gigemhilo said:
one safe place said:
If you form an LLC and then elect S status for tax filing, be sure the LLC paperwork has nothing in it that can bust your S election. One of those things is special allocations. There are more than a few folks that draft LLC paperwork under the premise it will operate and file taxes as a partnership. The template they use might have such partnership language in the documents and that could cause you to lose your S election.
Also, all owners of a S Corp must be a person (not another entity). There are exceptions to that if proper elections are filed with the IRS, but that is the general rule.
It doesn't sound like that is the case with the OP, but just wanted to add for clarity.
Some entities can be S corporation shareholders. Some trusts, an estate (at least for awhile), and another S corporation (with an important restriction) can. But someone really needs to know what they are doing when the shareholder is not a person. And even then, not all persons qualify.
Though retired now, I have just recently been made aware of a local company that has 35 or so shareholders that has an issue. It had been a C corporation from the time it was formed in 1918 or so. About 15 years ago it made an S election. At some point, one of the shareholders was someone's IRA account based on documents I was given. I do not know if the IRA was a shareholder when the S election was made and that fact was missed by everyone (including the IRS on the 2553) or if a transfer of shares was made after the S election and someone in the entity wasn't aware of the rules and then transferred the shares to the IRA. I notified the entity's CEO and they notified their CPA, but never heard anything back.