Real Estate Investor KnowledgeBase
Print

Loans or Capital Injections

capital injectionBy Jason Watson, CPA
Posted Saturday, August 3, 2024

We broached this from an investor perspective earlier and is largely repetitive. This tiny section expands on the notion of your cash going into the entity, and how that might be problematic.

The question comes up from time to time about how to fund the new venture. If you are the only owner, then any money going into the business, real estate investment or rental property entity should be deemed a capital injection and not a loan. For some reason small business owners and real estate investors want their entity to owe them money; this typically does not make sense and can set you up for problems down the road.

For example, if you lend your entity money and it goes bankrupt, your bad debt deduction might be limited as a short-term capital loss. According to IRS Publication 535 Business Expenses, a business loan is comprised of-

  • Loans to clients, suppliers, distributors, and employees
  • Credit sales to customers, or
  • Business loan guarantees

As such the loan to your entity might be deemed a non-business loan and limited as a short-term capital loss.

Let’s not forget that you must also impute interest expense to the entity, and then subsequently pick up interest income on your individual tax return (Form 1040). Issuing a 1099-INT from the business to yourself seems silly, but true!

However, another situation might arise where you are partnering with someone else, and let’s assume you have all the money for startup funding. Recall the golden rule where the person with the gold makes the rules. As such, you might want to consider your funding as a loan to the business or real estate venture. This allows you to do two things; you can take money out of the venture ahead of others as a loan payment (return of capital) and you can execute a personal guarantee from your other partner collateralizing the loan.

You can also convert your loan into additional equity. For example, you are a 50% owner and lend the business $100,000. Things are going great; however, the entity does not have the cash to pay you back since all the cash is being re-invested back into the venture. You might have a provision within the loan agreements that allows you to convert the debt into equity.

We talked more about this myriad of possibilities when partnering with others, including adding partners in a previous section. Check it out!

I Just Got A Rental, What Do I Do? 2024-2025 Edition

Rental BookThis KB article is an excerpt from our 320+ page book (some picture pages, but no scatch and sniff) which was released September 30, 2024, and is available in paperback from Amazon, as an eBook for Kindle and as a PDF from ClickBank. We used to publish with iTunes and Nook, but keeping up with two different formats was brutal. You can cruise through these KB articles online, click on the fancy buttons below or visit our webpage which provides more information.

I Just Got a Rental, What Do I Do?

Get practical rental property tax tips with humor, backed by real cases – click here to learn more!

Kindle - I Just Got a Rental, What Do I Do?

Get practical rental property tax tips with humor, backed by real cases – Now on Kindle!

PDF - I Just Got A Rental, What Do I Do 2024 Edition

Get practical rental property tax tips, backed by real cases – now in an accessible PDF!

Talk to a Real Estate CPA About Your Rental Property

Please use the form below to tell us a little about yourself, and what you have going on with your investments and wealth-building objectives. WCG CPAs & Advisors are real estate CPAs, tax strategists and rental property consultants, and we look forward to talking to you!

The tax advisors and business consultants at WCG are not salespeople; we are not putting lipstick on a pig expecting you to love it. Our job remains being professionally detached, giving you information and letting you decide within our ethical guidelines and your risk profiles.

We see far too many crazy schemes and half-baked ideas from attorneys and wealth managers. In some cases, they are good ideas. In most cases, all the entities, layering and mixed ownership is only the illusion of precision. As Chris Rock says, just because you can drive your car with your feet doesn’t make it a good idea. In other words, let’s not automatically convert “you can” into “you must.” Yes, it is fun to brag about how complicated your world is at cocktail parties, but let’s not unnecessarily complicate it for the bragging rights.

Let’s chat so you can be smart about it.

We typically schedule a 20-minute complimentary quick chat with one of our Partners or Senior Tax Professionals to determine if we are a good fit for each other, and how an engagement with our team looks. Tax returns only? Business advisory? Tax prep, and more importantly tax strategy and planning?

Should we need to schedule an additional consultation, our fee is $250 for 40 minutes. Fun! If we decide to press forward with a Business Advisory or Tax Patrol Services engagement, we will credit the consultation fee towards those services.

Text WCG Offices

Need to get in touch through a quick text?  We’ll respond back as soon as we can.

Call Our Amazing Team

If you need to speak to someone, we’re good listeners!  Give us a call and we’ll help you out!

Chat With a Tax Pro

Taxes are complicated.  We make them simple.  Get in touch with a pro here at WCG!

Table of Contents