Exercise 2-19 (LO. 3, 4) Thad, a single taxpayer, has taxable income before the QBI deduction...
Thad, a single taxpayer, has taxable income before the QBI deduction of $190,700. Thad, a CPA, operates an accounting practice as a single-member LLC (which he reports as a sole proprietorship). During 2019, his proprietorship generates a qualified business income of $150,000, W–2 wages of $125,000, and $10,000 of qualified property. Assume the QBI amount is net of the self-employment tax deduction. What is Thad's qualified business income deduction?
Thad, a single taxpayer, reports taxable income before the QBI deduction of $185,000. Thad, a CPA, operates an accounting practice as a single member LLC (which he reports as a sole proprietorship). During the tax year, his proprietorship generates qualified business income of $148,000 after deducting self-employment taxes, W–2 wages of $111,000, and $11,600 of qualified property. Assume the QBI amount is net of the self-employment tax deduction. What is Thad's QBI deduction? Please provide solution and answer
Exercise 2-19 (Algorithmic) (LO. 3, 4) Thad, a single taxpayer, has taxable income before the QBI deduction of $182,000. Thad, a CPA, operates an accounting practice as a single member LLC (which he reports as a sole proprietorship). During 2019, his proprietorship generates qualified business income of $145,600, W–2 wages of $109,200, and $8,400 of qualified property. Assume the QBI amount is net of the self-employment tax deduction. If required, round any division to two decimal places. Round your final...
Thad, a single taxpayer, has taxable income before the QBI deduction of $189,500. Thad, a CPA, operates an accounting practice as a single member LLC (which he reports as a sole proprietorship). During 2020, his proprietorship generates qualified business income of $151,600, W–2 wages of $113,700, and $10,800 of qualified property. Assume the QBI amount is net of the self-employment tax deduction. If required, round any division to two decimal places. Round your final answer to the nearest dollar. What...
Exercise 2-19 (Algorithmic) (LO. 3, 4) Thad, a single taxpayer, has taxable income before the QBI deduction of $195,500. Thad, a CPA, operates an accounting practice as a single member LLC (which he reports as a sole proprietorship). During 2020, his proprietorship generates qualified business income of $156,400, W-2 wages of $117,300, and $11,600 of qualified property Assume the QBI amount is net of the self-employment tax deduction. If required, round any division to two decimal places. Round your final...
Thad, a single taxpayer, has taxable income before the QBI deduction of $197,000. Thad, a CPA, operates an accounting practice as a single member LLC (which he reports as a sole proprietorship). During 2020, his proprietorship generates qualified business income of $157,600, W–2 wages of $118,200, and $8,400 of qualified property.
Problem 2-35 (LO. 3, 4) Susan, a single taxpayer, owns and operates a bakery (as a sole proprietorship). The business is not a "specified services" business. In 2020, the business pays $60,000 of W-2 wages, has $150,000 of qualified property, and generates $200,000 of qualified business income. Susan also has a part-time job earning wages of $11,100 and receives $3,300 of interest income. Her standard deduction is $12,400. Assume the QBI amount is net of the self-employment tax deduction. What...
Jennifer is a CPA and a single taxpayer using the standard deduction. In 2020, her CPA practice generates qualified business income of $162,400 and she has no other income or losses. Jennifer's taxable income before the QBI deduction is $150,000 ($162,400 – $12,400 standard deduction). Jennifer employs an administrative assistant in her practice and pays him $75,000 in wages. The unadjusted basis of depreciable assets employed in the practice totals $30,000. If amount is zero, enter "0". Assume the QBI...
Problem 2-35 (LO. 3, 4) Susan, a single taxpayer, owns and operates a bakery (as a sole proprietorship). The business is not a "specified services" business. In 2019, the business pays $60,000 of W–2 wages and generates $200,000 of qualified business income. Susan also has a part-time job earning wages of $11,000 and receives $3,200 of interest income. Assume the QBI amount is net of the self-employment tax deduction. What is Susan's tentative QBI based on the W–2 Wages/Capital Investment...
Ting is a CPA and a single taxpayer using the standard deduction. In 2019, her CPA practice generates qualified business income of $162,200; she records no other income or losses. Ting's taxable income before the QBI deduction is $150,000 ($162,200 - $12,200 standard deduction). Ting employs an administrative assistant in her practice and pays him $75,000 in wages. The unadjusted basis of depreciable assets employed in the practice total $30,000. If amount is zero, enter"0". Assume the QBT amount is...