GeorgeM777
Expert Alumni

Deductions & credits

Probably on your Schedule C, Profit and Loss From Business.  If you are a single member limited liability company (SMLLC), from a tax perspective (and not a legal perspective, only a tax perspective), the IRS disregards your entity for tax purposes.   By "disregarding your entity," the IRS is essentially saying that a SMLLC will complete a Schedule C, and include all gross receipts and expenses on a Schedule C. 

 

In TurboTax online, you enter your SMLLC income in the Income & Expense section.  Scroll down the page to Self-Employment, click on the drop-down arrow if necessary, and on the pages that follow, begin entering your income and expenses. 

 

Because your LLC had a profit last year, your net profit on your Schedule C will transfer to Schedule 1 and then transfer to your Form 1040.   TurboTax will also generate a Schedule SE, Self-Employment Tax.  

 

Because it appears that you were a part-year resident of SC and NY, you will likely have to file returns for both states.  When you begin your federal return, in the My Info section of TurboTax online, scroll down to the bottom on the Personal info summary page, and in the subcategory Other state income, make sure you select SC as the state where you earned income (assuming you earned income in that state). 

 

If NY is your resident state now, when you are ready to begin your state returns, start with SC first.  When you complete your NY part-year resident state return, you will be asked to enter taxes that you paid to SC.  Thus, in order to know the full extent of you SC tax liability, start preparing your SC first, then move to NY.

 

Regarding apportionment, as you move through the SC and NY returns, you will enter that portion of your income that derived from SC sources and NY sources.  Both state returns may likely start with all income transferred from your federal return, but because you were a part-year resident of each state, you will enter that portion of your total income that was derived from each state.  Each state will only tax you on income derived from sources within that state.  

 

@wdegaude

**Say "Thanks" by clicking the thumb icon in a post
**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer"