I was told that I needed to file my business taxes with Turbo Tax Home and Business. The business is technically a sole proprietor LLC, but it it owned by an entity and not an individual.
I don't know what I am supposed to put for the personal information because it's not a person. I have already filed my personal taxes.
How will the IRS know this is an entity and not individual owned?
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What type of entity is the business? A S Corporation, a C Corporation, a Partnership?
Did you file incorporations paperwork with your state? If so, you should know the type of entity.
You might need Turbo Tax Business which is a separate program from the personal Home&Business program. If you need to file a separate Business return like for a 1065 Partnership or LLC or a 1120 including a Single Member LLC - S corp or a 1041 Estate/Trust return you need Turbo Tax Business in addition to a personal tax program.
TT Business is not available to do online or on a Mac. You can buy the Windows Desktop program here,
https://turbotax.intuit.com/small-business-taxes/cd-download
Hi, I do have TurboTax business. I was filing the taxes with it and it told me I need to use TurboTax home and business since it's a sole proprietorship.
It is a C corp LLC.
@melisty wrote:
It is a C corp LLC.
A C Corporation files a Form 1120. The Form 1120 is only available using the TurboTax Business Edition. Whomever told you to use the Home & Business personal edition was grossly mistaken.
Understood, it was TurboTax business software that said I was using the wrong one. I will use the Business software again.
Thanks for your help!
I misspoke. We are a partnership, not a C corp. Would I still use TurboTax business?
Yes, you still need TurboTax Business to prepare a partnership's income tax return. TurboTax business will prepare Form 1065.
And just to be clear, a partnership is not a sole proprietorship. Only an individual can have a sole proprietorship. Also, it's a partnership only if there is more than one partner (which seems to be the case because you mentioned "we" have a partnership). If what you have instead is a single-member LLC, it's a sole proprietorship and the LLC is a disregarded entity for the purpose of an income tax return. A sole proprietorship reports on Schedule C of Form 1040.
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