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- @Q01
-
- CAN MY BUSINESS ADOPT A FISCAL YEAR FOR INCOME TAX PURPOSES?
-
- Selection of a fiscal tax year (as opposed to the calendar
- year) as your business's accounting period can provide
- considerable tax planning benefits, including increased
- flexibility. Not surprisingly, the tax law puts quite a
- few restrictions on your ability to adopt, or switch to, a
- fiscal tax year. This is particularly true in the case of
- partnerships, S corporations, and C corporations that are
- "Personal Service Corporations." (If you are not sure whether
- your corporation is a "Personal Service Corporation," exit
- now and first go through the consulting session on PSC's.)
-
-
- QUESTION: What type legal entity is your business set up as?
-
- (1) Sole proprietorship (2) Partnership (3) S corporation
- (4) C corporation that is a "personal service corporation"
- (5) C corporation (not a "personal service corporation")
- @MC\05
- 01\Q02
- 02\Q03
- 03\Q03
- 04\Q03
- 05\Q03
-
- @Q02
-
- CONCLUSION: As a sole proprietorship, you do not have a
- whole lot of leeway in selecting an accounting period for
- tax purposes. Very few sole proprietors (that is,
- individuals) have fiscal tax years. Unless you are one of
- the rare breed who already have been properly filing your
- individual tax returns on a fiscal year basis, you generally
- will be required to use the calendar year, ending December
- 31st, as your accounting period for income tax purposes.
-
- The rule for individuals is that, no matter how many
- businesses a taxpayer conducts, he or she may use only
- one and the same taxable year for all of them. This also
- means that a sole proprietor must use the same tax year
- for business income (on a Schedule C, for example) as for
- personal income and deductions.
-
- A salaried individual who has been filing on a calendar year
- basis, who goes into business for himself, may not change to
- a fiscal year without getting IRS approval, which can only
- be obtained by showing a very good business reason why a
- fiscal year should be allowed. The IRS will rarely approve
- such a change to a fiscal year, so, as a practical matter,
- don't expect to be able to use a fiscal year for your sole
- proprietorship. (In any event, the tax planning benefits of
- having a fiscal tax year for your business usually come
- from having a separate taxable entity, such as a partnership
- or corporation, that has a fiscal year that DIFFERS from
- your personal calendar year tax period, thus allowing
- opportunities for tax planning games and manipulations.
- That isn't possible for a sole proprietorship, which is
- not a separate taxable entity, since the only entity is
- YOU, the individual taxpayer, so there is seldom any great
- tax benefit to be derived from your having a fiscal tax
- year.)
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q03
-
- "NEW" TAXPAYERS: A "new" taxpayer is a person or entity
- that is just becoming subject to any internal revenue tax.
- This does not necessarily mean a new business, since an old,
- existing business that has just become a partnership or just
- been incorporated, for example, will be a "new" taxpayer in
- its first year as a new entity.
-
- Ordinarily, a new taxpayer has somewhat more flexibility in
- choosing a taxable year than an existing entity. However,
- a partnership, S corporation or personal service corporation
- ("PSC") is considerably restricted as to its choice of tax
- year, except when it applies to the IRS for permission to
- select a particular taxable year-end for persuasive business
- purposes. The IRS is not often persuaded, unfortunately.
-
- QUESTION: Is your partnership or corporation a "new"
- taxpayer at the present time?
-
- @YN
- 01\Q04
- 02\Q05
-
- @Q04
-
- @BR\04
-
- @Q05
-
- @BR\05
-
- @Q06
-
- CONCLUSIONS: As a newly-formed partnership, your business
- is quite limited in its choice of taxable year, unless you
- can establish to the IRS's satisfaction that you have good
- business reasons for adopting a year-end other than as
- described below.
-
- However, a partnership may make a "Section 444" election,
- which will allow it to have a fiscal year (ending only in
- September, October, or November, generally), provided that
- the partnership agrees to make tax prepayments that negate
- any tax deferral benefits the partners would otherwise
- derive from their having a taxable year different than that
- of the partnership. The required payments, which can be
- quite complex to calculate, are due on April 15th each year.
-
- Otherwise, as a general rule, your partnership will have to
- adopt as its taxable year a period that coincides with the
- taxable year of a majority in interest (over 50%) of its
- partners. If that is not possible, it must select one of
- the following as its taxable year, attaching a statement to
- the first tax return (Form 1065) justifying the taxable
- year used:
-
- . A year that is the same as that of ALL of its
- "principal partners" (partners who have at least
- a 5% interest in profits or capital of the
- partnership); or, if they do not all have the
- same taxable year,
-
- . The calendar year, and a statement showing that
- all the principal partners are not on the same
- taxable year. (Unless IRS regulations call for
- a different taxable year in your situation.)
-
- In all other cases, you must attach a copy of the IRS's
- letter approving the partnership's request to use the
- particular year-end that is being adopted.
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q07
-
- CONCLUSION: In general, a partnership that already has
- adopted a tax year for prior tax returns cannot now change
- to a different year without obtaining IRS approval, which
- usually requires a showing of some important business
- purpose. Such a change ordinarily WILL NOT be approved
- if it would result in any of the following:
-
- . A deferral of income or a shifting of deductions to
- another year that will reduce tax liability (for a
- partner or partners); or
-
- . A net operating loss in the short taxable year that
- results from the change in year-end (except in certain
- circumstances).
-
- @GOTO\Q12
-
- @Q08
-
- CONCLUSIONS: As a newly-formed S corporation, your business
- is quite limited in its choice of taxable year. In general,
- unless you can establish to the IRS's satisfaction that you
- have good business reasons for adopting a fiscal year, your
- S corporation will have to adopt a December 31st year-end.
-
- However, an S corporation may make a "Section 444" election,
- which allows it to have a fiscal year (ending only in
- September, October, or November, generally), provided that
- the corporation agrees to make tax prepayments that negate
- any tax deferral benefits the shareholders would otherwise
- receive from its having a taxable year different than theirs.
- These required payments, which can be quite complex to
- calculate, are due on April 15th each year.
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q09
-
- CONCLUSION: In general, an S corporation that already has
- adopted a tax year for prior tax returns cannot now change
- to a different year without obtaining IRS approval, which
- usually requires a showing of some important business
- purpose. Such a change ordinarily WILL NOT be approved if
- it would result in any of the following:
-
- . A deferral of a portion of the corporation's income,
- or a shifting of a portion of its deductions to
- another taxable year in a way that will reduce its
- tax liability; or
-
- . A deferral or a shifting of either income or deductions
- of another taxpayer, such as a shareholder, in a way
- that would substantially reduce the shareholder's tax
- liability; or
-
- . A net operating loss in the short taxable year that
- results from the change in year-end (except in certain
- circumstances).
-
- @GOTO\Q12
-
- @Q10
-
- CONCLUSIONS: As a newly-formed personal service corporation
- ("PSC"), your business is quite limited in its choice
- of taxable year. Unless you can establish to the IRS's
- satisfaction that you have good business reasons for
- adopting a fiscal year, your PSC will generally have to
- adopt a December 31st year-end.
-
- However, a PSC may make a "Section 444" election, which
- allows it to have a fiscal year (ending only in September,
- October, or November, generally), provided that the
- corporation agrees not to claim a full deduction for certain
- otherwise deductible payments to its shareholders during
- each tax year, unless it meets certain "minimum distribution
- requirements" for payments of compensation, rent, etc. to
- its shareholders during the year. In effect, if you delay
- much of your annual compensation from the corporation until
- after January 1, on a disproportionate basis, in order to
- obtain a tax deferral, the corporation will not be able to
- deduct those payments to you during its current tax year,
- under a complex formula.
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q11
-
- CONCLUSION: In general, a personal service corporation
- ("PSC") that already has adopted a tax year for prior tax
- returns cannot now change to a different year without
- obtaining IRS approval, which usually requires a showing
- of am important business purpose. Such a change ordinarily
- WILL NOT be approved if it would result in:
-
- . A deferral of a portion of the corporation's income,
- or a shifting of a portion of its deductions to
- another taxable year in a way that will reduce its
- tax liability; or
-
- . A deferral or a shifting of either income or
- deductions of another taxpayer, such as a shareholder,
- in a way that would substantially reduce the
- shareholder's tax liability; or
-
- . A net operating loss in the short taxable year that
- results from the change in year-end (except in
- certain circumstances).
-
- @GOTO\Q12
-
- @Q12
- One business reason that may be considered an acceptable
- basis for a change in taxable year is a shift to a "natural
- business year." Reasons that usually ARE NOT acceptable to
- the IRS include:
-
- . use of a particular fiscal year for regulatory or
- for financial accounting purposes;
-
- . the fact that your company usually hires staff at
- a certain time of the year;
-
- . use of a particular year for internal administrative
- purposes, such as promotions, admitting or retiring
- owners, or setting compensation levels;
-
- . convenience of the taxpayer (or its accountants);
- or
-
- . the fact that the business involves use of price
- lists or model years that change on an annual basis
- at a particular time.
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q13
-
- CONCLUSION: A newly-formed C corporation (which is not a
- personal services corporation) is ordinarily free to choose
- whatever year-end it desires, without IRS approval. All
- that is necessary is to file a first corporate tax return
- (Form 1120) within two months and fifteen days after the
- end of the fiscal year you wish to choose, indicating what
- taxable year you have selected.
-
- Often, it is useful to select a January 31st fiscal year.
- In this way, if the corporation pays substantial bonuses
- to you or other of its employees at year-end, these can be
- delayed until the month of January, so that they are
- deductible (for example) for the corporation's fiscal
- year ended January 31, 1997, which spans the period from
- February 1, 1996 to January 31, 1997, but won't be included
- in employees' taxable income until calendar year 1997,
- providing an 11-month tax deferral, in effect.
-
- But be careful about paying too much of annual compensation
- to owner-employees as bonuses: The IRS may take the position
- that such payments are really more like dividends than
- compensation, and thus not deductible by the corporation!
-
- @STOP
-
- @Q14
-
- CONCLUSION: An existing C corporation (which isn't a
- personal service corporation) may generally change its
- taxable year without IRS permission, if it has not changed
- its year-end before in the last ten years. To do so,
- however, it must meet certain specific requirements for
- obtaining automatic approval from the IRS. To obtain such
- automatic approval, it must file certain information with
- the IRS on a timely basis, and state that it meets the
- following requirements that are necessary for such automatic
- approval of the change:
-
- . It hasn't changed its taxable year in the last 10
- calendar years.
-
- . The short taxable year resulting from the change is
- not one in which it has a net operating loss.
-
- . Its annualized taxable income for the short year is
- 80% or more of the income for the preceding year.
-
- . If it has certain types of "special status" (such as
- being a foreign personal holding company, etc.) for
- either the short period or the preceding tax year,
- it must have such status for both such periods.
-
- . It must not try to become an S corporation for the
- taxable year that would immediately follow the short
- year that results from the change of year-end.
-
- Remember that this right to automatic approval of a change
- in taxable year applies only to certain C corporations,
- other than PSCs, and does not apply to S corporations or
- unincorporated taxpayers.
-
- @STOP
-
- @HELP
-
- @H\01
-
- A "C corporation" is a technical term,
- but, fortunately, is a relatively easy
- one to understand. A C corporation is,
- quite simply, any corporation (other
- than a not-for-profit one) OTHER THAN
- an "S corporation" (formerly known as a
- Subchapter S corporation). Thus if your
- business is incorporated, unless it is
- a corporation that has made an election
- to be taxed as an S corporation, it is
- considered to be a "C corporation."
-
- @H\02
-
- The IRS is very unlikely to grant a
- request for a change of taxable year to
- a fiscal year by an individual taxpayer
- if it appears that any tax deferral is
- likely to result. (Which would be the
- main reason you would want to change to
- a fiscal year!)
-
- @H\03
-
- In other words, is your business entity
- one that has not yet filed its first tax
- return, and thus has not yet elected an
- accounting period....
-
- @H\14
-
- Corporations that are DISCs, or that are
- partners in a partnership, or that are
- controlled foreign corporations, or that
- have made certain elections relating to
- "possessions tax credits" are not
- eligible to change their accounting
- period under the automatic approval
- procedures.
-
- @END
-