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Can a partnership issue a W-2 to a partner?

Writer Emily Baldwin

A partnership or LLC is a type of pass-through entity, where the profits and losses of the business pass through to the partners. Unlike in an S-Corporation (another pass-through entity), members or partners of this type of entity are not eligible to be paid as a W-2 employee, but they make take owner draws.

Where do I report guaranteed payments from a partnership?

Guaranteed payments are taxable income. They are treated as ordinary income and self-employment income for tax purposes. For partners receiving guaranteed payments, the payments will be recorded on their Schedule K-1 and included as income on Schedule E of their form 1040.

How do you distribute a salary to a partner?

How much remuneration or interest can be paid to a partner?

  1. On first Rs. 3 Lakhs of book profit or in case of loss – Rs. 1,50,000 or 90% of book profit, whichever is more;
  2. On the balance of the book profit – 60% of book profit.

Can a partner in a partnership pay W-2?

Generally a partner in a partnership cannot be an employee of the partnership. If the LLC is taxed as a partnership, then a member cannot have W-2 pay. The exceptions would involve unusual membership interests that are probably not in this picture.

Where does partnership income go on a tax return?

This partnership income is reported on the individual’s Schedule K-1, and the individual does not receive a Form W-2 for income earned while a partner (though the individual should receive both a Form W-2 and Schedule K-1 if he or she becomes a partner in the middle of a tax year).

Can a partnership not be taxed as an employee?

In Riether, a district court considered whether partners in an LLC taxed as a partnership for federal tax purposes could avoid paying self-employment tax on their entire distributive share of partnership income solely because they “received a Form W-2 from [the LLC] for the year 2006” and, thus, “were not self-employed.”

Can a partner be both an employee and a partner?

Because the IRS does not permit a partner to be both a partner and an employee, continuing to treat an employee who has received an unvested profits interest as an employee for employment tax purposes by issuing the partner a Form W-2, Wage and Income Statement, etc., presumably runs afoul of the above requirement.