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This question is prior to capital gains, but regarding the first year of putting the cash into the company.

This is important because if capital investment is taxed, then I'll have to recalculate and add more money. If not, my current estimates are correct. Please note that this is for a U.S. LLC.

If you have a reference for where to find this answer, I'd also appreciate that.

Thanks.

2007-02-03 03:04:15 · 3 answers · asked by jimbo 3 2 in Business & Finance Small Business

3 answers

Did you pay taxes on the capital before you put it into the companies?

LLCs pass profits and losses through to their members, and are not taxed themselves.

2007-02-03 17:49:52 · answer #1 · answered by Pugsly 2 · 0 0

Sort of... What you invest in is taxed but not the Capital itself... that would be silly. Unless you're getting a hunk of change and you're trying to dodge the Capital Gains. Be more spacific.

2007-02-03 11:33:44 · answer #2 · answered by Miotch 5 · 0 0

not normally. you should have an accountant involved at this point.

2007-02-03 15:49:21 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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