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| , Jul. 20, 2008 |
You must carefully follow IRS rules if you want to divide profits and losses in a way that's disproportionate to the owners' interests in the business.
If a business splits up profits and losses in a way that does not correspond to the owners' percentage interests in the business, it's called a "special allocation." The IRS pays careful attention to special allocations to be sure business owners aren't playing hide and seek with potential tax dollars -- for example, by allocating all business losses to the owner in the highest income tax bracket.
If the IRS rejects your special allocation, it will tax you and your co-owners as if you had divided profits and losses in proportion to your ownership interests, regardless of what your partnership agreement or operating agreement says.
To be certain that a special allocation is legitimate, the IRS checks to see whether the allocation has what it calls "substantial economic effect." This jargon means that a special allocation must reflect the owners' actual economic circumstances, not an effort to shift income around to reduce taxes.
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Unfortunately, the IRS regulations covering substantial economic effect are complicated. If you want to set up a special allocation, you'll need expert help to make sure that your allocation will pass muster with the IRS. A good accountant or tax lawyer -- one who provides advice on this area of tax law as a regular part of her practice -- can draft special language for your partnership agreement or operating agreement to ensure that the IRS will accept your special allocation.