Not-so-ancient history
Until the 2016 tax year, the filing deadline for partnerships
was the same as that for individual taxpayers: April 15 (or shortly thereafter
if April 15 fell on a weekend or holiday). One of the primary reasons for
moving up the partnership filing deadline was to make it easier for owners to
file their personal returns by the April filing deadline. After all,
partnership (and S corporation) income passes through to the owners. The
earlier date allows owners to use the information contained in the pass-through
entity forms to file their personal returns.
For partnerships with fiscal year ends, tax returns are now due
the 15th day of the third month after the close of the tax year. The same
deadline applies to fiscal-year S corporations. Under prior law, returns for
fiscal-year partnerships were due the 15th day of the fourth month after the close
of the fiscal tax year.
Avoiding a tragedy
If you haven’t filed your calendar-year partnership or S
corporation return yet and are worried about having sufficient time to complete
it, you can avoid the tragedy of a late return by filing for an extension.
Under the current law, the maximum extension for calendar-year partnerships is
six months (until September 16, 2019, for 2018 returns). This is up from five
months under the old law. So the extension deadline is the same — only the
length of the extension has changed. The extension deadline for calendar-year S
corporations also is September 16, 2019, for 2018 returns.
Whether you’ll be filing a partnership or an S corporation
return, you must file for the extension by March 15 if it’s a calendar-year
entity.
Extending the drama
Filing for an extension can be tax-smart if you’re missing
critical documents or you face unexpected life events that prevent you from
devoting sufficient time to your return right now.
But to avoid potential interest and penalties, you still must
(with a few exceptions) pay any tax due by the unextended deadline. There probably
won’t be any tax liability from the partnership or S corporation return. But,
if filing for an extension for the entity return causes you to also have to
file an extension for your personal
return, it could cause you to owe interest and penalties in relation to your
personal return.
We can help you file your tax returns on a timely basis or
determine whether filing for an extension is appropriate. Contact us today.
© 2019
No comments:
Post a Comment