In
addition, some S corporation income and expense items are subject to special
rules and separate identification for tax purposes. Examples of separately
stated items that could affect a shareholder’s tax liability include charitable
contributions, capital gains, Sec. 179 expense deductions, foreign taxes, and
net income or loss related to rental real estate activities.
These
items, as well as income and losses, are passed through to the shareholder on a
pro rata basis, which means that the amount passed through to each shareholder
is dependent upon that shareholder’s stock ownership percentage. However, a
shareholder’s portion of the losses and deductions may only be used to offset
income from other sources to the extent that the total does not exceed the
basis of the shareholder’s stock and the basis of any debt owed to the
shareholder by the corporation. The S corporation losses and deductions are
also subject to the passive-activity rules.
Other key points to consider when developing your comprehensive tax strategy include:
-
the availability of the Code Sec. 179 deduction at the corporate and shareholder level;
- reporting requirements for the domestic production activities deduction;
- the tax treatment of fringe benefits;
- below-market loans between shareholders and S corporations; and
- IRS scrutiny of distributions to shareholders who have not received compensation.
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