Need help to determine how to file the tax return. When an LLC owns by the husband and wife living trust, is it consider two members or single member?
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No need to file a return for the LLC, as it is considered a disregarded entity in this case. It is a 2-member LLC if there are two member/owners, but I am assuming they are filing a joint return and a H&W venture can be treated as one on the tax return. See related thread dated 7/18/14 titled "Inherited" for a discussion of partnership returns.
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A qualified joint venture by a husband and wife is a disregarded entity ONLY IF it is not organized as an entity under state law, including an LLC. A two-member LLC would file Form 1065 unless it elects to be taxed as a corporation. Only a single-member LLC can be a disregarded entity and file on the member's 1040. I'm speaking from a non-community property state, by the way.
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First, a direct answer to the question: it is considered two members.
As Lion said, a multi-member LLC business needs to file a partnership return. The exception is in a community property state, an LLC with only a husband and wife has a choice to file a partnership return or two Schedule Cs (or Schedule Es or Fs). I'm not sure if the wife's Living Trust (revokable) would mess up that option or not.
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I think people have missed the essence of the question. I read it as saying that the LLC is owned by the trust, and the trust happens to be a joint, husband and wife living trust. So on paper, at least, the LLC has only one member, the trust.
The question is whether the trust is disregarded in this case. I believe the answer is no, because grantor trusts, except in very specific circumstances, still have to file a return, even if the return is essentially a pro-forma declaring it to be a grantor trust. Or to put it another way, the division of income of the LLC will be specified by the trust document, and not the LLC documents - since the LLC documents can't even acknowledge the existence of more than one owner.
But I'm not 100% certain of this analysis, so I encourage more research. And, of course, if I'm misinterpreting the original question, then ignore this response entirely.
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Originally posted by Gary2 View PostI think people have missed the essence of the question. I read it as saying that the LLC is owned by the trust, and the trust happens to be a joint, husband and wife living trust. So on paper, at least, the LLC has only one member, the trust.
2. A single-member LLC is considered a disregarded entity by default unless an election is made otherwise. Ownership of an LLC by a revocable living trust does not relieve the grantor from the responsibility of possible taxation from the net income of such LLC.
3. See www.irs.gov/instructions/i1041/ch01.html#d0e744 for a discussion of Optional Methods for Certain Grantor Type Trusts in which all property is owned by a H&W and they file a joint return. In this case, the H&W are treated as one grantor, and a 1041 need not be filed if certain conditions are met.Last edited by Burke; 07-27-2014, 07:55 PM.
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