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Stay ahead of the curve—enroll now to master the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and confidently guide your clients through its sweeping tax changes.
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Are you a California CNA?
This course examines and explains the practical aspects of using a closely held corporation to maximize after-tax return on business operations. Recent developments giving corporations a competitive edge over other entities are explored and detailed. Practitioners are alerted to often missed fringe benefits, retirement planning opportunities, corporate business deductions, income splitting possibilities, and little-known estate planning techniques. The program covers step-by-step tax procedures to form, operate, and ultimately dispose of a closely held corporation. Distinctions between S and C corporations will be unraveled and guidelines for client direction given.
Course Publication Date: October 01, 2025
This course is available with NO ADDITIONAL FEE if you have an active self study membership or all access membership or can be purchased for $210.00!
Author: | Danny Santucci |
Course No: | TAX-CORP-5485 |
Recommended CPE: | 21.00 |
Delivery Method: | QAS Self Study |
Level of Knowledge: | Overview |
Prerequisites: | General understanding of federal income taxation |
Advanced Preparation: | None |
Recommended Field of Study: | Taxes
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Learning Objectives
- Specify the advantages and disadvantages of sole proprietorships including self-employed taxes and payment requirements and identify the characterization of sole proprietorship assets upon disposition.
- Recognize the role of the partnership agreement on partnership taxation particularly the application of the at-risk rules (§465).
- Identify the reporting requirements of unincorporated associations, determine what constitutes a “corporation,” and specify the characteristics of a personal service corporation.
- Identify the transfer of money, property, or both by prospective shareholders and the basic requirements associated with §351.
- Recognize the differences between start-up and organizational expenses, and identify the elements of corporate tax recognition including capital gains and losses stating dividends received treatment.
- Specify the requirements for corporate charitable contributions, and determine how to avoid §541 status particularly as to personal service contracts.
- Identify §531 status and determine accounting periods and methods available to corporations.
- Specify methods for identifying inventory items and, identify multiple corporation tax advantages.
- Determine payroll taxes and the uses of W-2, and specify the application of major employee labor laws.
- Recognize common-law rules used to determine employee status for FICA and federal income tax withholding, specify the dangers of unreasonable compensation stating how to avoid them, and determine valuable income-splitting devices.
- Identify buy-sell agreements distinguishing an entity purchase from a cross-purchase agreement and recognize business recapitalizations and the impact of estate freeze rules.
- Identify “income” under §61 and specify the tax differences between nonstatutory and statutory fringe benefits.
- Determine what constitutes working condition and de minimis fringes, cite the §79 group term life insurance rules, recognize §125 “cafeteria plans” stating how they function, and specify the mechanics of §105 self-insured medical reimbursement plans.
- Identify employer-provided automobile valuation methods, and specify ERISA compliance requirements.
- Define the disallowed “entertainment" recognizing the importance of the remaining statutory exceptions, specify the application of the percentage reduction rule, and determine an “entertainment facility” stating related deductible costs.
- Identify substantiation, recordkeeping, reimbursement, and reporting requirements recognizing variations in methods and specify the special reporting rules for self-employed persons and employers.
- Recognize the importance and variety of business insurance particularly the §79 requirements for group insurance, retired lives reserve, and split-dollar life.
- Identify the impact of the disallowance of the interest deduction on purchasers and the insurance industry recognizing the §264 interest limitation on policy loans, specify the benefit of corporate key person life insurance, cite the requirements of COBRA, and determine what constitutes a Voluntary Employee Benefit Association under §501(c)(9).
- Identify the types of qualified deferred compensation plans recognizing their funding limits and recall the ERISA and PBGC restrictions and insurance.
- Specify the requirements of the basic forms of qualified pension plans including vesting, contributions, and benefits.
- Determine the differences between qualified retirement plans and their impact on retirement contributions and benefits, identify the plan termination rules, and recognize self-employed plans from qualified plans for other business types.
- Identify the requirements of IRAs, SEPs, and SIMPLEs, and define tax-free Roth IRA distributions specifying strategies to maximize plan benefits.
- Recognize the postponement of income with a nonqualified plan identifying nonqualified plan advantages and recognize the impact of constructive receipt and economic benefit concepts.
- Identify ways to protect unfunded deferred compensation and specify the tax consequences of establishing a nonqualified plan.
- Determine what constitutes an S corporation, and specify the advantages, and the disadvantages associated with them.
- Identify variables that impact whether a business can choose S corporation status and cite ways an S corporation may be terminated specifying related procedures to be followed.
- Recognize the taxation and fringe benefits of S corporations as compared to other entity formats, identify the benefits available to S corporations and the related party rules, and specify when the Form 1120S must be filed.
- Recognize various business dispositions and tax-advantaged reorganization possibilities including the types of transactions that qualify as non-taxable reorganizations and identify the factors that determine the corporate tax attributes of an acquired corporation that carry over to the acquiring or successor corporation.
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