Business income is income received for products or services sold. For example,
fees paid to a professional person are considered business
income. Rents paid to a person in the real estate business
are business income. Payments received in the form of property or services
must be included in income at their fair market value on the date received.
Normally a business is organized as either a sole proprietorship, partnership,
or corporation. A sole proprietorship is the simplest form of business organization.
It has no existence apart from its owner. Business debts are personal debts
of the owner. As a sole proprietor, you file Form 1040 Schedule C (PDF), or Form 1040 Schedule C-EZ (PDF),
with Form 1040, to report the profit or loss from your business.
Also, you must file Form 1040 Schedule SE (PDF)
if you had net earnings (from Schedule C or C-EZ) of $400 or more or
had church employee income of $108.28 or more. Schedule SE is used to figure
self-employment tax, which is the combined social security and Medicare
tax on self-employment income. Refer to Tax Topic 408 for more
information on sole proprietorships, or order Publication 334 (PDF), Tax
Guide for Small Business.
A partnership is an unincorporated business organization that is the result
of two or more persons joining together to carry on a trade or business. Each
person contributes a combination of money, property, labor, or skills, and
each expects to share in the profits and losses. A limited liability company
with more than one owner is generally treated as a partnership for tax purposes.
A partnership's income and expenses are generally reported on Form 1065 (PDF), an annual information return. No income tax is paid by the partnership
itself. Each partner receives a Form 1065 Schedule K-1 (PDF),
which generally allocates the income and expenses among the partners according
to the terms of the partnership agreement. For more information, refer to Publication 541 (PDF), Partnerships.
A corporation, for Federal income tax purposes, generally includes a business
formed under federal or state laws that refer to it as a corporation, body
corporate, or body politic. It also includes certain businesses that elect
to be taxed as a corporation by filing Form 8832 (PDF).
The owners of a corporation are the shareholders. The tax on a corporation's
income is figured on Form 1120 (PDF) or Form 1120A (PDF). For more information on corporations in
general, order Publication 542 (PDF), Corporations. Corporations that
meet the requirements may elect to become S corporations, which are treated
in a manner similar to partnerships. An S corporation files Form 1120S (PDF), and generally does not pay tax on its income. Most income and
expenses are "passed through" to the shareholders on Form 1120S Schedule K-1 (PDF). These amounts are to be included on the shareholders'
individual returns.
Tax Topics & FAQs | 2001 Tax Year Archives | Tax Help Archives | Home