40 THE QUEENS COURIER • QUEENS BUSINESS • JUNE 13, 2019 FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
 TAX TIPS 
 THE 20% QUALIFIED 
 BUSINESS INCOME 
 DEDUCTION Call Now & End Your Tax Nightmare! 
 BY JOHN SAVIGNANO, CPA 
 Self-employed people and owners of pass-through firms, such as  
 LLCs, partnerships and S corporations, can take the break. There are  
 lots of special rules and restrictions, most of which apply to high  
 earners. Individuals who qualify for the 20% write-off claim it on line  
 9 of the 1040. There is no special form to use for 2018 returns, but  
 such a form is coming for 2019. 
 What exactly is qualified business income? 
 QBI is your allocable share of income less any deductions from a  
 trade or business. It doesn’t include wages, dividends, capital gain or  
 loss, nonbusiness interest income, reasonable compensation from S  
 firms or guaranteed payments from partnerships. If you have  
 multiple businesses, you generally determine QBI separately for each  
 one, but commonly owned similar activities may be aggregated if  
 certain conditions are met. If you own an interest in an S corporation,  
 partnership, multimember LLC or trust, the K-1 you receive will  
 report your share of the firm’s QBI and other related items. 
 What  is  a  specified  service  trade  or  business,  and  why  is  it  
 important? 
 An SSTB is a business involving the performance of services in  
 certain fields:  
 Health, law, accounting, actuarial science, performing arts,  
 consulting, athletics, finance, brokerage, investment management,  
 and securities trading and dealing. 
 IRS regulations delve into each SSTB and set forth lots of  
 exceptions. For example, health clubs, pharmaceutical research and  
 sales, architects, engineers, real estate agents, insurance agents and  
 traditional banks are not considered SSTBs. 
 The 20% QBI deduction phases out for high-incomers engaged in  
 an SSTB. The phaseout level starts at 2018 taxable incomes in excess  
 of $315,000 for couples and $157,500 for others. Note, that taxable  
 income excludes the 20% deduction.  If 2018 taxable income is more  
 than $415,000 for joint filers…$207,500 for singles…the deduction is  
 zero for that SSTB. These figures are adjusted for inflation annually. 
 Is Schedule E rental income eligible for the 20% deduction? 
 It depends. The break applies to QBI from a trade or business. IRS  
 refers to the standard under federal tax code Section 162 for defining  
 a trade or business. This standard is unclear in the context of rentals  
 because it’s based on a taxpayer’s specific facts. 
 A safe harbor applies if at least 250 hours are devoted to the rental  
 activity by the property owner, employees or independent contractor  
 in a given year. Time spent on repairs, collecting rent, negotiating  
 leases and tenant services count. Hours put in driving to and from  
 the real estate aren’t included for this purpose.   
 If the 250-hour test is met, you can treat the rental as a trade or  
 business for purposes of the QBI deduction. There are stiff  
 recordkeeping rules to comply with. The safe harbor rules aren’t set  
 in stone. IRS says it’s open to tweaking them. An influential  
 accounting group has asked IRS to lower the hours threshold to 100. 
 John Savignano is a partner with Savignano Accountants & Advisors  
 located at 47-46 Vernon Blvd., Second Floor, in Long Island City. If  
 you have any questions or require additional information, please call  
 John at 718-707-0955. 
  
  
  
  
  
 Co-Author of the  
 best selling book 
 “Breaking the Tax Code” 
  
  
 Salvatore P. Candela, EA, ATA, ABA 
 Enrolled Agent - Tax Advisor 
  
  
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