I learned something today. The M-2 on pg. 4 of the 1120S is not always required to be filled out if the business has been an SCorp from day one.
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Originally posted by BHoffman View PostI learned something today. The M-2 on pg. 4 of the 1120S is not always required to be filled out if the business has been an SCorp from day one.Last edited by BOB W; 03-16-2011, 10:33 AM.This post is for discussion purposes only and should be verified with other sources before actual use.
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Originally posted by BOB W View PostInteresting, my problem is that I never feel the return is complete if all of page 4 isn't in agreement.
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I've thought about that over the years. Is it better to disclose or not? I still don't know. I always fill out the Sch L, M-1, and M-2. With efiling, I have no idea whether the IRS receives that information whether I select it to "print" or not.
I'm starting to wonder if the things IRS doesn't require aren't really important to them. Maybe page 4 is only really there to help us reconcile book to tax. They can see most of the M-2 stuff on the Sch K and other forms anyway - distributions, credits, nondeductibles, Sec 179, etc.
Which begs another questions - my software is producing a form for distributions, where the date and amount is to be listed. That's new. Can anyone shed light on that?
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Originally posted by BHoffman View PostI learned something today. The M-2 on pg. 4 of the 1120S is not always required to be filled out if the business has been an SCorp from day one.
Can you give us a cite?ChEAr$,
Harlan Lunsford, EA n LA
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From the 1120S instructions:
"Schedule M-2. Analysis of Accumulated Adjustments Account, Other Adjustments Account, and Shareholders' Undistributed Taxable Income Previously Taxed
Column (a). Accumulated Adjustments Account
The accumulated adjustments account (AAA) is an account of the S corporation that generally reflects the accumulated undistributed net income of the corporation for the corporation's post-1982 years. S corporations with accumulated E&P must maintain the AAA to determine the tax effect of distributions during S years and the post-termination transition period. An S corporation without accumulated E&P does not need to maintain the AAA in order to determine the tax effect of distributions. Nevertheless, if an S corporation without accumulated E&P engages in certain transactions to which section 381(a) applies, such as a merger into an S corporation with accumulated E&P, the S corporation must be able to calculate its AAA at the time of the merger for purposes of determining the tax effect of post-merger distributions. Therefore, it is recommended that the AAA be maintained by all S corporations."
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Originally posted by BHoffman View PostFrom the 1120S instructions:
"Schedule M-2. Analysis of Accumulated Adjustments Account, Other Adjustments Account, and Shareholders' Undistributed Taxable Income Previously Taxed
Column (a). Accumulated Adjustments Account
The accumulated adjustments account (AAA) is an account of the S corporation that generally reflects the accumulated undistributed net income of the corporation for the corporation's post-1982 years. S corporations with accumulated E&P must maintain the AAA to determine the tax effect of distributions during S years and the post-termination transition period. An S corporation without accumulated E&P does not need to maintain the AAA in order to determine the tax effect of distributions. Nevertheless, if an S corporation without accumulated E&P engages in certain transactions to which section 381(a) applies, such as a merger into an S corporation with accumulated E&P, the S corporation must be able to calculate its AAA at the time of the merger for purposes of determining the tax effect of post-merger distributions. Therefore, it is recommended that the AAA be maintained by all S corporations."ChEAr$,
Harlan Lunsford, EA n LA
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L & M
Even if the return does not require a balance sheet, I like to have it in my file and omit it from the copy the IRS gets. It is possible that a small company might grow and the sales or assets might increase to a point where a balance sheet is required. If the company has not kept up with the assets and liabilities themselves, you would have a balance sheet if you had asked for enough information each year to create one.
Also, my tax program has an M-2 worksheet which, basically, adds and subtracts beginning retained earnings, profits, shareholder withdrawals, depreciation and other timing differences to reconcile tax figures to book figures. If it doesn't reconcile, the worksheet reveals that something is wrong.
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