If you own a profitable, unincorporated business with your
spouse, you probably find the high self-employment (SE) tax bills burdensome.
An unincorporated business in which both spouses are active is typically
treated by the IRS as a partnership owned 50/50 by the spouses. (For
simplicity, when we refer to “partnerships,” we’ll include in our definition
limited liability companies that are treated as partnerships for federal tax
purposes.)
For 2017, that means you’ll each
pay the maximum 15.3% SE tax rate on the first $127,200 of your respective
shares of net SE income from the business. Those bills can mount up if your
business is profitable. To illustrate: Suppose your business generates $250,000
of net SE income in 2017. Each of you will owe $19,125 ($125,000 × 15.3%), for
a combined total of $38,250.
Fortunately, there are ways spouse-owned businesses can lower
their combined SE tax hit. Here are two.
1. Establish that you don’t have a
spouse-owned partnership
While the IRS creates the impression that involvement by both
spouses in an unincorporated business automatically
creates a partnership for federal tax purposes, in many cases, it will have a
tough time making the argument — especially when:
- The spouses have no discernible partnership agreement,
and
- The business hasn’t been represented as a partnership
to third parties, such as banks and customers.
If you can establish that your business is a sole proprietorship
(or a single-member LLC treated as a sole proprietorship for tax purposes),
only the spouse who is considered the proprietor owes SE tax.
Let’s assume the same facts as in the previous example, except
that your business is a sole proprietorship operated by one spouse. Now you
have to calculate SE tax for only that spouse. For 2017, the SE tax bill is
$23,023 [($127,200 × 15.3%) + ($122,800 × 2.9%)]. That’s much less than the
combined SE tax bill from the first example ($38,250).
2. Establish that you don’t have a 50/50
spouse-owned partnership
Even if you do have a spouse-owned partnership, it’s not a given
that it’s a 50/50 one. Your business might more properly be characterized as
owned, say, 80% by one spouse and 20% by the other spouse, because one spouse
does much more work than the other.
Let’s assume the same facts as in the first example, except that
your business is an 80/20 spouse-owned partnership. In this scenario, the 80%
spouse has net SE income of $200,000, and the 20% spouse has net SE income of
$50,000. For 2017, the SE tax bill for the 80% spouse is $21,573 [($127,200 × 15.3%)
+ ($72,800 × 2.9%)], and the SE tax bill for the 20% spouse is $7,650 ($50,000
× 15.3%). The combined total SE tax bill is only $29,223 ($21,573 + $7,650).
More-complicated strategies are also available. Contact us to
learn more about how you can reduce your spouse-owned business’s SE taxes.
© 2017
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