Chapter 7
Tell Uncle Sam How It Is! Choosing How You Want to Be Taxed
IN THIS CHAPTER
Knowing which tax classification is right for you
Watching out for tax traps
Electing a tax designation with the IRS
In 1997, the United States Treasury established the current entity classification laws (which you may hear referred to as the check-the-box regulations because the corresponding IRS form is comprised of a series of checkboxes). This profound move established LLCs as one of the few entity types whose owners can dictate to the IRS how they want their company to be treated for tax purposes. LLCs can be taxed in four main ways, all discussed in this chapter — partnership taxation, disregarded entity taxation (if you’re a single-member LLC), corporation taxation, and S corporation taxation.
The chosen taxation has no bearing on the actual integrity and structure of the LLC; for instance, an LLC that elects to be taxed as a corporation is still considered an LLC by state law in every sense of the word. The key benefits of an LLC — dual liability protection, flexible management, ownership, and so on — are all still in full effect. The LLC simply pays taxes as a corporation does.
The default ...
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