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Updated over 7 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Steven King
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Corpus Christi, TX
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LLC

Steven King
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Corpus Christi, TX
Posted
To my seasoned investors, do you recommend setting up an LLC or some type of corporate entity? The plans are to acquire rental properties, but with the income generated would it be better to have a business overseeing the properties for better tax rates?

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Thomas Franklin
Pro Member
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Miami, FL
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Thomas Franklin
Pro Member
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Miami, FL
Replied

@Steven King Depending on your REI Objectives and Business Model, the following has been recommended, by my Accounting Team, and advice I follow.

Flipping Properties

If the primary objective of your real estate business, or one of your real estate businesses, is to buy, potentially fix up an existing property and resell it within one year, the Internal Revenue Service can consider that to be an active trade or business. Unlike passive rental income, the income from an active trade or business is subject to self employment tax (a nasty 15% tax commonly referred to a "social security and medicare" by working folks). If your goal is to reduce that self-employment tax to a minimum, an S Corporation is the best entity to use. Why?

It is the only entity structure whose rules allow the business owner to take a "reasonable salary" (subject to social security and medicare) and then take the remaining profit (often as much as 50% of the remaining income) out as distributions not subject to self-employment taxes. Correspondingly, all business income taken from an LLC under similar circumstances is subject to self-employment taxes. For a business owner with $100,000 taxable annual income, the net tax savings for using an S Corporation instead of an LLC in taxes paid every year can be as high as $7,500.

Holding Properties

When holding properties as a cash flow investor, the LLC (or LP) is generally the better choice because an LLC has more liberal distribution rules. The key here is flexibility. LLC distributions come out of the LLC at cost basis. The members of an LLC are issued a K-1 Form and have to pay taxes on all profits as though it were income, which could expose the owners to high employment taxes. Also, an LLC can elect to be taxed like an S Corporation.

While there is never only one answer that is correct for all circumstances, there is a general rule that is almost always the correct choice. So remember, for legal and tax planning, a good CPA will recommend that clients hold their properties in an LLC or Limited Partnership and run their businesses as S Corporations to avoid self-employment taxes.

I hope I have adequately answered your question. 

  • Thomas Franklin
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