Four possible options
The required installment of estimated tax that a corporation must pay to avoid a penalty is the lowest amount determined under one of the following four methods:
- Current year method. Under this option, a corporation can avoid the estimated tax underpayment penalty by paying 25% of the tax shown on the current tax year’s return (or, if no return is filed, 25% of the tax for the current year) by each of four installment due dates. The corporate due dates are generally April 15, June 15, September 15 and December 15. If a due date falls on a Saturday, Sunday or legal holiday, the payment is due the following business day.
- Preceding year method. Under this option, a corporation can avoid the estimated tax underpayment penalty by paying 25% of the tax shown on the return for the preceding tax year by each of four installment due dates. (Note, however, that for 2022, certain corporations can only use the preceding year method to determine their first required installment payment. This restriction is placed on corporations with taxable income of $1 million or more in any of the last three tax years.) In addition, this method isn’t available to corporations with a tax return that was for less than 12 months or a corporation that didn’t file a preceding tax year return that showed some tax liability.
- Annualized income method. Under this option, a corporation can avoid the estimated tax underpayment penalty if it pays its “annualized tax” in quarterly installments. The annualized tax is computed on the basis of the corporation’s taxable income for the months in the tax year ending before the due date of the installment and assumes income will be received at the same rate over the full year.
- Seasonal income method. Under this option, corporations with recurring seasonal patterns of taxable income can annualize income by assuming income earned in the current year is earned in the same pattern as in preceding years. There’s a somewhat complicated mathematical test that corporations must pass in order to establish that they meet the threshold and therefore qualify to use this method. If you think your corporation might qualify for this method, don’t hesitate to ask for our assistance in determining if it does.
Also, note that a corporation can switch among the four methods during a given tax year.
We can examine whether your corporation’s tax bill can be reduced. If you’d like to discuss this matter further, contact us.
© 2024
For more helpful tax and accounting articles, or to sign up for our newsletter, please visit our KKB Insights page. If you have any questions, please contact us.
Advantages of keeping your business separate from its real estate
/in Tax/by KKB CPAsIt may be advantageous to separate ownership of a business’s real estate from the business. But it isn’t always advisable. Here’s a look at the issues. Continue Reading Advantages of keeping your business separate from its real estate
Cutoffs: When to report revenue and expenses
/in Tax/by KKB CPAsDoes your company follow the cutoff rules? Loose interpretation of the accounting rules can lead to errors and unexpected audit adjustments. Here’s how to get it right. Continue Reading Cutoffs: When to report revenue and expenses
Help ensure your partnership or LLC complies with tax law
/in Tax/by KKB CPAsGuaranteed payments to partners and payments to retired partners are just two of the tax issues that should be addressed in your partnership (or LLC operating) agreement. Here are the details. Continue Reading Help ensure your partnership or LLC complies with tax law