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There shouldn't be any overlap in income between the W-2 and the K-1. The W-2 shows earnings you received by paycheck as an employee, which should have had payroll taxes deducted and sent in by the company.
The K-1 shows your share of the partnership's income or loss that is yours because you are a partner. You may or may not have received some of this as a cash distribution, but it is still income to you.
These are two distinctly different types of income, and need to be shown as different income sources.
Hi TaxGuyBill,
I am partnering with an existing business owner to acquire ownership through profit sharing contributions. The idea is to use profit sharing to purchase shares, up to and including 20%. The agreement is drafted for 2 years of automatic share purchases from the eligible profit sharing. My question is how can I use 100% of the profit sharing to purchase the shares pre-taxed, at least until all shares are purchase and the excess be taxed as income. Below are the brief details to the agreement.
Goal: 2 year plan to gain 20% ownership by the end of year 2. Profit sharing will be automatically rolled into purchasing up to 200,000 shares of a 1,000,000 share company at $1.30 per share.
Example: year 1 yields $130K in eligible profit sharing, to purchase 100,00 shares; 10%. Year 2 yields $65K in profit sharing and $65K in equity returns; 100% vested.
Year 1: Profit sharing will be automatically rolled into purchasing. Remaining share percentage (10%) will be the eligible profit sharing for year 2.
Year 2: Eligible profit sharing (10% per example) and equity returns from shares purchased in Y1 are automatically rolled into purchasing the remaining shares (10%) . Any excess returns are to be received and taxed as income.
Please tell me if there is a tax differed strategy to do this without the profit shares or equity returns being taxed before purchasing the shares. Otherwise, I will need to pay out of pocket for any remaining shares. As you can imagine, I would have to write a very big check if taxed before purchasing shares. Any and all advice is much appreciated.
@Hautehead wrote:Goal: 2 year plan to gain 20% ownership by the end of year 2. Profit sharing will be automatically rolled into purchasing up to 200,000 shares of a 1,000,000 share company at $1.30 per share.
Go to a good tax professional.
It is crazy to be planning something complex involving hundreds of thousands of dollars without sitting down with a good tax professional that look at all of the details.
And assuming you mean retirement accounts when you are referring to "pre-tax" and "profit sharing", that further complicates things, including the fact there are limitations for contributing to retirement accounts.
Again, go to a tax good professional.
another wrinkle is that a retirement a/c owning an interest in a profit-making business may have to file 990-T to pay tax on unrelated business income. another issue, how do you get the money out if you need it. under
59-1/2, there's a penalty. company goes belly up - no deduction - you suffer the loss thru a reduced value of the profit-sharing a/c. see a pro
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