Hoping to get some thoughts from those who deal with these more than me. Most of the K-1s and partnerships I deal with are small and simple.
I have a client who is a partner of a partnership that ceased operations in 2018 and was issued a final K-1. He did not receive anything from the partnership when it closed.
The final K-1 lists ordinary loss of $2,153 and Section 1231 Gain of $279,500.
Beginning of year basis is $491,013 + 1231 gain of $279,500 - decreased of share of liabilities of $653,478 - Loss of $2,153 = $114,882
However, the K-1 lists beginning capital account of -$162,465 + current year increases of $372,910 = $210,445. The difference between the basis and capital is $95,563 which is also the difference between the current year increase and net loss/gain.
I know that the capital account and the basis account are not the same thing, especially since the basis account can't go below zero, but I'm wondering what the $95k would be and if it is something that would affect basis. Since whatever his basis ends up being is going to become a capital loss to help offset the 1231 gain, the difference is substantial. Thoughts? Am I looking at this right?
Thanks!
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It sounds like you have the correct basis 114,882
Does his K-1 have an ending capital account of -0-? That $95K is most likely whatever was needed to zero out the capital account. Capital accounts on K-1s do not equal basis.
It sounds like you have the correct basis 114,882
Does his K-1 have an ending capital account of -0-? That $95K is most likely whatever was needed to zero out the capital account. Capital accounts on K-1s do not equal basis.
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