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The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provides a significant benefit for many business owners in the form of a 20 percent deduction of their qualifying business income from a pass-through entity. Unfortunately, there is a high level of complexity, ambiguity, and lack of official guidance in trying to determine what type of income qualifies and how much. Taxpayers and their advisers need answers.
by Robert E. Duquette, CPA
Apr 29, 2021, 13:50 PM

In relation to the definition of QBI:
How is QBI determined: at the activity level within an entity or at an aggregate-entity level by looking at the principal business only?
Can there be a de minimus rule to exempt a small amount of nonqualifying income mixed into the business, say 5 percent?
What is meant by the language in the Conference Report that QBI will not include reasonable compensation or guaranteed payments paid to the taxpayer for services rendered in connection with that trade or business? Does this mean the related expense is not deducted in determining QBI; not included as additional QBI; or is a reduction of QBI?
Clarification is needed on whether a taxpayer must offset ordinary income from the business with any related deductible business interest expense.
Guidance is needed on whether a taxpayer can aggregate the relevant metrics from various pass-through businesses if they are managed as one business in determining the wage/asset limitations, especially when the taxpayer has businesses integrated in a vertical or horizontal entity structure under common control.
Examples are needed for how current qualifying business losses are treated. For example, confirmation that they offset QBI from other qualifying businesses in the same year before the 20 percent deduction is calculated, and how the carryover of excess losses will work.
How will losses from other sections, such as 469 passive losses, originating in a current year or prior year, be treated in determining current year QBI? Do such prior passive losses offset passive income from that same business in the current year, and does the remaining prior passive loss offset current year QBI from that same business?
Confirmation is needed that a passive owner or shareholder is also eligible for the deduction, and that a rental real estate activity also qualifies.
Examples are needed of what is meant by disqualifying income if it is dependent on the “reputation or skill of one or more of its employees or owners.”
Specific and additional examples are needed of disqualifying income from “specified service businesses.”
Guidance is needed as to how to include the items of income flowing through to the owner/shareholder from a fiscal year K-1, especially one that ends in 2018 and began prior to the new law.
Clarification is needed as to exactly what types of business-related items make up QBI. For example, what about unrecaptured Section 1250 gain, Section 1245 recapture income when the asset or the business is sold, Section 1231 gains, and gain on sale of business intangibles?
How is the character of QBI affected, if at all, when it passes up through multiple other pass-throughs that may have other types of businesses, some of which may have QBI and some may not? How will REIT income, or other types of QBI, be treated when passed through other entities? In other words, how will these provisions work when there are multiple tiers of entities?
How does this all interact with alternative minimum tax, which still exists for individuals?
With regard to the W-2 wage limitation calculations once the applicable AGI thresholds are exceeded in order to determine the allowable deduction:
How are taxpayer wages or guaranteed payments treated in determining the wage limitations: fully included or excluded?
What if a business uses independent contractors vs. employees? Could there be a substance-over-form standard used to allow those payments in the overall W-2 limitation?
Clarification is needed as to how to compute the available deduction when a taxpayer is subject to the “double phaseouts” of being in a disqualified service business, and also to the wage and asset limitations.
With respect to the 2.5 percent of the “unadjusted basis immediately after acquisition” calculation:
How is unadjusted basis determined in the case of a tax-free acquisition, such as a like-kind exchange of real estate, a statutory merger, or a gift or inheritance?
Will improvements be allowed to be added to the original unadjusted basis?
How does one factor in property acquired midyear or sold midyear?
What if the business was not held all year?
What if property is recorded as a capitalized lease?
Will assets placed in service before 2018 be allowed to be included or only new additions?
Will unadjusted basis be considered before applying bonus expensing and Section 179 expensing?
---
1 Scott Greenberg, “Pass-Through Businesses: Data and Policy,” Tax Foundation, Jan. 17, 2017. https://taxfoundation.org/pass-through-businesses-data-and-policy/
2 “Request for Immediate Guidance Regarding IRC Section 199A – Deduction for Qualified Business Income of Pass-Through Entities (Pub. L. No. 115-97, Sec. 11011),” American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, Feb. 21, 2018. https://www.aicpa.org/content/dam/aicpa/advocacy/tax/downloadabledocuments/20180221-aicpa-sec-99a-qbi-comment-letter-faq.pdf
3 Jason Watson, “Taxpayer’s Comprehensive Guide to LLCs and S Corps: 2018 Edition,” Watson CPA Group. (Special thanks for the early publishing of guidance on this topic.)
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provides a significant benefit for many business owners in the form of a 20 percent deduction of their qualifying business income from a pass-through entity. Unfortunately, there is a high level of complexity, ambiguity, and lack of official guidance in trying to determine what type of income qualifies and how much. Taxpayers and their advisers need answers.
by Robert E. Duquette, CPA
Apr 29, 2021, 13:50 PM

In relation to the definition of QBI:
How is QBI determined: at the activity level within an entity or at an aggregate-entity level by looking at the principal business only?
Can there be a de minimus rule to exempt a small amount of nonqualifying income mixed into the business, say 5 percent?
What is meant by the language in the Conference Report that QBI will not include reasonable compensation or guaranteed payments paid to the taxpayer for services rendered in connection with that trade or business? Does this mean the related expense is not deducted in determining QBI; not included as additional QBI; or is a reduction of QBI?
Clarification is needed on whether a taxpayer must offset ordinary income from the business with any related deductible business interest expense.
Guidance is needed on whether a taxpayer can aggregate the relevant metrics from various pass-through businesses if they are managed as one business in determining the wage/asset limitations, especially when the taxpayer has businesses integrated in a vertical or horizontal entity structure under common control.
Examples are needed for how current qualifying business losses are treated. For example, confirmation that they offset QBI from other qualifying businesses in the same year before the 20 percent deduction is calculated, and how the carryover of excess losses will work.
How will losses from other sections, such as 469 passive losses, originating in a current year or prior year, be treated in determining current year QBI? Do such prior passive losses offset passive income from that same business in the current year, and does the remaining prior passive loss offset current year QBI from that same business?
Confirmation is needed that a passive owner or shareholder is also eligible for the deduction, and that a rental real estate activity also qualifies.
Examples are needed of what is meant by disqualifying income if it is dependent on the “reputation or skill of one or more of its employees or owners.”
Specific and additional examples are needed of disqualifying income from “specified service businesses.”
Guidance is needed as to how to include the items of income flowing through to the owner/shareholder from a fiscal year K-1, especially one that ends in 2018 and began prior to the new law.
Clarification is needed as to exactly what types of business-related items make up QBI. For example, what about unrecaptured Section 1250 gain, Section 1245 recapture income when the asset or the business is sold, Section 1231 gains, and gain on sale of business intangibles?
How is the character of QBI affected, if at all, when it passes up through multiple other pass-throughs that may have other types of businesses, some of which may have QBI and some may not? How will REIT income, or other types of QBI, be treated when passed through other entities? In other words, how will these provisions work when there are multiple tiers of entities?
How does this all interact with alternative minimum tax, which still exists for individuals?
With regard to the W-2 wage limitation calculations once the applicable AGI thresholds are exceeded in order to determine the allowable deduction:
How are taxpayer wages or guaranteed payments treated in determining the wage limitations: fully included or excluded?
What if a business uses independent contractors vs. employees? Could there be a substance-over-form standard used to allow those payments in the overall W-2 limitation?
Clarification is needed as to how to compute the available deduction when a taxpayer is subject to the “double phaseouts” of being in a disqualified service business, and also to the wage and asset limitations.
With respect to the 2.5 percent of the “unadjusted basis immediately after acquisition” calculation:
How is unadjusted basis determined in the case of a tax-free acquisition, such as a like-kind exchange of real estate, a statutory merger, or a gift or inheritance?
Will improvements be allowed to be added to the original unadjusted basis?
How does one factor in property acquired midyear or sold midyear?
What if the business was not held all year?
What if property is recorded as a capitalized lease?
Will assets placed in service before 2018 be allowed to be included or only new additions?
Will unadjusted basis be considered before applying bonus expensing and Section 179 expensing?
---
1 Scott Greenberg, “Pass-Through Businesses: Data and Policy,” Tax Foundation, Jan. 17, 2017. https://taxfoundation.org/pass-through-businesses-data-and-policy/
2 “Request for Immediate Guidance Regarding IRC Section 199A – Deduction for Qualified Business Income of Pass-Through Entities (Pub. L. No. 115-97, Sec. 11011),” American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, Feb. 21, 2018. https://www.aicpa.org/content/dam/aicpa/advocacy/tax/downloadabledocuments/20180221-aicpa-sec-99a-qbi-comment-letter-faq.pdf
3 Jason Watson, “Taxpayer’s Comprehensive Guide to LLCs and S Corps: 2018 Edition,” Watson CPA Group. (Special thanks for the early publishing of guidance on this topic.)
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