Jump to content

George Skidis

Members
  • Posts

    58
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    2

George Skidis last won the day on January 9 2023

George Skidis had the most liked content!

2 Followers

About George Skidis

  • Birthday July 23

Personal Information

  • Address
    2919 South Belt West, Suite C, Belleville, Illinois, 62226-5140
  • Are you a REIA Member?
    Yes
  • Which REIA are you a member of?
    Illinois REIA

Investing Information

  • Please select the region you invest in:
    Midwest
  • Full time or part time investor?
    Full Time

Interests

  • Investing Interests
    Buy & Hold/Landlording

Organizational Memberships

  • Are you a member of any of these organizations?
    ARPOLA
    REIFA

Recent Profile Visitors

1,742 profile views

George Skidis's Achievements

Enthusiast

Enthusiast (6/14)

  • Reacting Well Rare
  • Dedicated Rare
  • Collaborator Rare
  • First Post Rare
  • Conversation Starter Rare

Recent Badges

4

Reputation

Single Status Update

See all updates by George Skidis

  1. A common Question I am asked is how should my LLC be taxed. Here is some advice on that.

    Warning: Your FIRST LLC Tax Return is due March 15th the year after it is set up. So if you set it up in 2021 your first tax return is due March 15th 2022 -  EVEN IF YOU DIDN"T MAKE A DIME! The late filing penalty is $290 per month per member. 4 months late with 5 members the penalty is $5,800. Make sure you file on time.

    I prepare almost 200 tax returns a year. When it comes to an LLC the IRS will let you choose how you wish to be taxed. As a Multi Member LLC you can be taxed as a Partnership. Not a way to save any money. You can choose C-Corp, also not a great choice. However without looking at anyone's tax returns I would think an S-Corp would be your best choice. It allows principals to receive a distribution which is not subject to self employment tax only passive income tax. 

    Example: The LLC makes a profit after expenses of $100,000 and there are two members. If the LLC issues paychecks to each member of $30,000 ($60,000 total) that leaves $40,000 not subject to self employment tax. Each member then receives a distribution of $20,000. That saves around 15.3% self employment tax or $3,060 per member. They will still pay income tax depending on their individual income tax bracket but they saved $3,060 each on self employment taxes.

    Each of you should purchase "The Tax and Legal Playbook" by Mark J. Kohler and study this topic in more detail.

    Your LLC also needs an operating agreement to holdup in court. If you treat it just like a C-Corporation when it comes to maintaining meetings, minutes and record keeping it will protect you. Failure to do so can end up with the LLC being set aside. This works just like a when a judge allows a plaintiff to pierce the corporate veil and pursue each officer individually. Lee Phillips at LegalLees.com has a great course on LLCs. Let me know if I can help you with that.

    Good Luck and Good Investing

×
×
  • Create New...