18 tagged with "Succession Planning"
Strategies for transferring business ownership and leadership to ensure long-term continuity
Section 736 Payments to Retiring or Deceased Partners: 736(a) vs. 736(b), Hot Assets, and the Goodwill Lever
Section 736 splits liquidating payments to a retiring partner into 736(b) property payments (capital gain, no firm deduction) and 736(a) income or guaranteed payments (ordinary income with self-employment tax, deductible by the firm). The service-partnership carve-out, Section 751 hot assets, and Section 754 election together determine whether six- or seven-figure tax dollars land on the retiree or the firm.
ESOP Repurchase Obligation Accounting: The Hidden Balance Sheet Liability That Sinks Mature ESOPs
A practical guide to ESOP repurchase obligation accounting for closely held companies — how ASC 480-10-S99 classifies redeemable shares as temporary equity, how to fund the obligation with sinking funds, COLI, recycling, and redemption, and the bookkeeping habits that keep plan-year valuations defensible.
Quality of Earnings Reports: How Sellers Defend EBITDA, Survive Buyer Due Diligence, and Avoid Last-Minute Price Cuts
A Quality of Earnings (QoE) report decides whether a buyer accepts your EBITDA or re-trades the deal price. This guide breaks down the 12 add-backs buyers accept, the 8 they reject, and how the working capital peg quietly cuts seller proceeds at closing.
Section 2032A Special-Use Valuation: Cut Up to $1.46 Million Off the Estate Value of a Family Farm or Closely Held Business in 2026
Section 2032A lets executors value qualifying farm or closely held business real property at productive use rather than fair market value, with a 2026 reduction cap of $1,460,000 — worth up to $584,000 in federal estate tax at the 40% rate. The election is irrevocable, requires material participation, and triggers a 10-year recapture period.
ESBT vs QSST: Choosing the Right Trust to Hold S-Corporation Stock
A side-by-side comparison of Electing Small Business Trusts (ESBT) and Qualified Subchapter S Trusts (QSST) under Section 1361, including who pays the tax, the 2-month-and-16-day election window, and a worked example showing a $118,000 annual tax swing between the two structures on $1M of K-1 income.
ESBT vs QSST: How Trusts Can Hold S-Corporation Stock Without Killing the S Election
A trust holding S-corporation stock must qualify as a QSST or ESBT under Section 1361 or the S election terminates retroactively. A QSST taxes pass-through income at the single beneficiary's personal rate; an ESBT permits multiple beneficiaries but traps S-portion income at the 37% top trust rate. The election deadline is two months and sixteen days from the triggering event.
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.
Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax in 2026: How Grandparents Move Wealth to Grandchildren Without Paying Estate Tax Twice
For 2026 the One Big Beautiful Bill Act sets the GST exemption at $15 million per person ($30 million per couple), with a flat 40 percent rate on transfers to skip persons; this guide covers skip-person rules, direct skips, taxable terminations, automatic versus elective exemption allocation, and how dynasty trusts achieve a zero inclusion ratio.
The IDGT Installment Sale Playbook: Freezing Estate Value, Burning Through Income Taxes, and Surviving Rev. Rul. 2023-2
How the Intentionally Defective Grantor Trust (IDGT) installment sale freezes estate value at today's AFR, why Revenue Ruling 2023-2 ended the basis-step-up shortcut for grantor trust assets, and the formalities that decide audit outcomes.
Valuing a Closely-Held Business: Asset, Income, and Market Approaches for Exits, Buyouts, and Estate Transfers
Three valuation approaches — asset, income, and market — can produce 50% differences in indicated value for the same closely-held business. This guide explains when each fits, how DLOM and DLOC discounts apply, and what records owners need before a sale, partner buyout, or estate transfer.
Installment Sales and Form 6252: Spreading Capital Gain Across Future Years
How IRC Section 453 and Form 6252 let sellers spread capital gain on seller-financed real estate or business sales across the years payments arrive — including the gross profit percentage formula, the depreciation recapture trap, the Section 453A interest charge on installment balances above $5 million, and when to elect out.
Section 6166 Estate Tax Deferral for Closely-Held Businesses: The 14-Year Installment Election in 2026
How executors of closely-held business estates use IRC Section 6166 to defer federal estate tax across 14 years at a 2% rate, with the 2026 inflation-adjusted $1.94M base, the 35% eligibility test, election mechanics, and the acceleration events that kill the deferral.