Section 199A Compliance: Rules and Reporting After OBBA WEBCAST
Overview
Section 199A compliance has evolved after OBBA and so have the risks of getting it wrong. From revised definitions of qualified business income to updated reporting obligations, practitioners must navigate nuanced guidance affecting partnerships, S corporations, and sole proprietorships. Walk away with practical tools, compliance checklists, and calculation frameworks you can apply immediately.
Highlights
A deep-dive look at the Section 199A flow-through entities deduction. Calculation of qualified business income. Self-rental rule for 199A compared to self-rental rule for passive activities. Differing impact on the sole proprietorship, partnerships and S corporations. Forms reporting in Form 8995 and Form 8995-A. Section 199A flowchart.
Prerequisites
Basic working knowledge of individual and business taxation.
Designed For
CPAs in public practice and industry seeking an update on the latest tax developments impacting the flow-through entities deduction.
Objectives
Identify the impact of the Section 199A rules on a variety of business entities. Identify new provisions to Section 199A after OBBA 2025. Apply the rules and forms reporting for deducting income from flow-through entities.
Preparation
None.
Notice
None.
Leader(s):
Leader Bios
Steven Dilley, Federal Tax Workshops Inc
Steve Dilley is President of Federal Tax Workshops, Inc., East Lansing, Michigan, where for the past 35 years, his organization has prepared continuing professional education materials and presented seminars for accountants and attorneys throughout the United States. He is nationally known for his knowledge of the financial, accounting, and tax problems of the closely held business. He has published numerous articles on these topics. In addition, Steve is a Professor of Accounting at Michigan State University, East Lansing, where he teaches tax accounting. He was nominated in 2004 for the “Educator of the Year Award” and received the 2005 “Distinguished Achievement in Accounting Education Award” in Michigan. He also received the 2007 MSU Accounting and Information Systems Department Outstanding Teacher Award. He obtained his PhD in accounting, law degree and an undergraduate accounting degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is a member of the Michigan Association of CPAs, Wisconsin Bar Association, The American Accounting Association, AICPA, American Tax Association, and Hawaii Association of Public Accountants.
Non-Member Price $119.00
Member Price $89.00