTATE: │
- │ =================================== │
- │ Say your adjusted gross income for │
- │ the year before passive losses, IRA │
- │ deduction, taxable Social Security, │
- │ and the exclusion for savings bond │
- │ interest used for higher education │
- │ expenses, is $115,000, and you have │
- │ a $27,500 rental loss from property │
- │ in which you "actively participate" │
- │ in management. Your allowable loss │
- │ for the year would be $25,000, less │
- │ $7,500 (one-half of $115,000 minus │
- │ $100,000), or a net deduction equal │
- │ to $17,500. The remaining, unused │
- │ loss of $10,000 would be suspended │
- │ and carried forward indefinitely, │
- │ until, if ever, it can be used. │
- └─────────────────────────────────────┘
-
-
- @STOP
-
- @HELP
-
- @H\01
-
- A "C corporation" is a technical term,
- but, fortunately, is a relatively easy
- one to understand. A C corporation is,
- quite simply, any corporation (other
- than a not-for-profit one) OTHER THAN
- an "S corporation" (formerly known as a
- Subchapter S corporation). Thus, unless
- your corporation is one that has filed
- an S corporation election of Form 2553,
- it is considered an C corporation. You
- should answer this question "N" ("NO")
- if your company is not incorporated or
- if it is an S corporation.
-
- @H\02
- An individual is deemed to "materially
- participate" in an activity if:
-
- . She participates in the activity
- more than 500 hours in the year; or
-
- . Her participation is substantially
- ALL of the participation in that
- activity by anyone for the year; or
-
- . She participates over 100 hours in
- the activity and no other individual
- participates more than she.
-
- (IRS regulations go on for many pages...)
- @H\04
-
- Businesses that sell some form of
- property, rather than purely services,
- are not deemed to be engaged in
- performing services. Although such
- activities as wholesale or retail sales
- of goods or sales of insurance, real
- estate or financial services or products
- have a large service component, they are
- not considered to be performance of
- personal services, for purposes of this
- definition.
-
- @H\05
-
- Don't think you can get around the "five
- or fewer persons owning over 50% of the
- value of the stock" rule by putting 10%
- of the stock in the hands of each of 10
- related people. The "attribution" rules
- of the tax law lump all related parties
- together and treat them as one person.
-
- @H\06
- "Net active income" is: all taxable
- income, OTHER THAN portfolio income and
- expenses or passive activity income and
- losses. "Portfolio income and expenses"
- include the following items of income
- (less all allocable expenses):
-
- . Gross interest, dividends,
- annuities, or royalties not derived
- in the ordinary course of a trade
- or business (less expenses);
-
- . Gain or loss not derived in the
- ordinary course of business from
- disposition of assets (non-passive).
- @H\08
- The Regulations contain a number of very
- technical rules explaining this test as
- to whether services are "substantially"
- performed by owner-employees, which are
- much too complex and detailed to explain
- here, so in some cases it may not be
- clear one way or the other whether your
- corporation's owner-employees perform
- enough of the company's services to meet
- this test. Thus, in some cases, you may
- have to take your best shot at guessing
- whether to answer "YES" or "NO" to this
- question, in which case the answer you
- finally arrive at as to PSC status may
- not necessarily be correct.
- @H\09
-
- If the total combined ownership of stock
- in the corporation by employees,
- including shares they are deemed to own
- (stock owned by their children, related
- entities and so forth), is more than 10%
- of the corporation's stock (by value),
- you should answer "Y" ("YES") to this
- question. Otherwise, answer "N" ("NO").
-
- @H\10
- "Net active income" is: all taxable
- income, OTHER THAN portfolio income and
- expenses or passive activity income and
- losses. "Portfolio income and expenses"
- include the following items of income
- (less all allocable expenses):
-
- . Gross interest, dividends,
- annuities, or royalties not derived
- in the ordinary course of a trade
- or business (less expenses);
-
- . Gain or loss not derived in the
- ordinary course of business from
- disposition of assets (non-passive).
- @H\11
- An individual is deemed to "materially
- participate" in an activity if:
- . She participates in the activity
- more than 500 hours in the year; or
- . Her participation is substantially
- ALL of the participation in that
- activity by anyone for the year; or
- . She participates over 100 hours in
- an activity and no other individual
- participates more than she does.
- . For rental real estate (after 1993),
- she must perform over 750 hours a
- year in real estate trade(s) & more
- than half her total services must
- be in real estate trades/businesses.
- @H\13
-
- A "publicly traded partnership" is any
- partnership whose capital interests are
- traded on an established securities
- market (such as a stock exchange) or
- that are readily tradable on a secondary
- market (or its substantial equivalent).
-
- @H\15
-
- Note that "rental real estate" does not
- include very transient rentals, such as
- operation of hotels or motels. Thus, the
- income from any such operations are not
- automatically treated as passive.
-
- Also, note that for low-income property
- acquired after 1989, there is no phasing
- out of the $25,000 deduction (or credit
- equivalent) if adjusted gross income is
- over $200,000. That limit was removed
- by the 1989 Revenue Reconciliation Act.
-
- @H\17
-
- "Active participation" is a much less
- stringent participation requirement than
- the "material participation" rule that
- applies to non-real estate activities.
-
- The "active participation" requirement
- can be met without regular, continuous
- & substantial involvement in operations,
- provided that you participate in a
- significant way, such as by making
- management decisions or by arranging for
- others to provide services. For example,
- approving rental agreements may
- constitute "active participation."
- @H\18
-
- Special rules apply to allowance of low
- income housing credits under the passive
- loss rules for acquisitions of such
- properties made after 1989.
-
- @END
-