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Level 5
February 17, 2021
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S-Corp late election - how to report payroll tax

  • February 17, 2021
  • 2 replies
  • 48 views
My client decided to elect to be an S-Corp by filing Form 2553 pursuant to Rev Proc. 2013-30 together with the first Form 1120S.  He is a 100% shareholder.  As the election was made after the Form 941 and Form 940 filing deadline, in this case, how should I report payroll tax for him?
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Best answer by qbteachmt

I think the most reasonable solution is for IRS to set up an exception on the late payroll process for tax payers who adopt Rev 2013-30, and waive the late filing penalty and incremental burden on the taxpayers.  Because many taxpayers are unaware of the S-Corp election could benefit them, like my client, who is not a start-up business, and making more than 100% business growth every year.  If you are unaware, you won't have the intent to make the election timely.  You could have made the election timely if you were aware that was an option.  Is there a way to propose the IRA to provide some relief on this, so people do not get penalized by trying to do the right thing? 

 

The IRS do have Rev Proc 2016-47 to waive 60 day roll-over requirement when the taxpayer is unaware of the receiving account was not a qualified plan.  

 


"to set up an exception on the late payroll process"

Let's understand the no one here provided the recommendation to apply for this as a Late election; we don't know who gave that recommendation or why.

I did post this, copied from the IRS: "The entity and all shareholders reported their income consistent with an S corporation election in effect for the year the election should have been made and all subsequent years"

Which is why @rbynaker contributed an example of why late election might be appropriate.

"and waive the late filing penalty and incremental burden on the taxpayers."

It's a one-time thing, to do an annual payroll. And I like to point out, doing it timely or doing it later is the same amount of work. There is no Added burden here.

"Because many taxpayers are unaware of the S-Corp election could benefit them"

There's very little additional benefit to this election for single-member LLC/Sole Proprietorship with no employees.

"Is there a way to propose the IRA to provide some relief on this, so people do not get penalized by trying to do the right thing?"

Well, "I didn't know" is not really an excusable exception, if none of the conditions are being met.

It seems you are insisting this will be S Corp for 2020 activities.

There is always the possibility you can make precedence or get a private ruling:

https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/late-election-relief

 

2 replies

qbteachmt
Level 15
February 17, 2021

"in this case, how should I report payroll tax for him? "

Late. It's all late. You need to "do payroll" and there will be taxes and penalties, too.

Don't yell at us; we're volunteers
TaxesTechAuthor
Level 5
February 17, 2021

Why can't I file a Schedule C for the business owner as if the S-Corp 1099'ed him and report both EE and ER portion or payroll taxes on schedule SE?  Technically I should force the Schedule C QBI deduction to zero but it just does not make sense that Rev Proc 2013-30 allows retrospective late election, and there is no corresponding payroll tax filing process in place to facilitate this.  

In nature the S-Corp did pay the 100% owner as a 1099 contractor, and I think the QBI deduction is appropriate too.  

qbteachmt
Level 15
February 18, 2021

"Why can't I file a Schedule C for the business owner as if the S-Corp 1099'ed him and report both EE and ER portion or payroll taxes on schedule SE?"

Because this is not the person being a subcontractor to their own entity by running a different entity. In  addition, in the simplest terms, think of your proposal as Worker Misclassification, setting aside the issue of trying to have your own entity treat you as independent.

And the other issue is to understand that the IRS will look at any funds taken from the S Corp (you would call it Draw from the Sched C business), which is Distribution in the S Corp and if not taking a reasonable wage through payroll, and they recharacterize it as Payroll, because an S Corp is required to have payroll for the people it hired to do its business. Then, the IRS will declare you attempted to avoid Payroll taxes, which is punishable as tax avoidance is illegal. So, did you want payroll recharacterization, or just confess to it up front but be late about it?

"In nature the S-Corp did pay the 100% owner as a 1099 contractor, and I think the QBI deduction is appropriate too."

Is there something else you overlooked telling us? It's a subsidiary, the person was paid as an employee through the other corporation, they didn't even do business in 2020 and payroll is timely now for Jan 2021, perhaps there were no operations and only startup? Are you setting a Fiscal Year?

You should review what the IRS requires, including as example:

 

  • The entity and all shareholders reported their income consistent with an S corporation election in effect for the year the election should have been made and all subsequent years; and
  • Less than 3 years and 75 days have passed since the effective date of the election (See the Exception to the 3 Years and 75 Day Rule section below).

 

So far, nothing here is "special."

Don't yell at us; we're volunteers
IRonMaN
Level 15
February 18, 2021

Why was the election done, if he really didn't want to treat the business as an 1120S?  Folks that don't want to take out payroll should go the LLC route and stay a schedule C.  Corporations aren't a proper fit for everyone.

Slava Ukraini!
TaxesTechAuthor
Level 5
February 18, 2021

I think that is a good question why the election is done.  Another way to ask the same question is why there is a Rev Proc. 2013-30.  I came from Big 4 subsequent technical accounting on derivatives.  But due to COVID I am one of the small business player now.  Small businesses are extremely underserved and I am passionate to start new initiatives to bring service quality to small businesses as well. 

Originally it is a question on how to report on a very common scenario that is commonly not done right.  I am just trying to clean this process up.  I did not expect it become an academic debate and that is why I love tax.  So there is basically no answer without digging in case law.  

I did not mean to make you do research - I just think you are very knowledgeable and maybe you have a case number on mind.  If not, that is totally fine.  I am accumulating all these little things and this would be one of the most precious cases in my notes.  

 

Thank you and I hope you have a great day.  

rbynaker
Level 13
February 18, 2021

@TaxesTech wrote:

I think that is a good question why the election is done.  Another way to ask the same question is why there is a Rev Proc. 2013-30.

I'll chime in, mostly because I appreciate your being polite.  We need more of that here.

The late election procedures exist for the umpteen cases where the lawyer thought that the accountant was going to file the 2553 and the accountant thought the lawyer was going to do it.  Meanwhile the client put themselves on payroll and rather than try to unwind a bunch of payroll that has no business being on Schedule C the IRS allows the late election.  They don't want to have to process all of those amended payroll returns either.

If you read the RP though you'll find that it requires that "The Requesting Entity intended to be classified as an S corporation".  IMO if you never started payroll then it's hard to argue that an S election is anything more than an afterthought.

Rick