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More detail: I am a sole Shareholder in an S-Corp and since I've had no sales yet, all of the expenses have been paid indirectly from personal funds, specifically, my retirement account. What I mean by indirectly, is that I've taken large sums from my retirement fund and deposited those into the S-Corp checking account to be used for S-Corp's start-up expenses. If that were the end of the story, it would be simple. :(
However, what's making me sweat is the fact that I have paid for legit personal expenses from this S-Corp's checking account. The funds in the S-Corp's checking account are in reality my own personal funds, however, the first time they're deposited into S-Corp's checking account, I've increased "Paid-In Capital". Would it have been better if I had recorded these deposits as liability into Loan from Shareholder?
But now I've used these funds, from the S-Corp's checking account, to pay personal expenses. Do I just record "Shareholder Distribution" which would decrease my "Paid-In Capital" or decrease my liability account "Loan to Shareholder"?
How do i record this mess? I want to start fresh in 2015, and do things right, but I need to untangle all this for 2014 first.
And in terms of bank reconciliation, should I just disregard personal transactions? Or, ALL transactions going through the S-Corp's bank NEED to be recorded in QB, and then journal entries made to fix the mixing of personal and business?
Thank you so much!
Solved! Go to Solution.
I would not have used contributed the funds and used a liability account due to [name]
then when you use corp funds to pay personal expenses, use that same liability account, and it will "pay down" the liability - and try to avoid doing that after you have the liability paid off
if you want you can edit the original transaction and change the account from additional paid in capital to a liability account you create, and also edit the personal use transactions to hit that same account - make a back up first in case something goes wrong.
yes every transaction should be reflected in the QB bank account otherwise you will not be able to reconcile the bank statement which will have them
I would not have used contributed the funds and used a liability account due to [name]
then when you use corp funds to pay personal expenses, use that same liability account, and it will "pay down" the liability - and try to avoid doing that after you have the liability paid off
if you want you can edit the original transaction and change the account from additional paid in capital to a liability account you create, and also edit the personal use transactions to hit that same account - make a back up first in case something goes wrong.
yes every transaction should be reflected in the QB bank account otherwise you will not be able to reconcile the bank statement which will have them
C Corporation and S Corporation are very different with regard to personal/business expenses. In both cases, there should not be personal expenses recorded as business expense on books.
S Corporations have a Distributions account, which are distributions of profit to shareholders, after owners (who are also employees) have been paid reasonable amounts for salary including payment of payroll taxes. This is where you would need to charge any personal expenses paid with company funds which should ideally be an exception for this to occur since there are limits to Distributions allowed, for example, if you have no revenue you have no profit to distribute, right?
C Corporations do not have Distributions. They have Dividends which may be paid to shareholders when the BOD declares a dividend payable, but these are paid after taxes and where you hear the term "double taxation."
Yes, credit card accounts are opposite of bank accounts, since they are liabilities vs. assets.
I don't mean to be alarmist, but since you told us this is your Client...
This part: "I've advised this client not to include all these personal expenses as "business deductions" for the C-Corp, even though they're relatively low (compared to total expenses). "
Is why Enron People went to Jail. How liable are you? Very Liable. How bad would this be in an audit? Severe and punitive.
Nothing here is their personal piggy bank. Once they put money into the corporation, it belongs to the Corporation. They don't get to spend it on Personal.
You need to get this in front of a CPA ASAP and perhaps this situation can be salvaged before the 1120 due date.
Small piece of the whole big bad picture here, but fuel is also not a reimbursable expense unless it is for a rental car. Fuel is not reimbursable on company vehicle where the calculation for business expense is based on IRS formula and personal portion of mileage must be added to W-2 as taxable income. Use of personal vehicle requires tracking miles and can be reimbursed at IRS mileage rate. ALL of my clients are S Corp or C Corp.
Retirement account funds add a whole new issue to this. Are these funds that were withdrawn so they paid penalties and interest on them? If not, then this person may have personal tax issues too.
This isn't the case, either: "It should be that she's crediting a liability account because it's a credit card. I don't understand what can be a valid reason to treat a credit card as a bank/asset type of account."
It's Not a Credit Card Account for the Business; you told us this is Personal Spending. You don't track a Personal Card in the corporate bookkeeping. What happens is, this Employee submits the receipts to be reimbursed for business expenses, under the terms of An Accountable Plan, per the IRS.
Fuel is Personal when the vehicle is not a Corporate-owned vehicle. Then, again, the Employee submits a Mileage report and gets paid for Business Mileage, under the terms of An Accountable Plan and per the IRS mileage rates.
Unfortunately, the TCJA of Dec 2017 changed many of these laws for 2018 taxes. You cannot take Unreimbursed Employee business expenses as part of the 1040 taxes.
It really seems that both you and this person need to get with a CPA to review all activities, what they are called under the Rules, how to treat them in the accounting, and what Is and is Not business and what is Not Run through the business.
Look, it's nearly Mid-Jan. Do Not Stall.
Definitely a mixed bag of issues with IRS for sure. Probably a few red flags. Not good client to me.
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