By Dr. Jim Dahle, WCI Founder

Selling your small business can be one of the happiest and most profitable days of your life. However, it often comes with a nasty tax bill. Even with long-term capital gains treatment, you're likely paying 20% of the gains in that business (which is often the entire value of your boot-strapped startup) in capital gains taxes. Add on Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) of 3.8%, and you're only going to walk away with a little more than 3/4 of the value of the business you worked so hard to build.

Well, Uncle Sam wants people to create and build small businesses, so he has put a tax break into place to encourage that behavior. It is called Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) treatment. Here's what you should know.

 

What Is Qualified Small Business Stock?

QSBS is stock in a C Corporation that was acquired at issuance in exchange for money, property, or services. The corporation can never have had more than $50 million in assets prior to the time of the issuance of stock. The stock must have been held for at least five years. It also cannot operate in any of the following fields:

  • Health
  • Law
  • Engineering
  • Accounting
  • Actuarial science
  • Performing arts
  • Consulting
  • Athletics
  • Financial services
  • Brokerage services
  • Any trade or business in which the principal asset is the reputation or skill of one or more of its employees
  • Banking
  • Insurance
  • Farming
  • Hotels
  • Restaurants

More information here:

10 Reasons You Should Own a Business

Tax Preparation Checklist for Small Businesses and the Self-Employed

 

What Is QSBS Treatment?

If you sell QSBS, you can exclude the greater of $10 million or 10 times your basis in the stock. That could save you $2.38 million in capital gains and NIIT taxes. In fact, it could theoretically save you almost $12 million in taxes.

 

What's the Downside?

The downside is that it has to be QSBS. This is for founders, not investors. If you buy in at any time after the C Corporation is formed, you don't get this treatment.

If the business is not formed as or converted to a C Corp, your ownership is not QSBS. There are many advantages to sole proprietorships, partnerships, LLCs, and S Corps and many disadvantages to C Corps. You lose all of the advantages of the pass-through entities and deal with all of the disadvantages of a C Corp, and you will do so for at least five years if you want this particular advantage.

If you have not owned the shares for at least five years after it was formed as or converted to a C corp, it is not QSBS.

If the business is involved in any of the above listed fields, it is not QSBS.

When founding businesses, consider founding them as a C Corporation, especially if you expect to sell it after five years for less than $50 million. The tax savings could be significant.

What do you think? Have you received or expect to receive QSBS treatment for your business? Why or why not?