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Non-cash partner - Taxable Event?
I'm trying to structure a California LLC as the non-cash partner. My partners are bringing the cash to the deal. We are building ground-up condos and planning to hold them for rent long term. I found the property and assembled the team, and I will be the managing member of the LLC - and I have negotiated a % of the deal in return. My CPA is telling me that if I take a percentage of equity ownership, that is a taxable event and I will owe taxes on my % of the total capital raised as outlined in the operating agreement (on day 1 before we have built anything!). This is my first partnership multifamily deal after purchasing and renting my own properties, and I'm a bit lost on this topic.
My goal is to have equity ownership, take advantage of depreciation, and hold the property in the LLC long term, while collecting distributions and paying applicable taxes on those distributions.
My intention was to assign % ownership when the entity value was $0, like can be done when founding a company prior to incorporation. Thus no taxable event. Is this possible in a real estate deal, or am I forced to only be a profit sharing member of the LLC, taking distributions but not holding equity?
With so many partnership deals and syndications out there, there must be some proven strategies!
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Originally posted by @James Hedgecock:
I'm trying to structure a California LLC as the non-cash partner. My partners are bringing the cash to the deal. We are building ground-up condos and planning to hold them for rent long term. I found the property and assembled the team, and I will be the managing member of the LLC - and I have negotiated a % of the deal in return. My CPA is telling me that if I take a percentage of equity ownership, that is a taxable event and I will owe taxes on my % of the total capital raised as outlined in the operating agreement (on day 1 before we have built anything!). This is my first partnership multifamily deal after purchasing and renting my own properties, and I'm a bit lost on this topic.
My goal is to have equity ownership, take advantage of depreciation, and hold the property in the LLC long term, while collecting distributions and paying applicable taxes on those distributions.
My intention was to assign % ownership when the entity value was $0, like can be done when founding a company prior to incorporation. Thus no taxable event. Is this possible in a real estate deal, or am I forced to only be a profit sharing member of the LLC, taking distributions but not holding equity?
With so many partnership deals and syndications out there, there must be some proven strategies!
In a very simple word, if you didn't bring money into the deal, and you are entitled to receive money when the company liquidates (hypothetically) its capital with no basis of yours, then you will have to pay taxes on the money you got for free. An attorney can draft an agreement to avoid capital interest.
- If you dont want a taxable capital interest, your interest should only share future earnings and appreciation attributable to the profit interest. The capital interest participates immediately in some portion of the LLC's existing value. (If the value is 0, then it doesn't matter. But if assets are contributed, and you are entitled to the portion of the value, then it will create some taxable event).
This is a complicated area and you should work with an attorney and CPA.
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