Nathan Hale
Member
- Joined
- Jun 13, 2007
- Messages
- 4,155
Where did you hear that? Just because you do not use your corporation as a tax shelter does not mean it doesn't happen. During the last Congressional hearing on tax policy one of the points of unanimous agreement among tax experts was that corporations are used as tax shelters, and that reducing corporate taxes rates significantly below individual income taxes would create even more incentive for them to be used as tax shelters.
I'm not saying it doesn't happen, only that when it happens it probably happens as a result of convoluted loopholes rather than the structure of a C-Corporation. Unfortunately the c-corporation status is what triggers the tax, and that disinfranchises mom and pops all over the country.
If you want to purchase a jet, fuel it, insure it, pay various support entities and people, etc., you can do that through a corporation, and expenses become a write-off, reducing the taxes. Create multiple corporations to keep them all small. The IRS generally doesn't question Corporate expenses. Try writing off the cost of your pilot or gardener on your personal income taxes, and you will hear from the IRS.
Sure, you can attempt that, but corporate expenses are a huge IRS red flag. You have to itemize them on your 1120s and I have numerous personal examples of their scrutiny.