- Understand the important tax considerations when agreeing to guarantee a loan for your closely held corporation.
- Learn the distinction between business and non-business bad debt deductions.
- Highlight the three essential requirements for deducting a business or non-business bad debt; legal duty, timing of the guaranty agreement, and receiving reasonable consideration.
Let’s say you decide to, or are asked to, guarantee a loan to your corporation. Before agreeing to act as a guarantor, endorser, or indemnitor of a debt obligation of your closely held corporation, be aware of the possible tax implications. If your corporation defaults on the loan and you’re required to pay principal or interest under the guarantee agreement. You don’t want to be caught unaware of the possible tax implications.
A Business Bad Debt
If you’re compelled to make good on the obligation, the payment of principal or interest in discharge of the obligation generally results in a bad debt deduction. This may be either a business or a nonbusiness bad debt deduction. If it’s a business bad debt, it’s deductible against ordinary income. A business bad debt can be either totally or partly worthless. If it’s a non-business bad debt, it’s deductible as a short-term capital loss, which is subject to certain limitations on deductions of capital losses. A non-business bad debt is deductible only if it’s totally worthless.
When to Treat as a Business Bad Debt
In order to be treated as a business bad debt, the guarantee must be closely related to your trade or business. If the reason for guaranteeing the corporation loan is to protect your job, the guarantee is considered closely related to your trade or business as an employee. But employment must be the dominant motive. If your annual salary exceeds your investment in the corporation, this generally shows that the dominant motive for the guarantee was to protect your job. On the other hand, if your investment in the corporation substantially exceeds your annual salary, that’s evidence that the guarantee was primarily to protect your investment rather than your job.
Except in the case of job guarantees, it may be difficult to show the guarantee was closely related to your trade or business. You’d have to show that the guarantee was related to your business as a promoter, or that the guarantee was related to some other trade or business separately carried on by you.
If the reason for guaranteeing your corporation’s loan isn’t closely related to your trade or business and you’re required to pay off the loan, you can take a nonbusiness bad debt deduction if you show that your reason for the guarantee was to protect your investment, or you entered the guarantee transaction with a profit motive.
More Rules
In addition to satisfying the above requirements, a business or nonbusiness bad debt is deductible only if you meet these three requirements:
- You have a legal duty to make the guarantee payment (although there’s no requirement that legal action be brought against you).
- The guarantee agreement was entered into before the debt became worthless.
- You received reasonable consideration (not necessarily cash or property) for entering into the guarantee agreement.
Any payment you make on a loan you guaranteed is generally deductible as a bad debt in the year you make it. This is true unless the agreement (or local law) provides for a right of subrogation against the corporation. If you have this right, or some other right to demand payment from the corporation (which if the corporation has assets and is solvent, you generally have a right to do), you can’t take a bad debt deduction until the rights become partly or totally worthless.
If not deductible as a business or non-business bad debt, the payment of the guarantee of the corporation's debt will qualify as a capital contribution to the corporation and increase the shareholder's basis. The payment would result in an additional capital loss if the corporation is defunct at the time of the payment.
Make sure before you guarantee a loan, be sure to check with your attorney.
These are only some of the possible tax consequences of guaranteeing a loan to your closely held corporation. Call Fiducial at 1-866-FIDUCIAL or make an appointment at one of our office locations to learn about the possible tax implications of your situation.
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