I know this has probably been discussed somewhere but I am too lazy to look it up.
If you are a shareholder in a corporation and you personally lease an office space, can you either:
1. Have the corporation reimburse you, the shareholder, for the cost of the lease? or,
2. Lease the office space back to the corporation at FMV rent or the same rents that you pay? If so, can you deduct the lease payment you pay on your 1040, schedule E as an expense?
The ultimate goal is to get money out of the corp that isn't subject to SE tax or FICA. I know that if you own equipment or property the corp can use in its operations, you can rent equipment/property to the corp and it is kosher as long as the rents are reasonable and close to FMV rents. What I don't know is, does the same arrangement apply if the shareholder does not own the property, but pays the lease personally?
This situation arises when a person enters into a 3 or 5 year lease agreement and then a year or two later decides to incorporate and the lessor doesn't want to change the original contract with some obvious reasons. Some property owners do not want to deal with corporations for fear of difficulty to evict or the hassle of suing a corp for nonpayment of rents.
Any help would be appreciated. TIA.
If you are a shareholder in a corporation and you personally lease an office space, can you either:
1. Have the corporation reimburse you, the shareholder, for the cost of the lease? or,
2. Lease the office space back to the corporation at FMV rent or the same rents that you pay? If so, can you deduct the lease payment you pay on your 1040, schedule E as an expense?
The ultimate goal is to get money out of the corp that isn't subject to SE tax or FICA. I know that if you own equipment or property the corp can use in its operations, you can rent equipment/property to the corp and it is kosher as long as the rents are reasonable and close to FMV rents. What I don't know is, does the same arrangement apply if the shareholder does not own the property, but pays the lease personally?
This situation arises when a person enters into a 3 or 5 year lease agreement and then a year or two later decides to incorporate and the lessor doesn't want to change the original contract with some obvious reasons. Some property owners do not want to deal with corporations for fear of difficulty to evict or the hassle of suing a corp for nonpayment of rents.
Any help would be appreciated. TIA.
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