Are you loving the 21 percent corporate tax rate and now keeping more money inside the corporation?
If so, beware of the accumulated earnings tax. You can easily overlook it. You likely don’t have the proper documentation to avoid it. And it’s expensive.
The accumulated earnings tax is a 20 percent corporate-level penalty tax assessed by the IRS, as opposed to a tax paid voluntarily when you file your company’s corporate tax return.
To trigger the tax, you need to suffer an IRS audit that notes your failure to pay dividends when
Here’s the question: Why do you need more than $250,000 ($150,000 if you are a personal service corporation) in accumulated earnings?
If you can answer this question to the satisfaction of the IRS, you have no problem.
But don’t wait for the audit and the question. Be proactive. Get your reasons and dollar amounts into the corporate minutes. Here are some prompts to get you started on why you need to keep the earnings in the corporation:
Let’s move away from death. The IRS in Reg. Section 1.537-2 gives you a nice list of reasons for accumulating C corporation earnings, as follows:
From this same regulation, the IRS lists the following as likely unreasonable reasons for accumulating the earnings:
If you would like to discuss the accumulated earnings tax, please call me on my direct line at 408-778-9651.