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2021 Tax Planning Guide

Tax Rates and Business Structures

Real estate agent handing the house key

The corporate tax rate is now a flat 21%. There is also favorable treatment for pass-through entities, including S corporations and limited liability companies (LLCs). Now may be a good time to discuss your corporate structure with your tax and legal professionals.


REDUCED FEDERAL INCOME TAX RATE
Corporate entities are still double taxed on the corporate side and as individual taxpayers. While the lower corporate tax rate should help ease a bit of this tax burden, business owners can avoid this double taxation by organizing their
businesses as pass-through-entities, such as S corporations or limited liability companies (LLCs). There is no corporate income tax on business income for these entities. Instead, profits “flow through” to the individual tax returns of their owners, paying income tax once at their individual tax rate.


Sole proprietorships and partnerships also avoid double-taxation and receive ‘flow through’ treatment. But these latter two forms do not provide limited liability. Sole proprietors and partners may be personally liable for claims against their businesses.


PASS-THROUGH INCOME
Owners of some pass-through businesses can now take a deduction of up to 20% of qualified business income — plus 20% of qualified real estate investment trust (REIT) dividends and qualified publicly traded partnership (PTP) income. This tax break phases out for single taxpayers at $163,300 of taxable income, and for married taxpayers at $326,600 — not including qualified business income deduction. Above these thresholds, the deduction is based on whether you are a specified service trade business (SSTB) or not.
There is a caveat: The pass-through provision will pass into history in 2026 unless Congress votes to make it permanent.


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