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Is interest received from fix & flip loans subject to self employment tax?
Wanting to understand how the interest part of our income (partnership LLC) for short term loans- mostly fix & flips, are considered for tax. One accountant said it's not subject to self employment tax since it's considered passive (but origination fees and other loan income fees are subject to it. Another accountant said it's ordinary income subject to SE tax since we're a partnership LLC. Also anyone have insight on excess taxable income regarding the above and private lenders? Thanks
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Quote from @Cindy Auch:
Wanting to understand how the interest part of our income (partnership LLC) for short term loans- mostly fix & flips, are considered for tax. One accountant said it's not subject to self employment tax since it's considered passive (but origination fees and other loan income fees are subject to it. Another accountant said it's ordinary income subject to SE tax since we're a partnership LLC. Also anyone have insight on excess taxable income regarding the above and private lenders? Thanks
It depends. I'm sure you heard this a lot, but it is true.
Interest could either be "portfolio income" or "ordinary business income." It is decided on the partnership level and depends on whether this interest is incidental to your main business or it IS your main business, as well as the overall activities of the partnership, number of loans etc. It is case-by-case.
If it is portfolio income, it is reported on Line 5 of your partnership's K1, and there is no self-employment tax.
If it is ordinary business income, it is reported on Line 1 of your partnership's K1. Whether or not there is a self-employment tax attached is based on whether or not you materially participate in this business. The concept of material participation is not simple, unfortunately. Basically, if you run it hands-on and spend significant time doing it - probably there is material participation and self-employment tax.
As you can see, a generic yes/no answer is impossible for your question. It can only be answered after a detailed discussion of your business. Even after that, there could be different interpretations by different accountants.