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Can you buy a house through your S Corp?

There is no S corp rule or regulation to stop you from buying a house through your business. In fact, an S corporation is one of the types of business structures often considered for a business that will focus on real estate investing.

Why is there no real estate in S Corp?

This is because distributions of real estate from an S Corp. to its shareholders trigger tax on the gain at the time of distribution. Distribution of the real estate from a partnership to its partners does not trigger gain on distribution. The tax is deferred until sale of the real estate by the individual partners.

Should real estate be in an S Corp?

Holding real estate in an S corporation may seem like a great idea when forming a new entity. S corporations avoid double-taxation, protect shareholders liability, reduce self-employment taxes and (under certain conditions) allow for contribution of appreciated property to the S corporation without recognizing a gain.

Do you have to have s Corp for rental property?

As a side note, it is NOT a good idea to make an S-Corp election on your LLC if it owns rental property. Rental property by definition is passive income (unless you are a real estate professional as defined by the IRS) and therefore not subject to self-employment tax.

What happens if you own real estate in a S corporation?

Holding real estate in an S corp does not pose a problem while it is held. You can collect rent, pay expenses, and put the property in the name of the S corporation. Business is run as usual, and asset protection is in effect if you operate the corporation property. The issues arise when it’s time to get the property out of the entity.

When is S corporation rental income not passive?

If that continues for three years, it loses its S election. Included in passive income is “rents”, but not all rents. If the corporation is doing enough to manage the property then the rent is not passive. The corporation in this ruling was doing enough:

Can a property be transferred from a LLC to a s Corp?

In both an LLC and an S corp, taxes for transferring property start out in a similar way. For example, if you own a property that has not depreciated, but you want to transfer it to another entity for liability reasons, the process would be the same in both an S corp or LLC.