Time is running out for many small businesses wishing to
take advantage of the expanded business loss carryback option included in this
year’s recovery law. Eligible individuals have until Oct. 15 to choose this
expanded carryback option. Eligible calendar-year corporations have until Sept.
15.
This carryback provision offers small businesses that lost
money in 2008 an excellent way to quickly get some much needed cash if they
were profitable in previous years. This option is only available for a limited
time, so small businesses should consider it carefully and act before it’s too
late.
Under the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), many small
businesses that had expenses exceeding their income for 2008 can choose to
carry the resulting loss back for up to five years, instead of the usual two.
This means that a business that had a net operating loss (NOL) in 2008 could
carry that loss as far back as tax-year 2003, rather than the usual 2006. Not
only could this mean a special tax refund, but the refund could be larger,
because the loss is being spread over as many as five tax years, rather than
just two.
This option may be particularly helpful to any eligible
small business with a large loss in 2008. A small business that chooses this
option can benefit by:
- Offsetting
the loss against income earned in up to five prior tax years.
- Getting
a refund of taxes paid up to five years ago.
- Using
up part or all of the loss now, rather than waiting to claim it on future
tax returns.
Under ARRA, eligible taxpayers can choose to carry back a
NOL arising in a taxable year beginning or ending in 2008 for three, four or
five years instead of two. The option is available for an eligible small
business (ESB) that has no more than an average of $15 million in gross
receipts over a three-year period ending with the tax year of the NOL. This
choice may be made for only one tax year.
Most taxpayers still have time to choose this special
carryback and get a refund. A calendar-year corporation that qualifies as an
ESB must file a claim by Sept. 15,
2009. For individuals, the deadline is Oct. 15, 2009. This includes a sole proprietor
that qualifies as an ESB, an individual partner in a partnership that qualifies
as an ESB and a shareholder in an S corporation that qualifies as an ESB.
Deadlines vary for fiscal-year taxpayers, depending upon when their fiscal year
ends and whether they are making the choice for the tax year that ends or
begins in 2008.
Individuals can accelerate a refund by filing Form 1045,
Application for Tentative Refund. Similarly, corporations with NOLs may also
accelerate a refund by using Form 1139, Corporation Application for Tentative Refund.
Normally, refunds are issued within 45 days. These forms, along with answers to
frequently-asked questions about this special carryback, and other details can
be found at www.irs.gov.
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