Investments

Wow! Imagine paying zero taxes when selling your business.

Yes, you are indeed reading the headline correctly. Just imagine, you started your C corporation business and just sold it for $5 million and you don’t owe any federal taxes at all on the sale! Thanks to good old (enacted originally in 1993) Internal Revenue Code §1202, along with some more recent tax law tweaks, the zero tax-bite is available for those businesses that are “qualified small business corporations” (QSBC).

QSBC_Small_Business_Sale.jpg

Of course, as with most things tax, there are a number of rules and details to follow and meet. You may even already have a tax code-defined QSBC. But, whether you are thinking of starting a business or if you already have a business and want to see if qualifying as a QSBC makes sense, paying zero taxes on the sale of your business stock is certainly a big incentive.

Then, additionally add to the benefit pile that the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) with its new 21% corporate tax rate, and it makes the small business corporation benefits potentially even more attractive.

The difference between a QSBC and a garden-variety C corporation is that if your corporation can qualify as a QSBC the stock sale is potentially eligible for:

  • a 100 percent federal income tax gain exclusion (think, tax-free capital gains), and

  • a federal-income-tax-free gain rollover break (again, think tax-free)

When QSBC status is available for a start-up business, it can potentially dictate against the conventional wisdom that operating as a pass-through entity (LLC, S corporation, etc.) is usually the right way to go. But, the only way to know is to perform the proper planning for business formation, finance structure, and taxes. This means getting together with your CPA in the planning phase of your business is critical.

What if you already have an existing business? Exploring restructuring far enough ahead of any potential sale of your business or time-frame when you think you may put your business on the market may allow you to take advantage of the QSBC benefits.

100% Gain Exclusion (Tax-Free Capital Gains)

To qualify for tax-free capital gains, you must:

  • acquire your QSBC stock after September 27, 2010

  • hold your QSBC stock for more than five years

And your tax-free capital gains from the sale of a particular QSBC. In any year can’t exceed the greater of

  • 10 times your aggregate adjusted basis in your QSBC stock you sell, or

  • $10 million reduced by the amount of eligible gains that you've already taken into account in prior tax years from sales of this QSBC stock ($5 million if you use married filing separate status)

The Devil is in the Details

Of course our lawmakers did not feel like including every business in this tax benefit. Qualified businesses do not include:

  • the performance of services in the fields of health, law, engineering, architecture accounting, actuarial science, performing arts, consulting, athletics, financial services, brokerage services, or any other business where the principal asset is the reputation or skill of one or more of its employees;

  • banking, insurance, leasing, financing, investing, or similar activities;

  • farming (including raising or harvesting timber);

  • production or extraction of oil, natural gas, or other natural resources for which percentage depletion deductions are allowed; or

  • the operation of a hotel, motel, restaurant, or similar business

Also, the corporation’s gross assets cannot exceed $50 million before the stock is issued and immediately after the stock is issued (which considers amounts received for the stock).

Selling Before 5 Years?

For you serial entrepreneurs that get that offer you just can’t refuse before the five year qualification period has run there is a tax-free gain rollover deal for QSBC shares held more than six months.

Once you have more than six months under your belt, you can sell your QSBC shares and roll over your eligible capital gains to a new QSBC even when you fail the five-year requirement. The rollover provision allows you to sell QSBC shares on a tax-deferred basis without losing eligibility for the gain exclusion break when you eventually sell the replacement stock.

Too Much At Stake Not to Plan

I’ve touched only on some of the rules and issues for this valuable tax planning opportunity. But I wanted to give you a good handle on how this idea might work to your benefit. If you would like to spend some time with me or my team going over the possibilities for you, please call us at 831-758-5966 or email us at info@schollcpa.com. Your success is our bottom line.

State of the Union 2015

Hopefully you were not waiting until President Obama’s State of the Union address on January 20 to hear about his plans to shake up the tax laws. After all, the details of his tax plan had been leaked days earlier and the entire text of his speech was posted online before the event.

Apparently we have a new State of the Union address tradition. In each of his six previous State of the Union addresses he also proposed tax hikes.

Here are the more significant tax provisions that were proposed.

Toby Keith's "I Love This Tax Problem"

In 2003, country music superstar Toby Keith released "I Love This Bar," the first single from his Shock'n Y'All album. (For those of you under age 25 or so, an "album" is . . . oh, never mind.) Billboard predicted the song would become "a beer-joint staple for years to come," and it promptly shot to #1 on the charts, selling over a million copies.

"I Love This Bar" is just one of Keith's odes to drinking — he's also scored hits with "Whiskey Girl," "Get Drunk and Be Somebody," and "Get My Drink On." "Red Solo Cup," his 2011 smash, made the red plastic cups the symbol of "party time" for the under-30 set. Naturally, with that sort of appeal, Keith had to open a bar of his own. Singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffet pioneered the concept, opening dozens of Margaritavilles anywhere middle-aged men of a certain disposition gather to recall their youth. If Jimmy can do it, why can't Toby?

A Little Bit of Tax

It seems like every day brings new questions about the digital currency called bitcoin, which first appeared in 2009. Who is the shadowy "Satoshi Nakamoto" who created the currency's protocol and software? Who stole $450 million worth of bitcoin from the Tokyo-based Mt. Gox exchange? Who was the mystery buyer who used bitcoin to snag a $500,000 house on the Indonesian island of Bali?

Last week, the IRS solved a mystery by ruling on how bitcoin would be taxed, at least here in the United States. And their answer to that question may shoot a hole in bitcoin's hope to become more widely accepted.

The verdict is in... Bitcoin will be taxed as property, not as currency

We have had more than a few clients this past year ask about Bitcoin and trading in Bitcoins from an income tax perspective.  There has been a lot of urban legends out there that claim, since the IRS has not given any formal guidance, that income taxes don't apply. Like most urban legends, that is simply wrong and making that assumption can land you in some real tax trouble.

When we delivered that news it was sometimes not what our client, or prospective client, wanted to hear. We've had to remind everyone that the primary premise of the U.S. Tax Code, Section 61, is pretty simple. It says that "gross income means all income from whatever source derived." So, unless there is a specific exclusion from taxability for the income source, you're on the hook for taxes.

I'd Like to Thank the Academy . . . .

Sunday night, millions of movie fans across the globe tuned in as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences presented the 86th Academy Awards. Viewers were amazed that Adruitha Lee and Robin Mathews spun a $250 budget into a Best Makeup award for Dallas Buyers Club. They held their breath and wondered how much Kim Novak had to drink before she stumbled her way through the animation awards. And they thrilled as first-timer Lupitsa Nyong'o won Best Supporting Actress for 12 Years a Slave. But there's one award we didn't see — and it's a key to getting any movie made. We're talking, of course, about the coveted award for Best Original Tax Planning.

When we think of movies, we immediately think of Hollywood. But most movies aren't