Tax Savings Tips: March 2022
Tax-Saving Tips
March 2022
New Hope for
Restoring and Fixing the Employee Retention Credit
As
you may remember, two bad things happened to the Employee Retention Credit
(ERC):
1.
On
November 15, 2021, Congress retroactively repealed the ERC for the fourth
quarter of 2021 (except for start-up businesses).
2.
On
August 4, 2021, the IRS issued the clearly irrational Notice 2021-49, stating
that a corporate owner with certain living relatives does not qualify for the
ERC.
Hope
in the House
On
December 7, 2021, Rep. Carol D. Miller (R-WV-3) and three co-sponsors offered
H.R. 6161, the Employee Retention Tax Credit Reinstatement Act, which would
reinstate the ERC for the fourth quarter. On the day it was presented, the
House referred the bill to its Committee on Ways and Means—a good thing.
Today,
there are 54 bipartisan co-sponsors. The bill has some legs.
Hope
in the Senate
On
February 10, 2022, Sen. Margaret Wood Hassan (D-NH) along with four co-sponsors
introduced S. 3625 (identical to H.R. 6161) in the Senate, where it was read
twice and referred to the Senate Committee on Finance.
The
bill now has seven co-sponsors. Sen. Hassan and three of the co-sponsors are on
the Senate Committee on Finance—a good sign.
Your
Turn
Now
is a good time to call your congressional representatives and ask them to both
·
support
H.R. 6161 or S. 3625 to reinstate the ERC for the fourth quarter of 2021, and
·
override
IRS Notice 2021-49 and allow the ERC on the wages paid to corporate
owner-employees. Clarity on this is important to everyone, including the IRS.
How
to Do It
Make
as many phone calls as you can. Start with the tax law writers, your senators,
and your congressional representative. Here’s contact information for them:
·
Richard
Neal, Chairman, Committee on Ways and Means, United States House of
Representatives (telephone: 1-202-225-5601; fax: 1-202-225-8112; for email and
other contact info, click
here)
·
Kevin
Brady, Ranking Member, Committee on Ways and Means, United States House of
Representatives (telephone: 1-202-225-4901; fax: 1-202-225-5524; for email and
other contact info, click here)
·
Ron
Wyden, Chairman, Committee on Finance, United States Senate (telephone:
1-202-224-5244; fax: 1-202-228-2717; for email and other contact info, click here)
·
Mike
Crapo, Ranking Member, Committee on Finance, United States Senate (telephone:
1-202-224-6142; fax: 1-202-228-1375; for email and other contact info, click here)
·
Your
congressional representative (telephone: 1-202-224-3121; for other contact
info, click
here)
·
Your
two senators (telephone: 1-202-224-3121; for email and other contact info, click here)
Please
note that when you reach out in this way, it often feels as though you are
communicating with a black hole and your message is not getting any attention.
That’s wrong. Senators and congressional representatives log everything. You
are being heard.
IRAs for Kids
Working
at a tender age is an American tradition. What isn’t so traditional is the
notion of kids contributing to their own IRA, especially a Roth IRA. But it should
be a tradition, because it’s a really good idea.
Here’s
what you need to know about IRAs for kids. Let’s start with the Roth IRA
option.
Roth
IRA Contribution Basics
The
only federal-income-tax-law requirement for a child to make an annual Roth IRA
contribution is to have enough earned income during the year to cover the
contribution. Age is completely irrelevant.
So
if a child earns some cash from a summer job or part-time work after school, he
or she is entitled to make a Roth contribution for that year.
For
both the 2021 and 2022 tax years, your working child can contribute the lesser
of
·
his
or her earned income for the year, or
·
$6,000.
While
the same $6,000 contribution limit applies equally to Roth IRAs and traditional
IRAs, the Roth option is usually better for kids.
Key
point.
A contribution for your child’s 2021 tax year can be made as late as April 15,
2022. So, there’s still time for that.
Modest
Contributions to Child’s Roth IRA Can Amount to Big Bucks by Retirement Age
By
making Roth contributions for a few years during the teenage years, your kid
can potentially accumulate quite a bit of money by retirement age.
But
realistically, most kids won’t be willing to contribute the $6,000 annual
maximum even when they have enough earnings to do so.
Say
the child contributes $2,500 at the end of each year for four years. Assuming a
5 percent annual rate of return, the Roth account would be worth about $82,000
in 45 years. Assuming a more optimistic 8 percent return, the account value
jumps to a whopping $259,000. Wow!
You
get the idea. With relatively modest annual contributions for just a few years,
Roth IRAs can be worth eye-popping amounts by the time your “kid” approaches
retirement age.
Vacation Home
Rental—What’s Best for You: Schedule C or E?
Do
you have a beach or mountain home that you rent out?
If
the average period of rental is less than 30 days, you likely have a
choice—either
·
claim
the income and expenses on Schedule C, or
·
claim
the income and expenses on Schedule E.
When
Is Schedule C a Good Choice?
If
you show a tax loss on your rental property, Schedule C is a great choice
because it allows you to deduct your rental losses against all other income
(assuming you materially participate in the rental property).
If
you show taxable income on the rental property, Schedule C is not good because
it causes you to pay self-employment taxes.
When
Is Schedule E a Good Choice?
If
you show taxable income on the transient rental, Schedule E is best because you
don’t pay any self-employment taxes on Schedule E income.
If
you show a loss on your transient rental and you materially participate, you can
deduct your losses against all other income, but those Schedule E losses do not
reduce self-employment income.
Okay,
now you know how to play the game.
IRS
in Summary Mode
In
recent advice, the IRS stated that rentals of living quarters are not subject
to self-employment tax when no services are rendered for the occupants.
But
if services are rendered for the occupants, and the services rendered
1.
are
not clearly required to maintain the space in a condition for occupancy, and
2.
are
of such a substantial nature that the compensation for these services can be
said to constitute a material portion of the rent,
then
the net rental income received is subject to the self-employment tax.
Entertainment
Facility: Perk for You, Your Net Worth, and Your Employees
Imagine
this: your Schedule C business buys a home at the beach, uses it solely as an
entertainment facility for business, pays off the mortgage, and deducts all the
expenses.
Now
say, 10 years later, without any tax consequence to you, you start using the
beach home as your own.
Is
this possible? Yes. Are there some rules on this? Yes. Are the rules difficult?
No.
Okay,
so could you achieve the same result if you operate your business as a
corporation? Yes, but the corporation needs to rent the property from you or
reimburse you for the facility costs, including mortgage interest and
depreciation—because you want the title to always be in your name, not the
corporation’s name.
The
beach home, ski cabin, or other entertainment facility must be primarily for
the benefit of employees other than those who are officers, shareholders, or
other owners of a 10 percent or greater interest in the business, or other
highly compensated employees. In this situation, you create
·
100
percent entertainment facility tax deductions for the employer (you or, if
incorporated, your corporation), and
·
tax-free
use by the employees.
The
employee facility deduction is straightforward. It has three splendid benefits
for the small-business owner:
1.
You
deduct the facility as a business asset.
2.
Your
employees get to use the facility tax-free.
3.
You
own the property and can use it personally without tax consequences once you no
longer need it for business use. (Note that when you sell, you will have a gain
or loss on the sale and some possible recapture of depreciation.)
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