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New Member
posted Jun 7, 2019 3:03:42 PM

Tax Year Prior to 2020: Single Member LLC Filing

The past two years my CPA had filed my taxes using form 1065. I was informed by an IRS agent that since I am a single member LLC and my husband is not a part of the operation of my business or listed on my LLC documents we do not have file as a partnership. Although for 2013 and 2014 my business taxes was filed on form 1065, can I now just do 1040 along with my personal household taxes? or once you file as 1065 you can't change another tax year and file differently?

0 24 10709
24 Replies
New Member
Jun 7, 2019 3:03:44 PM

Single member LLCs may include their business activity on Schedule C, which is included with your personal income tax return (Form 1040).

TurboTax Home and Business will help you. Indicate you have a business and we'll ask you if it's a single member LLC.

Make sure your state does not have a separate form that's filed separately from your personal state return. Some states have a different requirement than the federal return.

New Member
Jun 7, 2019 3:03:45 PM

the above answer would seem to indicate that one would be walked through every aspect of accounting for a single member LLC by following the prompts/questions in the home/business package.  this was not my experience.  I cannot find anything that asks about LLC membership/status at all, and especially not single-member LLC status.  Also, it does not seem to do anything with owner contributions or distributions, or ask any questions related to them.  seems like a pretty big gap here.  leaves me feeling very unsure about using this package.

Level 9
Jun 7, 2019 3:03:47 PM

@annievk.g   There is no need for the Federal tax return to know if it is an LLC or a non-LLC Sole Proprietorship.  They are treated the same on the Federal tax return.  If you live in a State that has different requirements, it will ask you if it is an LLC or not.

A Sole Proprietorship (including a Single Member LLC) does not need to know anything about owner contributions or distributions.  You are taxed on the business profit, and the contributions or distributions don't affect anything and are not entered on the tax return.

New Member
Jun 7, 2019 3:03:48 PM

I am learning the hard way, Single Member LLC is treated as a separate entity based on state you live. It would be ideal if state filing had the prompts to walk you through and fill the requisite forms for state based on how state rules apply for the LLC. I am being asked for income details 10 years ago from my state as I had filed my returns as single member LLC and reported SCHED C. Now state is coming back to request details and submit data on tax years as long ago as 2008.

New Member
Jun 7, 2019 3:03:50 PM

I second what annievk.g said. I cannot find anything that asks whether my business is LLC at all. I am in California. Is this expected?

Level 9
Jun 7, 2019 3:03:51 PM

Have you checked in the State interview?  That is where it should be.

New Member
Jun 7, 2019 3:03:53 PM

Ah that's right. Thanks for clarifying!

New Member
Dec 18, 2019 10:38:57 AM

Since you mention distribution, sounds like you're an LLC filing as an S corp and need TurboTax Business.  You'd need a separate filing for your personal income.

New Member
Jan 21, 2020 2:18:18 PM

I cannot load the disc you sent me for 2019.  I hope resetting the account has fixed the problem. If not, is there a way to speak directly to a service rep?

New Member
Jan 21, 2020 2:20:20 PM

Not a new member, been a member for many years, but was required to reset my password.

New Member
Apr 3, 2020 9:06:17 AM

I have a similar situation.  The difficulty lies in answering what happened to the prior two-member LLC, which was treated as a partnership.  There is a questionnaire to indicate what happened and the appropriate choice is not there.  The fact is that the other partner retired.  There was no taxable transaction.  The taxpayer is continuing as a single-member LLC and reporting as a disregarded entity on schedule C.  The problem is in when you indicated that it is the final year for the prior two-member LLC, there is no options available to indicate what really happened here.  It is asking if you sold, gifted, etc.  Has anyone run into that?

Expert Alumni
Apr 6, 2020 12:24:44 PM

Since you did not sell the partnership you don't need to report the disposition of it, assuming you don't have any carryover losses to account for. So, you can delete the K-1 entry that will get carried over from the previous year and then set up the sole-proprietorship as if it was a new business.

Returning Member
Mar 2, 2021 2:44:20 PM

Why isn't this a topic that is discussed every year? Home business zoning can be especially challenging. To know if one should try and form an LLC prior to and then going backwards is difficult when you think you have everything lined up. There needs to be pro bono consultative attorneys out there in every state that prepares these type of documents for you with the inside of them becoming your LLC attorney. I think that would work for all don't you?

Level 9
Mar 2, 2021 4:21:30 PM

Your CPA is correct, in general the IRS treats an LLC owned by a husband and wife in a non-community property state  as a  partnership.  It can also be treated as a  a qualified joint venture (QJV), but some rules apply.  Here is a TurboTax article about QJV's.   If one spouse does not participate in the business at all, then it can file as a "disregarded entity" separate from its owner, but again, some requirements must be met.

 

@gibsonaz1

Level 2
May 14, 2021 10:20:29 AM

I have a single member LLC that received pass through K1 income form another LLC, do report the income by filing a return for my single member LLC or do I report this income on my personal taxes, I live in AZ BTW.

Expert Alumni
May 14, 2021 10:35:24 AM

Report it on your personal taxes.   If you have a single member LLC, it is considered a disregarded entity and is reported on your personal tax return.  

 

Your single member LLC income and expenses are reported on your Schedule C.  The link has instructions

The K-1 from the other LLC gets reported on your Schedule E.   The link has instructions

 

@CGAZ - You will need TurboTax Self-Employed to report both activities if you are using the Online version.  

Level 2
May 14, 2021 11:44:35 AM

I am employed (W2), my single member LLC is a side investment issue that I have income and expenses to report...couple things, number 1, can I still use schedule C for expenses from LLC on my personal return?  and 2, I know exactly what the LLC income is but have not received the K1 as of yet, should I enter everything I have and file and pay taxes or file an extension until I receive K1?

Expert Alumni
May 14, 2021 11:58:50 AM

1 - Yes, your single member LLC will report income and expense on Schedule C which gets filed with your personal return.

2 -  Yes, enter what you have, but do not file yet.   Don't file until you get the K-1.   But, you should still pay what you owe, if anything, by Monday.   When you make a payment to the IRS, they will automatically give your the extension.   Use the link below.  

 

Get an extension when you make a payment    @CGAZ

Level 2
May 14, 2021 1:55:20 PM

The investment gain or income that I made from my LLC...where do I file this investment income, I did not participate in the company that will issue the K1 and have no expenses?

Level 14
May 14, 2021 3:50:09 PM

@CGAZ   There should NOT be a Schedule C.  

 

You would enter the estimated income as a K-1 to estimate how much tax that you owe.  When you actually receive the K-1, then you will change the numbers that you entered to reflect what is on the K-1.

 

Be aware that what you actually RECEIVED may not necessarily be anything what the K-1 shows as taxable.  What you receive (distributions) and what is taxable(income) can be very different.

Level 2
May 17, 2021 10:36:12 AM

I live in AZ and lived in my home for 15 years, sold this home in 2020 and took a -$75k loss,  can I take depreciation adjustment on my AZ State return?  I never rented or took home office deductions. 

Level 2
May 17, 2021 11:38:57 AM

I live in AZ and lived in my home for 15 years, sold this home in 2020 and took a -$75k loss,  can I take depreciation adjustment on my AZ State return?  I never rented or took home office deductions. 

Level 2
May 17, 2021 11:44:31 AM

I live in AZ and lived in my home for 15 years, sold this home in 2020 and took a -$75k loss,  can I take depreciation adjustment on my AZ State return?  I never rented or took home office deductions. 

Expert Alumni
May 17, 2021 6:48:36 PM

No.  A loss on the sale of your main home or a vacation home is not deductible. This is considered a personal loss and isn't deductible for tax purposes.