I have a client who in prior years received a K-1 from a partnership in which is was listed as a general member. Accordingly, there was always self-employment tax reported on the K-1. So far, so good.
Now, this year (2021), he sent me the same K-1 as he always has in the past but now it shows that his revocable trust owns the partnership interest (and not him as an individual). Because trusts are not subject to self-employment tax, there is no amount reported on line 14A (Self-Employment Tax).
Since his trust is a revocable (grantor) trust, no Form 1041 was filed and I am picking up the income on my client's 1040 I am also reporting self-employment tax on Sched SE because I'm pretty sure he would still owe S/E tax on that income. Did I handle that correctly?
Wonder if I also need to file a trust return in this case?
Thanks for any feedback.
Best Answer Click here
"Pretty sure" is good enough for your client to fork over $20,000 or so to IRS? On the other hand, if he's a retired federal employee looking to collect enough quarters of coverage, he might be upset if you told him not to pay it. Unfortunately, this is a "facts and circumstances" question. Your hair might turn gray from worrying about such gray areas. There's an interesting discussion here:
I wonder what the 1065 instructions say about this. My guess is that they are wishy-washy, because that's usually the case with SE tax issues.
You have clicked a link to a site outside of the Intuit Accountants Community. By clicking "Continue", you will leave the community and be taken to that site instead.