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take an example: the company is an LLC(in NY), and constructs condominiums which will be sold after it's done. If the company uses cash method for accounting, how to report the tax if it has a gain? or loss? in which form? any publications referral? thanks!

2006-11-03 10:48:54 · 4 answers · asked by bubupigjun 1 in Business & Finance Taxes United States

4 answers

Usually when you are completing a long term contract you would use the percentage of completion method to recognize revenue, however the one exception is real estate construction contractors. You can use the completed contract method of accounting and recognize all revenue when the project is complete and you begin selling condominiums. (CAUTION: completed contract method is not allowed for AMT so if you fall in the AMT catagory the difference between completed contract and percentage of completion will be an add back during construction years)

When you say "cash method of accounting" I'm going to assume you do not mean that you are "expensing" construction costs as they are paid that would be wrong, wrong, wrong. Your expenses should be capitalized into what will become the "basis" for the real property when you sell it. Ideally you would be tracking the costs of each individual condominium unit but assuming that you you are building "cookie cutter" every-conduminium-looks-like-the-one-beside-it kind of condominiums you will be able to use your total costs divided by total square footage and then multiplied by the square footage of the units as you sell them (keeping in mind that condos that you hold longer will end up with a larger basis due to "carrying costs"). When you are doing this caluclation remember that your total costs include "common area" costs that will not be divided into the condo units. Those costs will be depreciated by you, if you continue to own the main building, or used as basis for your sell of the common areas.

I don't know a publication off the top of my head but if you go to this link it will give you several IRS regulations and rev. rulings that will help you: http://www.irs.gov/businesses/small/industries/article/0,,id=99237,00.html

2006-11-03 13:57:07 · answer #1 · answered by FlCpa 3 · 0 0

Sorry, yet while it replaced into that easy all and sundry might do it, and that they did for awhile. the end result replaced right into a great sort of undesirable judgements by skill of all in touch and a fall down of the marketplace. So good now you're unlikely to get a valid mortgage for extra desirable than 80% of the acquisition fee; and to with the intention to qualify for that mortgage you would be required to have a job, have a credit historic previous, and be waiting to make the money. additionally you would be required to have the different 20% in funds plus money for different costs available in funds, no longer from yet another mortgage.

2016-11-27 01:50:20 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Try this web site it has a great deal of information.

http://www.smallbusinessaid.net/llctaxes.html

2006-11-03 11:57:24 · answer #3 · answered by ? 6 · 0 0

If you are maintaing a proper accounting system,and not cheating then its possible to show up your accounts

2006-11-03 10:53:21 · answer #4 · answered by amin 1 · 0 2

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