The IRS Issues Proposed Regulations on the Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction - The Wealthy Accountant (2024)

The IRS is true to their word when they said they’d issue regulations on the Qualified Business Income Deduction, otherwise known as QBI, by the end of summer. In the past week proposed regulations were published, coming in at 184 pages. Remember these are “proposed” regulations. Final regulations come after guys like me pick it apart. Most of what you see probably survives so it is a good time to start the planning process.

Accountants who wanted to get a jump-start advising clients on ways to maximize the deduction are in for a rude surprise. Most schemes are out. At the end of this post I will outline what can be done to maximize the deduction.

The 184 pages of proposed regs cover more than just QBI. We will discuss the most relevant here. Consider consulting with a tax professional to review how your personal situation is affected by these proposed regulations.

If I find any other juicy tidbits, I’ll publish. If not, I’ll wait until the final regs are issued.

Who Qualifies?

First, let’s clarify what the QBI deduction is. The QBI deduction is a 20% non-cash deduction for qualified business income (generally profits) for small businesses (sole proprietors, LLCs, S corporations, partnerships and some trusts) and income property investors.

The IRS confirmed what I suspected when they said QBI applies to self-employed persons, along with pass-through entities (S corps, partnerships, LLCs) and certain trusts. I think there is room for debate of the sole proprietor issues, but if the IRS gives the green light I’m happy to oblige. QBI is also available for income property owners with somewhat different rules.

Some issues the IRS clarified are pretty straight forward from H.R. 1. Phase out of the deduction starts at $315,000 for joint returns and $157,500 for the rest of the crowd if the business is in a listed field. The deduction is reduced to zero for that business once income exceeds $415,000 for joint returns; $207,500 for other returns.

The fields restricted by the above phase out are:

  • Health
  • Law
  • Accounting
  • Consulting
  • Performing Arts
  • Actuarial Science
  • Athletics
  • Financial/Brokerage/Investment Management/Securities Trading/Securities Dealers

One issue worth pointing out is the phase out is applied per business! This opens a potential planning opportunity where you break a larger company into parts to fall under the limits. Except the IRS knows this trick already and nixed it.

The IRS Issues Proposed Regulations on the Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction - The Wealthy Accountant (1)This doesn’t mean you can’t have multiple businesses. QBI is calculated separately for each business, but if the same owner/s has two or more similar businesses they are combined in many cases! The “bust the company into a bunch of littler companies” idea doesn’t work.

Small businesses are still punished in a way for raising employee wages.Items I published previously are correct.

And talking about wages: enterprising tax professionals may have advised you to fire employees and hire them back as independent contractors. This way the old employees are really business owners and get a 20% deduction on their wages. The IRS has made clear this will NOT be allowed. This and similar schemes will be pursued and denied by Revenue. Penalties and interest will apply. You’ve been warned.

Investors in Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) have clarity with the proposed regs when claiming QBI. I’ll discuss this in a future post closer to tax season as the planning opportunities are limited for most taxpayers.

S corporations exclude reasonable compensation to owners when calculating QBI. The same applies to guaranteed payments to partners. Every idea I’ve seen to game the system involving owner’s compensation is clarified in the proposed regs and not allowed. But there are legal ways to maximize QBI.

Legal Ways to Increase QBI

Fancy footwork may seem the way to go when dealing with the new tax rules, but the old reliable methods of reducing income have a better chance having stood the test of time.

Lowering your income if you are already below the phase out has less benefit than in the past as business deductions are technically only worth 80 cents on the dollar. (You get a 20% deduction anyway if you don’t invest in the expense.) Below the phase out you need to consider the long-term effects on your tax situation. Additional equipment purchases or promotional expenses may not be the best choice when you consider the reduced profits mean a reduced QBI deduction. Example: You elect to spend an additional $10,000 on advertising. The additional deduction is only $8,000 since you would have received a $2,000 QBI deduction anyway.

The phase out is where things really get interesting. If you’re reasonably close to the phase out threshold, a modest amount of planning could make the difference between the full QBI deduction and no deduction at all. Remember, you can’t just increase your paycheck (assuming you are an owner receiving reasonable compensation) to reduce the company profits since reasonable compensation isn’t considered when calculating QBI. Let’s start with some small things and work up to large deductions you can take to qualify for the QBI deduction.

Office in the home: Sole proprietors can deduction a regular and exclusive office in the home using actual expenses or the safe harbor of $5 per square foot, up to 300 square feet. This is more valuable than in the part with the standard deduction much higher and state and local taxes (SALT) deductions limited on Schedule A.

The IRS Issues Proposed Regulations on the Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction - The Wealthy Accountant (2)Missing deductions: It might sound strange, but many business owners forget to take all their deductions. Business miles are deductible. Keep a log book in your vehicle so every mile is counted. Small cash payments for business expenses add up. Track them all. Any expense related to the business should be included. The IRS used “ordinary and necessary” as their term for what is allowed as a business expense. This is a wide road.

Section 1.263(a)-1(f) de minimis election: The de minimis election allows you to deduct all items that would normally be depreciated under $2,500. This is per item! For businesses this doesn’t mean much as bonus depreciation (more on this later) allows much larger deductions. But income property owners benefit mightily! Most stoves and refrigerators are under $2,500. Expensing anything connected to real estate under Section 179 isn’t allowed, even stoves and refrigerators. For most taxpayers this is a moot point as bonus depreciation counts for all assets with a class life of 20 years or less. But, many states limit Section 179 depreciation or don’t exactly follow federal tax rules for bonus depreciation. To my knowledge, all states follow this de minimis election, thereby bypassing Section 179 and bonus depreciation issues. Note: you can clean your depreciation schedule, too. Previous items under $2,500 can be currently expensed if the election is made. This could be a sizable deduction if you have a lot of small items on your depreciation schedule from prior years.

Repair Regs: Section 1.263(a)-3(h) election: This election allows for a deduction of up to $10,000 for an improvement as a repair. Property improvements do not fall under the bonus depreciation rules. Example: a bathroom or kitchen in an office or income property is probably an improvement by most measures and therefore depreciated over 27.5 or 39 years. If the remodel is $10,000 or less (per remodel or improvement) you can elect to treat the improvement as a repair and expense the entire amount. This is important. You might have a deck on a property replaced for $3,000, a roof for $9,000 and a minor bathroom remodel for $6,000. Each is a separate event. Each is under $10,000. You can elect for each improvement (you make multiple elections for multiple improvements) to deduct the amount as a repair expense. In this case the total repair expense deducted is $18,000.

Bonus depreciation: Bonus depreciation is back at 100% for assets with a class life of 20 years or less. This is by far the easiest way to chew huge chunks of reportable profit from a business. The decision for a machine shop to purchase a new piece of equipment this year or next for $200,000 will require a review of the current circ*mstances. If this year’s profits are too high for the QBI deduction, it might be advantageous to purchase the equipment this year. If not, you can save the purchase for next year. Facts and circ*mstances will prevail. If there is one area to get creative, it’s here. One caveat: restaurant, retail and leasehold improvements (qualified improvement property) acquired and placed in service between September 28, 2017 and December 31, 2017 get the 100% bonus depreciation, but not afterwards unless the tax law glitch is fixed. Don’t hold your breath.

I don’t want to get any longer on such a technical post. I just want you to understand there are many ways to take advantage of the current tax environment. The proposed regulations cover a wide variety of material. When the regs finalize I’ll publish more.

Until then, feel free to leave questions in the comments. I’ll answer the best I can with the limited information you provide me and as time permits. As previously noted, the proposed regs run 184 pages. I focused on the issues affecting my clients most. There are lesser issues that also affect clients I didn’t touch on. For example, I didn’t touch on the “reputation or skill” clause as it relates to QBI.

To keep this blog readable I’ll break up the technical tax posts with plenty of entertaining and useful wealth building, early retirement, side hustle and frugal living posts. It’s always good to have a family friendly blog.

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The IRS Issues Proposed Regulations on the Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction - The Wealthy Accountant (2024)

FAQs

What are the limitations on the QBI deduction? ›

The deduction is limited to the lesser of the QBI component plus the REIT/PTP component or 20 percent of the taxpayer's taxable income minus net capital gain.

What disqualifies QBI deduction? ›

Facts About the Qualified Business Income Deduction. Accessed Nov 20, 2023. . Many high earners in these fields won't qualify for this tax break, because in 2023, it disappears once you hit a total taxable income of $232,100 if you're single, and $464,200 if you're married filing jointly.

What are the general rules surrounding the QBI deduction? ›

But it is available regardless of whether you itemize deductions or take the standard deduction. In general, the deduction cannot exceed 20% of the excess of your taxable income over net capital gain. If QBI is less than zero, it is treated as a loss from a qualified business in the following year.

Why am I getting a QBI deduction? ›

Did you do some work where you were paid directly by a customer or business, with no taxes withheld from your compensation? You may or may not have also received a 1099-NEC in the mail to document this payment(s). Either way, this is considered self-employment income, which means you're eligible for the QBI deduction.

Who cannot take the QBI deduction? ›

Income earned through a C corporation or by providing services as an employee is not eligible for the deduction.

What is the cut off for QBI deduction? ›

Exception 1: If your 2023 taxable income before the QBI deduction isn't more than $364,200 if married filing jointly, and $182,100 for all other returns, your SSTB is treated as a qualified trade or business, and thus may generate income eligible for the QBI deduction.

What is the 20 rule for Qbi? ›

Deduction for Taxable Income Up to $182,100 ($364,200 if Married) For 2023, the threshold is taxable income up to $364,200 if married filing jointly, or up to $182,100 if single. If your income is within this threshold, your pass-through deduction is equal to 20% of your qualified business income (QBI).

What is true about QBI deduction? ›

With the QBI deduction, most self-employed taxpayers and small business owners can exclude up to 20% of their qualified business income from federal income tax (but not self-employment tax) whether they itemize or not.

Which entity is not eligible for the Qbid? ›

The QBID is available whether a taxpayer itemizes deductions on Schedule A or takes the standard deduction. Income earned by providing services as an employee or earned through a C corporation is not eligible for QBID.

Does QBI go away in 2025? ›

For several tax regulations and credits introduced as part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), 2025 marks the end of their eligibility period, including for the qualified business income deduction (QBI), unless Congress acts to extend it.

Is QBI deduction going away? ›

The qualified business income (QBI) deduction is available to eligible businesses through 2025. After that, it's scheduled to disappear. So if you're eligible, you want to make the most of the deduction while it's still on the books because it can potentially be a big tax saver.

How do you solve for QBI deduction? ›

How to Calculate QBI for Your Small Business
  1. QBI (the net amount of income, gain, deduction, and loss from any qualified trade or business) multiplied by 20%
  2. Taxable income multiplied by 20% minus net capital gains and qualified dividends.

What are the limitations on business interest deduction? ›

A taxpayer's deduction of business interest expenses paid or incurred is generally limited to 30 percent of the taxpayer's adjusted taxable income (ATI), but not less than zero.

Who qualifies for the 20% pass-through deduction? ›

199A Deduction) The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) created a deduction for households with income from sole proprietorships, partnerships, and S corporations, which allows taxpayers to exclude up to 20 percent of their pass-through business income from federal income tax.

How do I calculate my qualified business income deduction? ›

How to Calculate QBI for Your Small Business
  1. QBI (the net amount of income, gain, deduction, and loss from any qualified trade or business) multiplied by 20%
  2. Taxable income multiplied by 20% minus net capital gains and qualified dividends.

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