Hello,
I bought a business this year--it was a stock sale where I purchased half the shares of an LLC structured as a partnership. It is a note payment--I am paying this over several years, monthly payments with interest.
Where/how do I input this in Turbotax?
Thank you!
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
you don't on your 1040. you should be getting a k-1 from the partnership(?) you don't buy stock in a partnership you but a partner's/member's interest. On the other hand, if the LLC was structured to be taxed as an S or C corporation, then you would be buying "stock" in the company though technically an LLC taxed as a corp never issues stock.
I received a K-1 from the partnership and input it into Turbotax. I also bought half the shares of the business (yes, the interest of the partner, but there was a specified number of shares in the operating agreement).
Not an S corp or C corp, it was an LLC.
Where do you input these details in Turbotax? I am paid on a K-1, and then part of my claimed income goes toward the note payment each month. How/where do you input this?
Your purchase of the LLC interest should have been a third-party transaction between you and the member from whom you purchased your share of the LLC. If the seller agreed to installment payments, was there a formal agreement for this transaction? How do you pay the seller? From the payments you receive from the LLC? Did the payoff agreement include any interest on the balance? You may be able to deduct investment interest expense if you have documentation for the amount of interest you are paying on the purchase price of the LLC.
Schedule K-1 reports your allocated income from the LLC. In addition, if you are "paid" by the LLC, you either received Form W-2 (wages) or self-employment income (guaranteed payments) on Line 14 of the K-1. At this point, it appears Schedule K-1 is the only information you need to enter on your 1040 individual tax return.
Additional info:
Let's expand on your issues:
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post
Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
DIY79
New Member
torrescharfauros
New Member
DaveFrick
Level 2
stacey9554
Level 2
justintccasey
New Member