Article Date:
May 2018


Word Count:
1364

 

 

Do Your Business Losses Make You an IRS Target? If So, Do This


If you operate what you think is a business, but that business loses money, it may not be a business at all under the tax code.1

 

Such a money-losing activity can look like a tax shelter to the IRS, and that substantially increases your chances of an IRS audit.2

 

The tax code contains a business loss safe harbor that’s known as a presumption of profit. You meet this safe harbor when your activity produces a profit in three of five years (two of seven for breeding, training, showing, or racing of horses).3

 

When you meet the safe harbor, you are presumed a business unless the IRS establishes to the contrary.4

 

Most taxpayers and tax professionals know this for-profit tax code section as the hobby loss section. But you can see that this tax code section creates trouble for much more than you would consider a simple hobby.

 

And as you may remember from the two recent articles below, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (known as tax reform) killed for eight years all the business deductions that apply to any activity deemed a hobby:

 

·

Tax Reform Puts Screws to Hobbies

·

Q&A: Loophole to Deduct Hobby Expenses after Tax Reform

 

Example. Henry has an activity that fails the business test and loses money. Last year, he had $70,000 of income and $100,000 of losses. Under pre-tax-reform law, Henry could claim the hobby-related business deductions up to the amount of his income. So Henry deducted $70,000 (subject to some minor adjustments) and reported close to zero taxable income.

 

Not this year. Tax reform is going to make Henry suffer. With the same facts, Henry’s business deductions are zero. His taxable income is $70,000.

 

Think about that. Henry lost $30,000 ($70,000 - $100,000) in real money. He now pays taxes on $70,000 of phantom income.

 

What can Henry do to make this problem go away? He has two choices.

 

·

First, as we discussed in Tax Reform Puts Screws to Hobbies, he could create a “for profit” business defense in the hope that he would defeat the IRS in an audit.

·

Alternatively, he could stop the taxation on his phantom income ... Log in to view full article.

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