Under the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Congress enacted a new Section 199A 20% profit deduction for owners of pass-through businesses, and which include Subchapter S corporations, LLCs, sole proprietorships, and even certain trusts. Section 199A is intended to provide a deduction to owners of these pass-through business entities who do not otherwise benefit from the new 21% flat tax Congress has given to corporations under the new tax law. While Section 199A is intended to benefit these generally smaller types of business entities and their owners, the new tax law is riddled with ...

A bedrock of IRS administrative practice has been the voluntary disclosure.   Where an individual or business has not filed tax returns or believes they may have criminal tax exposure for prior actions, IRS procedures have long-sanctioned a form of  “criminal tax amnesty” if the taxpayer voluntarily comes forward before being contacted by the IRS, discloses his tax misdeeds, fully cooperates to correct the back tax issues, and then becomes compliant going forward.  In exchange for this “voluntary disclosure”, while criminal tax prosecution may not be recommended, the ...

The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 enacted sweeping changes to the federal audit regime for entities taxed as partnerships.  The new audit rules became effective for tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2018.

For tax years beginning before January 1, 2018, partnerships are audited using one of three different procedures (unless the partnership makes an affirmative election to be governed by the new partnership audit rules effective for tax years beginning before January 1, 2018).  These procedures are:

a. Partnerships with 10 or fewer partners: The Internal Revenue Service ...

Posted in: Federal Tax

South Carolina imposes a number of civil tax penalties that are similar to those imposed under the Internal Revenue Code (the “Code”).  South Carolina’s civil tax penalties, while similar in some respects, are not the same as the Code’s civil penalties.    The following is a summary of South Carolina’s civil tax penalties:

1. Failure to file (late filing) – 5% of the amount due is levied per month or fraction thereof, up to 25%.

2. Failure to pay (late payment) – 0.5% of the amount due is levied per month or fraction thereof, up to 25%

3. Negligence or disregard – 5% of the ...

The Tax Court recently issued a full T.C. opinion which will impact a tremendous number of conservation easement donations.  In Pine Mountain Preserve, LLLP v. Commissioner, 151 T.C. 4 (2018) the Tax Court found a reservation of rights to construct certain improvement within a floating building envelope resulted in a conservation easement failing to constitute a qualified real property interest granted in perpetuity.  As a result, no deduction was allowed for the grant of the conservation easement.

Taxpayers have commonly reserved the right to construct improvements within a ...

On January 18, 2019, Treasury and the IRS issued final regulations for the new Section 199A 20% profit deduction for pass-thru businesses adopted under the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Acts.  The new regulations are eagerly anticipated because filing season for the first year of the new tax law, 2018 generally, is now upon us.  The final regulations were issued after public comments were received in response to proposed Section 199A regulations issued last August.  The IRS, in IR-2019-04 (January 18, 2019), also released a new set of additional proposed resolutions under Section 199A ...

Aside from corporate tax reductions, one of the most important aspects of the new Tax Cuts and Jobs Act beginning this year is the new 20% deduction for "pass-through" businesses - i.e. businesses that are not corporations. With the corporate tax rate being reduced to a flat 21%, the 20% deduction for other forms of businesses was designed to give a reduction to these businesses approximating the lower corporate tax rate. However, this 20% deduction, found in new Internal Revenue Code § 199A, is saddled with exclusions, phase-outs, technical issues, and uncertainties so that many ...

The new 20% deduction for "pass-through" business owners under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is raising many questions from owners of real estate-related businesses. Can these owners qualify for this important deduction, and under what conditions?

For most pass-through business owners (such as owners of LLCs, Subchapter S corporations, and partnerships), the deduction is the lessor of (1) the "combined qualified business income" of the taxpayer, or (2) 20% of the excess of taxable income over the sum of any net capital gain. The term "combined qualified business income" is then defined ...

A bedrock of IRS administrative practice has been the voluntary disclosure. Where an individual or business has not filed tax returns or believes they may have criminal tax exposure for prior actions, IRS procedures have long-sanctioned a form of "criminal tax amnesty" if the taxpayer voluntarily comes forward before being contacted by the IRS, discloses his tax misdeeds, fully cooperates to correct the back tax issues, and then becomes compliant going forward. In exchange for this "voluntary disclosure," while criminal tax prosecution may not be recommended, the taxpayer will ...

Aside from corporate tax reductions, one of the most important aspects of the new Tax Cuts and Jobs Act beginning this year is the new 20% deduction for "pass-through" businesses - i.e. businesses that are not corporations. With the corporate tax rate being reduced to a flat 21%, the 20% deduction for other forms of businesses was designed to give a reduction to these businesses approximating the lower corporate tax rate. However, this 20% deduction, found in new Internal Revenue Code § 199A, is saddled with exclusions, phase-outs, technical issues, and uncertainties so that many ...

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