Hello,
I am preparing a S corp and the two shareholders individual returns. The two shareholders are both single but have been living together for years. The have joint bank accounts like a married couple. But they file their own tax return.
The S corp income is split 50% v.s. 50%. However, the "husband" has wages income from another job but the "wife" does not. They never pay themselves from the S corp.
They have been claiming business use of home. I did a test, if the "husband" claims all the home office deduction and remaining mortgage interest and real estate tax on schedule A, the "husband" will save thousand of dollars in tax. The "wife" will use standard deduction and still owe zero tax due to carryforward of Section 179 and home office deduction. By the way, the mortgage interest statement has his social security number and both names. I guess the house is under both names. We are in California.
Can I use this strategy to maximize tax savings?
Thanks a lot in advance for your advice.
Maria
I am preparing a S corp and the two shareholders individual returns. The two shareholders are both single but have been living together for years. The have joint bank accounts like a married couple. But they file their own tax return.
The S corp income is split 50% v.s. 50%. However, the "husband" has wages income from another job but the "wife" does not. They never pay themselves from the S corp.
They have been claiming business use of home. I did a test, if the "husband" claims all the home office deduction and remaining mortgage interest and real estate tax on schedule A, the "husband" will save thousand of dollars in tax. The "wife" will use standard deduction and still owe zero tax due to carryforward of Section 179 and home office deduction. By the way, the mortgage interest statement has his social security number and both names. I guess the house is under both names. We are in California.
Can I use this strategy to maximize tax savings?
Thanks a lot in advance for your advice.
Maria
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