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Business Advisory Services
Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Table Of Contents
By Jason Watson, CPA
Posted Wednesday, October 20, 2021
We are going to walk you through a handful of examples comparing non-S Corp scenarios such as sole proprietorships, single-member LLCs (disregarded entity) and other pass-through environments (partnerships) to those same situations being taxed as an S corporation. We will demonstrate the benefits of the Section 199A deduction, and how it plays into the “Should I elect S Corp?” question.
Aside from the usual suspects such as not earning more than $30,000 in net business income after expenses, or operating in Tennessee, New Hampshire or New York City, every scenario provides an additional benefit by electing S Corp status on top of the Section 199A deduction. Here is a link to our S Corp Questionnaire to help determine if an S Corp election makes sense-
There are four variables you need to assign values to, a definition to consider, one tax bracket to memorize and two phase-out numbers to understand. Get some flashcards!
You need to determine the amount the entire household reports as taxable income, not just the business income. See Line 15 of your Form 1040 from 2020 to gain perspective of where you are. Write down 20% of this number.
You need to calculate the total amount of W-2 wages the business pays including staff wages. Write down 50% of this number. You need to calculate the unadjusted basis immediately after acquisition (the value immediately after purchase before depreciation) of any depreciable assets the business owns. Write down 2.5% of this number (this becomes important for real estate investors).
Take your net business income after expenses, and write down 20% of this number.
Does your business survive on the reputation or skill of its owner(s)? Are you an accountant, actuary, attorney, consultant, financial advisor, medical doctor, paid athlete or performing artist? See our previous chapter on Section 199A deduction analysis.
The 24% tax bracket ends at $157,500 for single taxpayers and $315,000 for married taxpayers. The next tax bracket leaps to 32%. The 24% to 32% jump is clearly intentional and draws a line in the sand between middle class and upper middle class in our opinion. The Section 199A benefit might erode (phase out) after the 24% marginal tax bracket depending on your situation. Tax brackets are indexed each year.
The income phase out period is $50,000 for single and $100,000 for married.
We explained the decision tree elsewhere in our book, however we want to illustrate the iteration in a different way. The question becomes, “How do I figure out my Section 199A deduction?” Besides using expensive tax software and professional advice, you can consider this flowchart.
If your taxable income is in the 24% marginal tax bracket or less, stop. You are done and can select the lower of 20% of your qualified business income or 20% of your taxable income.
Assuming now that your taxable household income is in the 32% marginal tax bracket or above, you must worm in some additional Section 199A limitations based on the following-
You must now consider the Section 199A deduction based on W-2 wages or depreciable assets, and use the most restrictive of all Section 199A calculations. If you are in the income phase-out range (or the deduction limitation phase-in range, however you want to view the nomenclature), there is a linear, sliding scale of limitation based on W-2 wages and depreciable assets.
In other words, the deeper into the phase-out range you are, the limiting effect of W-2 / depreciable assets becomes stronger. No need to hurt ourselves with the calculus at this point.
If you are an SSTB, then you must now reduce your Section 199A deduction on a linear, sliding scale that reaches $0 as you move along the phase-out range (which is $50,000 for single taxpayers and $100,000 for married taxpayers). W-2 wages or depreciable assets come into play, but in a different way (near the end we provide an example of the phaseout). Your Section 199A simply ends after $207,500 (single) and $415,000 (married).
Remember that being designated an SSTB only affects you if your taxable household income exceeds the 24% marginal tax bracket.
Here are some random examples to illustrate various Section 199A qualified business income deductions.
Note: The $157,500 and $315,000 numbers represent the end of the 24% marginal tax bracket. These are 2018 numbers (base year) and are indexed each year.
50% of $0 is $0 (W-2 limit calculation).
2.5% of $1,000,000 is $25,000 (depreciable asset limit calculation).
Section 199A is limited to the lessor of $100,000 as compared to the greater of $0 (W-2) and $25,000 (depreciable assets).