@Linda Weygant, I'm an auditor and I'm vaguely familiar with taxes. The questions I'm about to ask might seem silly but I might be able to ask the right questions to help people.
1.) With an S-Corp being a flow through entity, are the profits of the S-Corp only taxed as they're passed through to the owner? Or for example an S-Corp with a Dec 31 Year End, YE, has a pretax profit of $50,000. If the S-Corp elects to not distribute the earnings to the owner(s), does the S-Corp pay taxes on the $50,000 in profit?
2.) In a BRRR strategy, if an S-Corp whose owner/investor has a strategy of combining BRRR and Flipping by Buying, Rehabbing, Renting, and then selling after 1 year, can the S-Corp and Investor take advantage of the lower Capital Gains Tax rate because the property was held for longer than a year making it a Long-Term Investment?
3.) In a BRRR strategy where you elect to hold property for 5 years, at a minimum, due to the new changes in the Federal tax code, can an S-Corp avoid built in gains taxes on properties held for a minimum of 5 years? Or is this only available to Corporations who are converting from a C to an S-Corp?
4.) If your S-Corp produces $200,000 in Pre-Tax profit and you want to defer paying taxes by reinvesting the $200,000 does the following scenario fulfill the requirement? (Note: This question is here to help investors who want to maximize liquidity: Say you purchase 2 SFH's that cost $100,000 each, ($200,000 total), and get 2 mortgages with 20% down, ($40,000 in total Down Payments, $160,000 in Mortgages Payable), does this satisfy your reinvestment requirements? This would allow an investor to keep $160,000 of cash liquid for reinvestment at any other time.
Background and a Spot for Keywords to gain attention:
I have plenty of other questions and work for a company in Arkansas with 150 CPA, of which 100 are in the Tax Department. I could ask them but decided to use the forum to hopefully help other's with questions. If an other CPA's, Certified Public Accountants, with Real Estate Tax experience, please feel free to chime in.