As you consider shutting down your sole proprietorship or your single-member LLC treated as a sole proprietorship for tax purposes, it’s crucial to understand the tax implications of this decision. Here’s an overview of key points you need to consider.
1. Asset Sale Tax Implications
When you sell a sole proprietorship, you sell its assets, not the company. Federal tax rules tell you how to allocate the total sale price to specific business assets. This allocation is critical as it impacts the calculation of taxable gain and loss.
2. Taxable Gain and Loss
3. Special Rules for Depreciable Real Estate
For depreciable real estate, specific federal income tax rules apply:
4. Other Depreciable or Amortizable Assets
Gains attributable to depreciation or amortization deductions are recaptured and taxed at higher ordinary income rates. Remaining gains on assets held for more than one year are taxed at lower long-term capital gains rates.
5. Non-Compete Agreement Payments
Payments received under a non-compete agreement are treated as ordinary income but are not subject to self-employment tax.
6. Tax-Saving Strategies
To minimize tax liability, strategically allocate more of the sale price to assets generating lower-taxed long-term capital gains and less to those generating higher-taxed ordinary income.
7. Tax Return Reporting
Report gains and losses on IRS Form 4797 and Schedule D for capital gains and losses. Use IRS Form 8594 to allocate the sale price and IRS Form 8960 to calculate the net investment income tax, if applicable (not likely).
8. State Income Tax
You may also owe state income tax on gains from the sale of your business.
Takeaways
Properly managing the shutdown of your sole proprietorship or single-member LLC involves careful planning and accurate reporting to optimize tax outcomes.
If you want to discuss the sale or shutdown of your proprietorship, please call me on my direct line at 408-778-9651.