100% owner of a successful S-corp has no employees other than himself. We have established his pay from the S-corp to be $80,000 per year. Normally, this is less than the S-corp profit in most years.
On December 27, 2013 we paid the $80,000 from the corporation to himself and issued W-2, W-3 accordingly. A payroll tax deposit of roughly $12,000 was made timely.
Owner went ALL of 2014 holding a $70,000 check and never cashed it. He never needs $$ from the corporation. I was outraged, and told him we were now confronted with either refiling all forms for 2013, or taking the $70,000 into income for 2014.
No one wants to deal with re-filing the payroll 941s etc and besides the SS records are already updated, and p/r taxes were paid. However, the $80,000 salary was a "wash" as such, meaning he has to pay on $80,000 wages, but the corporation was able to deduct the $80,000 from his K-1 allocation of ordinary income. Not exactly a wash but at least for the most part.
If we take the $70,000 uncashed check into income for the corporation in 2014, where would the "wash" offset occur on his personal return?
On December 27, 2013 we paid the $80,000 from the corporation to himself and issued W-2, W-3 accordingly. A payroll tax deposit of roughly $12,000 was made timely.
Owner went ALL of 2014 holding a $70,000 check and never cashed it. He never needs $$ from the corporation. I was outraged, and told him we were now confronted with either refiling all forms for 2013, or taking the $70,000 into income for 2014.
No one wants to deal with re-filing the payroll 941s etc and besides the SS records are already updated, and p/r taxes were paid. However, the $80,000 salary was a "wash" as such, meaning he has to pay on $80,000 wages, but the corporation was able to deduct the $80,000 from his K-1 allocation of ordinary income. Not exactly a wash but at least for the most part.
If we take the $70,000 uncashed check into income for the corporation in 2014, where would the "wash" offset occur on his personal return?
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