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Debits equal credits and typically an entry on the balance sheet will affect the income statement. What do you have going on?
Are those two separate questions unrelated, or is this the same one topic?
Example: The State taxes that were paid are Personal, so that isn't gong to hit the P&L. Debit Partner Draw and Credit Bank for the spending.
The predecessor accountant incorrectly recorded the loan as receivable instead of payable while the equity was off by the difference. So, instead of amending the tax return for balance sheet changes, I was hoping to add a footnote in the tax return providing a reasoning.
I'm not sure how someone can just accidently put something on the balance sheet as an asset when it should have been a liability. Did they "plug" income in order to make things balance?
An S corp doesn't pay its own Federal Income or State Income taxes.
And since it is never a good idea to put Real Estate into an S Corp, is the Business Equipment Tax, not Real Estate property tax?
You don't report a total sum of these taxes. For instance, Payroll taxes are separate and not part of Property or Franchise taxes. The employer's share of taxes are part of Gross Payroll, and the employee share is never reported as Expense by the employer, since it's already part of gross wage expense.
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