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Buy nowHello,
I am going to give a hypothetical numbers situation to see if someone can help me clarify this.
Lets say, after running a P&L report for 2024, the final profit is $1,000. However, the owner has taken $2,000 in owner's draws over 2024 as well. Does this mean that the final reportable profit is still $1,000 OR does it mean that the business's final profit is $3,000?
@RedlineCreationsLLC There are a few ifs, ands, and buts, so let's go in order.
A P&L report only contains income, other income, expenses, other expenses, and COGS.
As Owner's Draw is an Equity account, it should never be on a P&L. It won't affect the profit.
That being said, it can still impact the income taxes depending on the type of business.
For instance, a sole proprietor would have vanilla Owner's Draw. This does not generally impact the income taxes.
However, if it were a Partnership or S-Corp or such, you would have Guaranteed Payments or Shareholder Distributions or such like. These generally end up on the K-1 somewhere and have an impact on the personal income taxes of the officer involved.
Profit is separate from the owner's draw. A $1,000 profit stays $1,000. An owner's draw (like taking $2,000) is money from the business's equity, not an expense. Draws don't change the profit on the P&L but can impact taxes.
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