Choice of Tax Year
Your tax year determines the time frame in which your taxable
income will be computed. All income received or accrued within a single
year is reported on that year's tax return, along with all expenses
paid or accrued. The end of the year is the cutoff point for many
tax-saving strategies.
In theory, your tax year, which is
also known as your accounting period, may be either a calendar year
or a fiscal year (a 12-month period that ends on the last day of any
month other than December). Whether you knew it or not, you selected
your tax year the very first time you filed a tax return as an individual,
partnership, or corporation. You must continue to use the same tax
year that you used that first time, unless you get IRS permission
to change. The default selection is a calendar year.
Limitations
on your choice. There are a number of restrictions on the
accounting period you can use for tax purposes.
Since a sole
proprietorship does not exist apart from its owners (at least in the
eyes of the IRS), a sole proprietorship must use the same tax year
as the owner. Most sole proprietors use the calendar year as their
tax year, since they must continue to use the same tax year that the
owner used in his or her initial individual tax return (and since
most of us began filing early in life, we used the calendar year for
our first tax return). If you want to switch to a fiscal year, you'll
need special permission from the IRS.
A partnership or LLC
must generally use the same tax year as the majority of its owners.
An S corporation or a personal service corporation must generally
use a calendar year. Exceptions to these general rules may be made
if you can establish to the satisfaction of the IRS that you have
a business purpose for using a different tax year.
If you
have started a new business that will be operated as a C corporation,
it may initially have large expenses or losses. Because of this,
if you begin operations during the year (rather than on January 1),
it may be helpful to choose a fiscal year that extends beyond the
end of the first calendar year so that as much income as possible
will be offset by the opening expenses and losses.
Choosing
a fiscal year. The tax year you choose may determine the accuracy
with which your business's income is matched with the expenses that
generate the income. So, in the case of a seasonal business, the
accounting period should include the entire season.
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Example A ski resort is open only during the
months of December through March the winter resort season. If the
books are kept on the basis of a calendar year, the accounting period
would split the season, and distortion of income would result. So,
what would appear as a profit as of December 31, the close of the
calendar year, may turn out to be a loss, or vice versa, when the
entire season, December through March, is considered. Moreover,
the use of the calendar year would require the operators to take inventories
and make other determinations in the middle of the season when they
have the least amount of time available. The use of a fiscal year
that included the entire season would make it possible to avoid these
difficulties. |
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If the nature of your business is such that the bulk
of expenses and receipts for an operating cycle fall in different
years, it may be best to select an accounting period that includes
both.
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Example Let's say that your business incurs
most of its expenses in the fall and gets most of its income in the
spring. In any one calendar year, expenses and receipts would have
little relation to each other. Receipts in 2014, for example,
would not be offset by corresponding expenses, because these expenses
would have been incurred in 2013. The 2014 receipts would be offset
by 2013 expenses, although these expenses would relate to 2014 receipts.
A fiscal year starting on July 1, August 1, or September 1 would
more accurately reflect income for your natural business year.
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Making changes in your accounting period.
If you want to switch from a calendar year to a fiscal year (or vice
versa), you'll need permission from the IRS. To get permission you
must demonstrate to the IRS's satisfaction that you have a valid business
purpose other than tax avoidance. In many cases, a seasonal business
would be able to show a valid business purpose for using a fiscal
year. You can request approval by filing IRS Form 1128, Application
to Adopt, Change, or Retain a Tax Year.
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Warning Except in unusual cases, once you have
received permission to change your tax year, the IRS will not allow
you to change it again within 10 years. |
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