Significant Changes in Federal Tax Law Affecting Partnerships and LLC’s (2024)

Significant Changes in Federal Tax Law Affecting Partnerships and LLC’s

Author: Frank L. Brunetti

The Bipartisan Budget Act changed the procedures for auditing tax returns filed by partnerships. The TEFRA partnership audit procedures which were adopted in 1982 and the electing large partnership rules are repealed effective for returns filed for partnership tax years beginning after 2017.Significant Changes in Federal Tax Law Affecting Partnerships and LLC’s (1)These rules will be replaced with a new set of rules for auditing partnerships and their partners at the partnership level.

TheChanges in Federal Tax Law rules

Under the new approach, adjustments to a partnership’s items of income, gain, loss, deductions, and credits will be made at the partnership level. This means that the partnership for the first time in 75 years will be subject to a partnership level income tax. The tax rate will be the highest individual or corporate rate. Any additional tax, penalty, or additional amount related to the tax will also be determined at the partnership level [IRC Sec. 6221(a), effective after 2017]. If an adjustment to the partnership items is made, the partnership will be required to pay tax equal to the imputed underpayment, which is generally the net of all adjustments for the year under audit multiplied by the highest individual or corporate tax rate.

However, partnerships that can show that the underpayment would be lower if it were based on certain partner-level information can pay the lower amount. The information needed to show that a lower underpayment amount should apply could include amended returns of partners, the tax rates applicable to specific types of partners (e.g., individuals, corporations, or tax-exempt organizations), and the type of income subject to the adjustments ( IRC Sec. 6225, effective after 2017).

Partnership Adjustments and Requirements

Instead of taking the adjustment into account at the partnership level, a partnership can elect, not later than 45 days after receiving a notice of final partnership adjustment, to issue adjusted Schedules K-1 to the partners who were in the partnership in the year under audit. Those partners would then take the adjustments into account in the adjustment year by filing amended returns through a simplified amended return process (IRC Sec. 6226 , effective after 2017). This is called a “push out elections” which countermand the default rule above and makes the partners individually subject to the tax liability. Under this rule the interest rate on any deficiency paid by a partner is 2% higher than it would otherwise be.

Under the revised audit rules, partners generally must treat each item of income, gain, loss deduction, or credit attributable to a partnership consistently with the partnership’s treatment of the item. Any underpayment of tax by a partner due to failure to comply with this consistency requirement will be treated as a mathematical or clerical error (subject to the summary assessment procedures of IRC Sec. 6213(b)(1), and that the abatement requirement underIRC Sec. 6213(b)(2) will not apply. The consistency rule will not apply if (a) the partnership has filed a return but the partner’s treatment of the item is (or may be) inconsistent with the treatment on the partnership’s return or (b) the partnership has not filed a return, provided the partner files a statement with the IRS identifying the inconsistency [IRC Sec. 6222, effective after 2017].

“Opt out” of new rules

Partnerships with 100 or fewer partners can “opt out” of the new rules for any tax year, in which case the partnership and its partners will be audited under the general rules for individual taxpayers. Generally, to elect out, each of the partners has to be an individual, a C or S corporation, a foreign entity that would be treated as a C corporation were it domestic, the estate of a deceased member, or another person identified in future IRS guidance [IRC Sec. 6221(b), effective after 2017]. Notwithstanding if a partnership has a partnership or trust as a partner, they cannot elect out and they are subject to the new audit default rules.

Instead of waiting for the new rules to come into effect, partnerships generally can elect to apply them to returns filed after November 3, 2015.

Partnership Representative (PR)

The position of “Tax Matter Partner” has been replaced with “Partnership Representative. The “PR” need not be a partner. This person will have exclusive power to deal with the IRS. This means that the Partnership Representative will decide on resolving the tax issue and can allocate the additional tax in a manner that he, she or it deems reasonable.

Under the new rules, partners who are in the partnership in the year an adjustment is finalized bear the economic burden of any imputed underpayment paid at the partnership level, regardless of whether they were partners in the year the adjustment arose. This means that if a partnership’s tax year of 2018 is audited in 2020 and an adjustment is made in 2022, the partners who exist in 2022 will bear the economic burden of the adjustment for 2018 even though they might not have been partners in the audit year.

Adding an indemnification agreement to partnership agreements, under which partners who sell or liquidate their interest before an audit agree to be responsible for any adjustment attributable to years they were a partner, could address this problem.

Impact on Business Deal

The repeal of the TEFRA audit rules will have significant impact on every Partnership and LLC Operating Agreement and business deal.

Significant Impact on Preparation of Partnership Agreements

  • Designation of partnership representative.
  • Partner approval of certain decisions made by partnership representative.
  • Contractual notice/participation rights.
  • Indemnification by current and former partners of partnership tax liability under default rule (including method of allocating liability among partners).

Significant Impact on Partnership Transactions

  • Acquisitions of partnership interests.
  • Partnership M&A transactions.
  • Due diligence/representations/indemnification
  • Should partners seek to include in the agreements rights similar to those
    notice rights of beginning of administrative proceeding and final partnership administrative adjustment (former 6223(a));
  • PR is required to keep each partner informed of all administrative and judicial proceedings of partnership items (former 6223(g));
  • Right to participate in the proceeding (former 6624);
  • Petition for judicial review (former 6626);
  • Petition for an administrative adjustment (former 6627).

Planning Ahead for 2018

All existing and newly-formed partnerships should be considering provisions to be included in amended or new partnership agreements.

Because the audit rules have changed, the economic exposure of partners and members in LLCs have changed as well. Partners and LLC members will have to rethink their agreements, and come up with indemnifications, deal with indemnification by former partners, consider escrows in the event of purchase of partnership interests, and so on and so forth.

Do you have any questions? Would you like to discuss the matter further? If so, please contact me, Frank Brunetti, at 201-806-3364.

Significant Changes in Federal Tax Law Affecting Partnerships and LLC’s (2024)

FAQs

What are the tax implications of a partnership LLC? ›

Generally, members of LLCs filing Partnership Returns pay self-employment tax on their share of partnership earnings. If the LLC is a corporation, normal corporate tax rules will apply to the LLC and it should file a Form 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return.

How are the TCJA tax law changes affecting individual taxpayers? ›

TCJA repealed personal and dependent exemptions. In their place, the law increased the standard deduction and the child tax credit (CTC) and created a new $500 tax credit for dependents not eligible for the child tax credit (table 2).

What are the new tax changes for 2024? ›

Key provisions in the Tax Relief for American Families and Workers Act of 2024. The bill provides for increases in the child tax credit, delays the requirement to deduct research and experimentation expenditures over a five-year period, extends 100% bonus depreciation through 2025, and increases the Code Sec.

What is the new IRS rule for LLC? ›

New Rule Requires Small Businesses and LLCs to Report Ownership Information. Share: As of Jan. 1, 2024, many businesses will be required to report beneficial ownership information to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) to identify those who directly or indirectly own or control the company.

What is the federal tax rate for LLC partnership? ›

If an LLC is listed as a C Corporation, the LLC must file corporate income taxes. In 2022, the federal corporate income tax rate is 21%, with many states adding their own taxes on top of that. Along with the corporate income tax, any profits or dividends distributed to members are subject to capital gains tax.

Is it better to be taxed as a partnership or LLC? ›

In general, an LLC offers better liability protection and more tax flexibility than a partnership. But the type of business you're in, the management structure, and your state's laws may tip the scales toward partnership.

What are the tax changes in the TCJA? ›

The TCJA also simplified the tax system by significantly reducing the number of households caught up in the alternative minimum tax (AMT) by increasing the AMT exemption and the exemption phaseout thresholds and by repealing the Pease limitation on itemized deductions.

What were some of the significant tax law changes for individuals beginning in 2018? ›

Itemized deductions: For 2018, the following changes have been made to itemized deductions that taxpayers can claim on Schedule A: o Your itemized deductions are no longer limited if your adjusted gross income is over a certain amount. o You can deduct the part of your medical and dental expenses that is more than 7.5 ...

What changes did TCJA make? ›

The TCJA changed the U.S. corporate tax system from worldwide to territorial. U.S. corporations no longer have to pay U.S. taxes on most future overseas profits. U.S. corporations paid U.S. taxes on all profits no matter where they were earned under the previous system.

At what age is Social Security no longer taxed? ›

Social Security tax FAQs

Social Security income can be taxable no matter how old you are. It all depends on whether your total combined income exceeds a certain level set for your filing status. You may have heard that Social Security income is not taxed after age 70; this is false.

What are the federal tax changes for 2026? ›

At the end of 2025, the individual tax. provisions in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) expire all at once. Without congressional action, most taxpayers will see a notable tax increase relative to current policy in 2026. In 2026, business taxes will also be higher as 100 percent bonus depreciation.

Why is everyone owing taxes this year in 2024? ›

Under-withholding from Your Paycheck

Under-withholding is the #1 reason individuals owe taxes. This occurs when not enough tax is taken out of your paychecks throughout the year. If you haven't updated your W-4 form after a major life change, income adjustment, or second job, you might find yourself in this situation.

How can an LLC avoid income tax? ›

File as an S corporation

LLCs have the option of filing as an S corp., the main benefit of which is it provides a mechanism for reducing self-employment taxes. Under an S corp structure, the owner of an LLC can be considered an employee and receive a salary.

What is the difference between a partnership and an LLC? ›

An LLC is a business entity with a defined legal structure. An LLC is distinct from the personal financial status of the owner(s), even if the owner(s) created the business entirely with their own money. A partnership is a broader term used to describe mutually exclusive types of businesses.

How do LLCs avoid paying taxes twice? ›

LLCs avoid double taxation because they are a pass-through entity—there is no tax on profits at the LLC level, only at the individual member level.

Do LLC partners have to file taxes together? ›

LLCs classified as partnerships (more than one member) generally determine and report their California income, deductions, and credits separately under the personal income tax law. These items pass through to their owners for purposes of taxation.

Is an LLC taxed as a limited partnership? ›

LLCs can elect to be taxed as a C Corporation, an S Corporation, or a disregarded entity. 9 Both an LLC and LP's default tax status is to be taxed as a partnership. An LLC may be taxed as a partnership, C-Corp, S-Corp, or disregarded entity.

Are LLCs and partnerships taxed the same? ›

State Taxation

Most states tax LLCs in the same way that they choose to be taxed on their federal return. General Partnerships, on the other hand, are taxed using the state's partnership tax rules. Most states require the partnership to make a tax filing.

How are owners of a partnership taxed? ›

General partnerships do not pay annual tax; however, limited partnerships are subject to the annual tax of $800. For information on estimated payments, go to our due dates page.

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