Welcome Guest. Register Now!  



Find a tax professional cpa near you

View Single Post
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 02-17-2009, 10:24 PM
TaxGuru's Avatar
TaxGuru TaxGuru is offline
Tax Guru
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: New Jersey, USA
Posts: 1,864
Blog Entries: 3
Corporation who obtain shareholder loans must pay interest to shareholders based on the Loan agreement. This is the IRS preferred approach to shareholder loans made to corporations. But, in a situation, where a corporation is unable to pay any interest on the shareholder loans due to lack of funds does present some problems. The IRS position is that the Corporation should accrue the interest on these loans and debit the books with interest expense and credit the shareholder loan outstanding amounts. Then the corporation should issue the shareholder a 1099-Int for interest paid to the shareholder.

Clearly, this appears to be a deviation from the cash basis treatment, but during the course of some IRS audits, my experience has been that these are some of the adjustments that the IRS has made for my cash basis corporate clients!
__________________
Find a CPA near you!

Ask TaxGuru Please refer to the legal disclaimer.
Reply With Quote
 
Follow us on Twitter
» Categories
 
Individual
 » Income
 » IRA/Sep
 » Medical
 
Corporations
 
Forum for CPAs
 
Financial Planning