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HELP...LLC Basis Limitation

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    HELP...LLC Basis Limitation

    I hope this is a no brainer type question for someone out there. I am working on an LLC 1065 and the person is dealing in rental real estate and of course with depreciation and all there are losses, sizable losses and the tax payer wants those losses to offset against their earned income on the 1040. Well, I keep running into the basis limitation section and thus none of the loss is pulled into the 1040. (using Lacerte tax software if that matters to anyone) I am a CPA but am a CFO by day and I do this at night for good friends. So, I need a "reader digest" version of basis limitations and how can I get this to work for the tax payer; it seems to me to be possible, so I think there is something I am missing. Any thoughts on what I need to look at to get this loss to pass through to the 1040, is it at-risk basis, or some other angle; what am I missing here? Thank you all for your help, if you need additional information, please let me know!!!

    #2
    A couple of questions, and possible answers:

    Originally posted by sray0713 View Post
    I hope this is a no brainer type question for someone out there. I am working on an LLC 1065 and the person is dealing in rental real estate and of course with depreciation and all there are losses, sizable losses and the tax payer wants those losses to offset against their earned income on the 1040. Well, I keep running into the basis limitation section and thus none of the loss is pulled into the 1040. (using Lacerte tax software if that matters to anyone) I am a CPA but am a CFO by day and I do this at night for good friends. So, I need a "reader digest" version of basis limitations and how can I get this to work for the tax payer; it seems to me to be possible, so I think there is something I am missing. Any thoughts on what I need to look at to get this loss to pass through to the 1040, is it at-risk basis, or some other angle; what am I missing here? Thank you all for your help, if you need additional information, please let me know!!!
    1. You said "LLC 1065 and the person is dealing in rental real estate". If it's only one member there is no 1065. The only option is to report on Sch. E 1040, or corp return (bad idea with real estate) if the election was made.

    2. I don't use Lacerte, but you should have a box to check somewhere on your data entry for at risk on the K-1 screen. Make sure that the box is not checked as a not at risk activity.

    Hopefully a LaCerte user can give more info.

    Comment


      #3
      Loan

      If indeed this is a partnership and not a single-member LLC, the 1065 is the right form.

      And it follows that for a partnership, the basis is increased by any loans guaranteed by the partner. (Not so with an S corp)

      For purposes of discussion assume there are 4 partners, and a loan for $400,000 guaranteed by each of the partners. One of the partners thus can increase his basis by $100,000. This can help accommodate a loss.

      Bear in mind, also, a couple of features:
      1) The $100,000 is not forever -- it reduces as the principle is paid off by the
      partnership.
      2) If one of the partners is not signatory to the $400,000, he is not at risk
      with respect to his share of the $100,000 and cannot have it added to basis.

      Maybe this helps --

      Comment


        #4
        Additional information

        Yes, this is a multi-member LLC. This is some great information.....I just have not done a lot of these and so I am getting my mind wrapped around it again. So, when a guaranteed loan is received, this will increase their basis, and is this in regards to inside, outside or both basis or is there a distinction between "at-risk basis" and any other basis? Again, thanks for the information, please mention anything else..this is great, really helps me out!!

        Comment


          #5
          No Taxability Basis

          For purposes of what you're discussing, the partnership does not have
          a "basis" because the partnership is not being taxed. Of course, if the
          partnership buys an asset, it will have basis in that asset for determining
          future gain/loss, but the taxability of the partnership flows through to the
          shareholders through a K-1 document.

          So the loan principle becomes basis to the partners and irrevelant to the
          partnership.

          Sounds like you're new at this, so I will also advise that you should
          report ordinary income and loss from that type of entity on line 2 of the
          K-1, "Net Rental Real Estate Income (Loss)" and NOT on line 1,
          "Ordinary business income (loss)". Needs to flow through to the partners
          in this fashion.so the partners can enter it on form 8582 if required.

          Comment


            #6
            The issue with an LLC has to do with at-risk basis for each partner (member). As a partnership, all partnership liabilities increase the partner’s basis. But with an LLC, a partnership liability does not increase the at-risk basis, unless the LLC member personally guarantees the partnership debt. It is possible that only one member needed to personally guarantee the debt in order to get the loan from the mortgage company. You need to find out if your client was one of the partners that did actually guarantee the debt, otherwise, your client gets no basis in the debt, and losses passed through are suspended under the at-risk rules.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Bees Knees View Post
              The issue with an LLC has to do with at-risk basis for each partner (member). As a partnership, all partnership liabilities increase the partner’s basis. But with an LLC, a partnership liability does not increase the at-risk basis, unless the LLC member personally guarantees the partnership debt. It is possible that only one member needed to personally guarantee the debt in order to get the loan from the mortgage company. You need to find out if your client was one of the partners that did actually guarantee the debt, otherwise, your client gets no basis in the debt, and losses passed through are suspended under the at-risk rules.
              Non-recourse debt does not increase anyones basis unless it is "qualified non-recourse debt".

              Comment

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