Description
When a purchaser buys an existing partner's partnership interest or the interest of a member of a limited liability corporation (LLC) taxed as a partnership, the amount paid becomes the basis for the purchaser's partnership interest (outside basis). If the partnership's assets have appreciated sufficiently, the difference between the new partner's inside and outside basis can be substantial. This disparity can deprive the new partner of depreciation deductions and inflate his or her share of the gain from subsequent property dispositions unless a Section 754 election is in effect. The Section 754 election can also apply when a partnership makes a distribution of property and the basis of the distributed property to the partnership and the basis the partner/distributee will take in the distributed property are not equal. In this case, a partnership can recover basis it would otherwise lose if the 754 election were not in effect.
Presented by Mike Tucker, Ph.D., LL.M., J.D., CPA
Qualifies for IRS CE Credit
Designed For
Any Accounting and Finance Professional who wishes to understand the tax rules and economic opportunities associated with having a partnership make a Section 754 election
Objectives
- Determine the amount of a Section 754 basis step-up
- Know how to allocate the basis step-up to the partnership's assets
- Know how a partnership makes a Section 754 election and reports it to the IRS
Highlights
- How and why a partnership makes a 754 election
- The effect of the 754 election when an interest in a partnership is sold or inherited
- How the 754 election applies when a partnership makes a distribution of property to one or more of its partners
- How to make the 754 basis adjustment
Advanced Prep
None
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Leaders
Surgent Panel
No Biography Available