A client purchased a new truck in 2018 that is used for all three of his business's. The vehicle is 100% business use and client owns other personal vehicles. The truck was mainly purchased for rental properties (llc), however the use rate is about 10% (S-corp 1), 30% (S-Corp 2), and 60% (LLC-rental schedule E filer). Client purchased truck with personal funds and title is in clients name, not corporation. I'm trying to figure the best way to allocate this vehicle with my current option listed below; it seems the most straightforward. Any additional comments or ideas by this knowledgeable community would be greatly appreciated!
Option 1- Keep vehicle in clients/LLC name and section 179 the asset (truck qualifies), basically LLC 100% use. Then have the two S-Corps reimburse the owner for actual vehicle use via accountable plan.
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This is not true: "The vehicle is 100% business use"
Because you also told us this: "that is used for all three of his business's"
The person is an Employee of the S Corps. That means this is Personal Vehicle used for the business of the Corporation, not His Business, for two of three entities.
"the use rate is about 10% (S-corp 1)"
He submits a Mileage report to his employer under the rules of An Accountable Plan and gets reimbursed at the Mileage rate. Not Percent Shared Usage. And that means, for the other entities, this missing share is Personal, not business.
"30% (S-Corp 2)"
He submits a Mileage report to his employer under the rules of An Accountable Plan and gets reimbursed at the Mileage rate. Not Percent Shared Usage. And that means, for the other entities, this missing share is Personal, not business.
"and 60% (LLC-rental schedule E filer)."
Which means 40% is Personal, from the perspective of the LLC.
"Client purchased truck with personal funds and title is in clients name, not corporation."
Employees turn in Mileage reports and get reimbursed under the terms of an Accountable Plan.
"I'm trying to figure the best way to allocate this vehicle"
Only the LLC gets to report the Vehicle.
The S Corps both have Mileage Expense paid to the Employee. They don't have a vehicle.
"Option 1- Keep vehicle in clients/LLC name and section 179 the asset (truck qualifies), basically LLC 100% use."
It's not 100% LLC use. You have a Mixed Use vehicle.
"Then have the two S-Corps reimburse the owner for actual vehicle use via accountable plan."
Reimburse the Employee.
This is not true: "The vehicle is 100% business use"
Because you also told us this: "that is used for all three of his business's"
The person is an Employee of the S Corps. That means this is Personal Vehicle used for the business of the Corporation, not His Business, for two of three entities.
"the use rate is about 10% (S-corp 1)"
He submits a Mileage report to his employer under the rules of An Accountable Plan and gets reimbursed at the Mileage rate. Not Percent Shared Usage. And that means, for the other entities, this missing share is Personal, not business.
"30% (S-Corp 2)"
He submits a Mileage report to his employer under the rules of An Accountable Plan and gets reimbursed at the Mileage rate. Not Percent Shared Usage. And that means, for the other entities, this missing share is Personal, not business.
"and 60% (LLC-rental schedule E filer)."
Which means 40% is Personal, from the perspective of the LLC.
"Client purchased truck with personal funds and title is in clients name, not corporation."
Employees turn in Mileage reports and get reimbursed under the terms of an Accountable Plan.
"I'm trying to figure the best way to allocate this vehicle"
Only the LLC gets to report the Vehicle.
The S Corps both have Mileage Expense paid to the Employee. They don't have a vehicle.
"Option 1- Keep vehicle in clients/LLC name and section 179 the asset (truck qualifies), basically LLC 100% use."
It's not 100% LLC use. You have a Mixed Use vehicle.
"Then have the two S-Corps reimburse the owner for actual vehicle use via accountable plan."
Reimburse the Employee.
"LLC
will report the vehicle use at 100% use; client should then use another
"personal" vehicle for S-Corp business and get reimbursed via
accountable plan.
Does this sound better?"
Not really. You report based on reality, not, "Let's just call that 100% LLC." You stated Factually this is a mixed use vehicle. Mixed Use = the amounts for the S Corps are Personal use and there is not 100% LLC. You seem to be trying to report that the Difference between the three businesses makes LLC 100%, but that isn't what you have.
S Corp 1 perspective = Employee used Personal Vehicle.
S Corp 2 perspective = Employee used Personal Vehicle.
LLC Perspective = there is Some Use of the mixed use vehicle that applies to the LLC, and it obviously isn't 100%. You told us there are the other two Uses.
I don't understand. Are you trying to advise a client not to use a vehicle they just bought except for some limited functions, only? And you think there is a tax regulation that makes this advantageous?
"It appears having new vehicle be a mixed used vehicle would not yield the best results."
You do what matches the Reality.
Why would someone buy a new Truck and then let it sit around and not be used, when that is why they bought that vehicle?
1. Client is the Employee to two different S Corps. The person also happens to be a Shareholder. This is Moot to the question. We know this is falls under Business Use of a Personally Owned vehicle. That takes away any Further business perspective for the LLC. By Definition. You cannot Split a vehicle and end up with 100% anywhere else.
2. Meaningless. The person bought a Vehicle. We don't care about their rationalization or justification. We care about Reality. Plans and "meant to" do not apply to Taxes or Reality.
3. Per Reality.
"Even if its not used much is irrelevant, its a business vehicle."
No, it's not. You need to read your own descriptions. Look at item 1 again.
"Should the new truck be used 100% for LLC and other personal vehicle be used for S-corp use"
They should use what needs to be used for getting done what needs to be done. If I bought a truck for the LLC, that means I intend to Carry Stuff. That means I use the Truck for the LLC. It doesn't matter what I use for the S Corps, other than, if I need to haul stuff, I need to use the Truck.
"If i am drastically missing the point and am blatantly overlooking something please advise"
Vehicles are Functional Tools, not tax shelters.
You really are overthinking this.
"You keep stating that because a truck is present it will be used for all things."
I keep asking why in the world would anyone be advised not to use a Truck they own, when the truck is Owned, and a Truck would be used? What tax regulation tells us it is Advantageous to buy a Truck and not use it? How does tax guidance change my use of Vehicles I bought intending to use as vehicles are used? And if the LLC "owns" the Truck, that is the same as Personal. So, this point is Moot. The only real separation is if a corporation owns that vehicle.
For this: "Your basically saying no sole owner or owners of a business can possibly say their "business" vehicle is used 100% for business, that doesn't make sense."
I teach the word Discoverable. As in, if you turned in mileage for that same vehicle to each S Corp, there is no possible way the LLC has it also as 100%, because this is Discoverable = entries were made and reimbursements for mileage were made. Proof is required under An Accountable Plan. Once you provide that Proof, it's sort of hard to also state otherwise, elsewhere.
This isn't stated correctly: "One benefit in the reimbursement scenario is the
favorable effect on reasonable compensation."
Because reimbursement under an accountable plan is Not part of payroll and has no impact on Compensation or taxes. That is the point of An Accountable Plan. It's no different than me buying printer paper on my way to the office; you get the receipt and the paper and Reimburse me. That has nothing to do with Payroll. And if that trip to Staples was out of my way, I decide to also make you pay Mileage for my extra side trip. It's all just repaid to me. Accountable Plan = I proved it to you, so you can just pay me and it isn't part of Payroll.
Here's the issue for this part: "I thought this question to really be an expansion or slight modification of another often approached question pertaining to S-Corps; which is, "should i put vehicle in my name and get reimbursed" or "put vehicle in that of the company". This is a very common question, and we run the cost/benefit of each."
Because any Personal use of that vehicle, such as the Truck is in the name of S Corp 1, and the person uses it for S Corp 2 and for the LLC and for Commuting, makes all of this other use Personal and taxable through Payroll as a Fringe Benefit.
So, for instance, S Corp 1 owns and pays to operate a vehicle. Your Employee of S Corp 1 gets taxed on that value for all the Personal use, all the S Corp 2 use and all the LLC use.
All you are doing is Hiding the marble under a different cup. If I bought a Truck to use for the LLC because I need a Truck to do what I need to do, why would I park it and not use it for other things when I need a Truck to do what I need to do for the other things? That is what you seem to be stating is your advice.
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