My client is a financial advisor. He gets a statutory employee W-2 as well as a 1099 from the same company he works at. The statutory employee W-2 is for insurance sales, and the 1099 is for financial planning fees and mutual fund commisions, etc. He says it's impossible to attribute his expenses to specific types of income. Therefore, I plan to prorate most expenses between the 2 Sch C's based on the split of statutory employee vs 1099 income.
I'm not sure how to deal with the following expenses:
1) Payroll -- He hires his own admin assistant and issues her a regular W-2. Is it okay to allocate some of that to the statutory employee Sch C? Specifically, can a statutory employee be an employer himself?
2)Depreciation -- His equipment is 100% used for business but I'm not sure I can take 100% sec 179 deduction... Let's say we split the business use of the equipment 60% and 40% between the 2 Sch C's. I can write-off the 60% as sec 179 on one Sch C but will have to depreciate the 40% on the other Sch C (>50% required for 179), right??? Sounds unfair and cumbersome to me. Would anyone of you handle this differently?
Thanks in advance for sharing your ideas.
I'm not sure how to deal with the following expenses:
1) Payroll -- He hires his own admin assistant and issues her a regular W-2. Is it okay to allocate some of that to the statutory employee Sch C? Specifically, can a statutory employee be an employer himself?
2)Depreciation -- His equipment is 100% used for business but I'm not sure I can take 100% sec 179 deduction... Let's say we split the business use of the equipment 60% and 40% between the 2 Sch C's. I can write-off the 60% as sec 179 on one Sch C but will have to depreciate the 40% on the other Sch C (>50% required for 179), right??? Sounds unfair and cumbersome to me. Would anyone of you handle this differently?
Thanks in advance for sharing your ideas.
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