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70 tagged with "Partnerships"

Partnership accounting, profit sharing, and financial management

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Form 8825 Demystified: How Partnerships and S-Corps Report Rental Real Estate Without Triggering an IRS Letter
·mike

Form 8825 Demystified: How Partnerships and S-Corps Report Rental Real Estate Without Triggering an IRS Letter

Form 8825 consolidates partnership and S-corp rental real estate activity, with line 21 flowing to Schedule K-1 box 2 where each owner applies the passive activity loss rules under Section 469. The December 2025 revision splits gross rents from other rental income and adds Schedule A's twenty named expense categories for Schedule M-3 filers. Owners hit basis, at-risk, and passive walls in that order before a loss reaches Form 1040.

real-estate
partnerships
s-corp
depreciation
+4
Form 8865 Foreign Partnership Reporting: The Four Categories of Filers, the $10,000 Penalty, and How U.S. Persons Stay Off the IRS Radar
·mike

Form 8865 Foreign Partnership Reporting: The Four Categories of Filers, the $10,000 Penalty, and How U.S. Persons Stay Off the IRS Radar

Form 8865 is the U.S. information return for foreign partnership interests, with $10,000 per-partnership per-year penalties for non-filing. This guide breaks down the four filer categories under Sections 6038, 6038B, and 6046A, the constructive ownership rules that catch most surprise penalties, and the schedules each category must include.

tax
international-tax
partnerships
tax-compliance
+3
Form 8865 Foreign Partnership Reporting: The Four Categories of Filers, $10,000 Penalty Trap, and How U.S. Persons Stay Compliant in 2026
·mike

Form 8865 Foreign Partnership Reporting: The Four Categories of Filers, $10,000 Penalty Trap, and How U.S. Persons Stay Compliant in 2026

Form 8865 makes U.S. persons report controlled foreign partnerships, property contributions, and 10-percentage-point interest changes. Missing it triggers $10,000 per partnership per year, plus a 10% foreign tax credit haircut and stacking 30-day penalties up to $50,000.

tax-compliance
international-tax
partnerships
irs-reporting
+3
Schedules K-2 and K-3 in 2026: The Domestic Filing Exception, the 1-Month Deadline, and the Foreign Tax Credit Trap
·mike

Schedules K-2 and K-3 in 2026: The Domestic Filing Exception, the 1-Month Deadline, and the Foreign Tax Credit Trap

Schedules K-2 and K-3 pulled even purely domestic partnerships and S-corps into international tax reporting starting in 2021. This guide explains the 2026 filing rules, the four-condition domestic filing exception, the January 15 partner notification and February 15 1-month K-3 request deadlines for calendar-year filers, the $250,000 small entity carve-out added in 2024, and the per-partner, per-month penalty math for non-compliance.

tax
tax-compliance
partnerships
s-corp
+4
Section 199A QBI Aggregation Election Under Reg 1.199A-4: How Pass-Through Owners Combine Commonly Controlled Trades or Businesses to Beat the W-2 Wage and UBIA Limits
·mike

Section 199A QBI Aggregation Election Under Reg 1.199A-4: How Pass-Through Owners Combine Commonly Controlled Trades or Businesses to Beat the W-2 Wage and UBIA Limits

The Section 199A aggregation election under Reg 1.199A-4 lets pass-through owners combine commonly controlled trades or businesses before applying the W-2 wage and UBIA of qualified property limitation. This guide walks through the five eligibility tests, the Form 8995-A Schedule B disclosure, the irrevocable consistency rule, and when pooling QBI across an operating-and-leasing or multi-entity structure actually unlocks more deduction.

tax-planning
tax-deductions
s-corp
llc
+4
Section 465 At-Risk Rules: Why Tax Basis Won't Save Your Partnership Losses
·mike

Section 465 At-Risk Rules: Why Tax Basis Won't Save Your Partnership Losses

Section 465 at-risk rules disallow partnership and S-corp losses beyond your true economic exposure, even when tax basis is sufficient. This guide explains Form 6198, the qualified nonrecourse financing carve-out, recapture triggers, and why basis and at-risk amounts diverge.

tax
partnerships
s-corp
tax-compliance
+4
Family Limited Partnership Valuation Discounts in 2026: How Wealthy Families Quietly Shave 25–40% Off Estate and Gift Tax Bills
·mike

Family Limited Partnership Valuation Discounts in 2026: How Wealthy Families Quietly Shave 25–40% Off Estate and Gift Tax Bills

A practical 2026 guide to Family Limited Partnership valuation discounts — how high-net-worth families combine 10–25% lack-of-control and 20–35% lack-of-marketability discounts to cut estate and gift tax exposure, with worked numerical examples, the IRC Section 2036 traps that have collapsed estates in Tax Court, setup costs, and the bookkeeping required to defend the structure on audit.

estate-planning
tax-planning
partnerships
business-valuation
+4
Form 8886 Reportable Transactions: The 75 Percent Penalty Hiding in Your Tax Return
·mike

Form 8886 Reportable Transactions: The 75 Percent Penalty Hiding in Your Tax Return

Form 8886 discloses reportable transactions to the IRS. Missing it triggers a Section 6707A penalty up to $200,000 per year for entities and keeps the assessment statute open indefinitely on listed transactions under Section 6501(c)(10). This guide breaks down the five categories, the penalty math, filing mechanics, and the foreign currency loss trap that catches accidental filers.

tax
tax-compliance
compliance
irs-reporting
+3
Form 8886: The Reportable Transactions Disclosure That Triggers 75% Penalties and Six-Year IRS Lookbacks
·mike

Form 8886: The Reportable Transactions Disclosure That Triggers 75% Penalties and Six-Year IRS Lookbacks

Form 8886 carries a 75% penalty for undisclosed listed transactions, capped at $200,000 for entities, with no reasonable cause defense and a statute that stays open until one year after you file. Here's who must file, what counts as reportable, and how to handle late disclosure.

tax
tax-compliance
irs-reporting
compliance
+3
Form 8995 vs. Form 8995-A: Which QBI Deduction Form to File in 2026 (And Why Your Income Threshold Decides)
·mike

Form 8995 vs. Form 8995-A: Which QBI Deduction Form to File in 2026 (And Why Your Income Threshold Decides)

For 2026, taxable income under $201,750 (single) or $403,500 (MFJ) qualifies you for the one-page Form 8995. Above those thresholds, Form 8995-A applies W-2 wage, UBIA, and SSTB phase-in limits to the 20% QBI deduction.

tax-deductions
tax-planning
tax-preparation
small-business
+4
Schedules K-2 and K-3: The Domestic Filing Exception, the 1-Month Rule, and the $250,000 Small-Entity Carve-Out for 2026
·mike

Schedules K-2 and K-3: The Domestic Filing Exception, the 1-Month Rule, and the $250,000 Small-Entity Carve-Out for 2026

How U.S. partnerships and S corporations qualify for the Schedule K-2/K-3 domestic filing exception, manage the 1-month-date partner request rule, and use the new small-entity exception for entities with under $250,000 in total receipts.

partnerships
s-corporation
international-tax
tax-compliance
+3
Section 1061 Carried Interest Three-Year Holding Period: How Hedge, PE, and VC Fund Managers Lose Long-Term Capital Gains Without It
·mike

Section 1061 Carried Interest Three-Year Holding Period: How Hedge, PE, and VC Fund Managers Lose Long-Term Capital Gains Without It

Section 1061 recharacterizes carried interest gains from long-term to short-term unless the underlying asset was held more than three years — a 17-point federal rate swing for hedge, PE, and VC fund managers. A practitioner guide to applicable partnership interests, Worksheet A and B reporting, the capital interest exception, and 2026 planning moves.

tax
tax-planning
tax-compliance
partnerships
+4
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