Author: Stephen Nelson Added: August 30, 2008
Some CPAs and attorneys say there's an eleventh commandment, "Thou shalt not invest in real estate inside a corporation." And, usually, this proclamation holds true. Investing in real estate within a corporation means you lose many of real estate's tax benefits. In a handful of cases, however, a special sort of corporation-- a subchapter S corporation--may be useful for real estate investors, as discussed below... S Corporations Work Well for Real Estate Flippers One situation where an S corporation works well is flipping. If someone regularly flips real estate, profits and losses are not treated as capital gains or capital losses. Rather, profits and losses are treated as ordinary income and loss. That "ordinary" treatment isn't all bad. For example, while ordinary income never gets taxed using the low capital gains rates (which is bad), an ordinary loss unlike a capital loss can easily be used to offset other income (which is good). However, "ordinary income" tax accounting treatment creates a terrible trap for careless house flippers. Ordinary income is subject to both income taxes and self-employment taxes. Specifically, in addition to any income taxes a real estate flipper pays on his or her profits, a flipper also pays a 15.3% self-employment tax on roughly the first $100,000 of annual profit and a 2.9% self-employment tax on anything over $100,000 in annual profit. For example, a house flipper that makes $100,000 in some year pays not only income taxes but also a 15.3% self-employment tax, or roughly $15,000. An S corporation, however, offers up a loophole. In an S corporation, only that portion of the profit that gets paid out as designated wages gets subjected to the employment tax. Suppose, for example, someone flipping houses operates as an S corp, earns $100,000 in profit, but pays only $50,000 of this profit out as wages (and then the remaining $50,000 as a shareholder "dividend"). In this case, the employment tax equals 15.3% of the $50,000 of wages, or roughly $7500. And the S corporation therefore saves the real estate investor about $7500. S Corporations Work Well for Rehabbers And there's a related group of real estate investors for whom an S corporation works, too. If you're someone who's buying fixers, making substantial improvements, and then re-selling, there's a good chance that your real estate activities are considered an active trade or business (which means ordinary income treatment and self-employment taxes). Accordingly, rehab-ers can often use an S corporation to save on self-employment taxes just as flippers can. A quick digression: If you're confused about why flipping or rehab-ing houses is treated as an active trade or business and subject to self-employment taxes, consider the cases of a retailer or a home builder. A retailer selling, for example, computers does not get to call her gross profit capital gain. And a home builder constructing spec homes does not get to call his profit capital gain. From the point of the tax laws, a flipper is just a "retailer" whose inventory consists of houses. And someone who rehabs fixer-uppers is sort of a home builder. S Corporations For Property Management Activities One other S corporation opportunity exists for real estate investors. Specifically, passive real estate investors may sometimes benefit by setting up an S corporation to perform property management for their real estate. This S corporation then employs the real estate investor to do the work of managing, the properties. A property management S corporation sometimes makes sense because the S corporation allows the real estate investor to accrue social security benefits and because the S corporation, by creating earned income for the real estate investor, also lets the investor provide him- or herself with tax-free fringe benefits like a retirement plan or health insurance. A real estate investor with, for example, several rentals might form a property management S corporation, pay a reasonable salary, and then get tax-free health insurance and a 401(k). These sorts of tax-free fringe benefits could save a family $5,000 to $10,000 a year in taxes. Note: Setting up an S corporation for property management purposes can be tricky. While real estate investors tend to be a do-it-yourself bunch, for an S corporation, you probably want to get expert help from a knowledgeable CPA, tax attorney or enrolled agent.
--- Bellevue, WA accountant Stephen Nelson serves small business entrepreneurs, real estate investors, and other taxpayers with complex finances and accountant. Nelson is also the author of QuickBooks for Dummies and the editor of the popular Do-it-yourself Business Incorporation web site.
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