Properly Document and Structure Your Professional Practice Management Fees
Dental, orthodontic, and other professional practices often use management fees to allocate compensation among professionals. This compensation strategy is sometimes tax efficient only if the management fee is tax deductible. The U.S. Tax Court recently ruled that a dental practice was not entitled to deduct purported management fees that the practice paid to a related, ESOP-owned entity because there was no indication that the entity actually performed services in exchange for the fees. Wiley M. Elick, Tax Court Memorandum 2013-139. The court also upheld the IRS's imposition of an accuracy-related penalty. Professionals who use management fees in their compensation plan should ensure that the relationship is properly structured and that services are well documented.
Categories: Income Tax
Joel Farrar is a business lawyer with specialties in mergers and acquisitions (M&A), start-up law, and executive compensation planning. Joel particularly enjoys helping entrepreneurs with start-up businesses and fundraising.
View All Posts by Author ›Categories
- Income Tax
- Property Tax
- Use Tax
- Compliance
- Estate Planning
- Employment Tax & Withholding
- Sales Tax
- Audits
- Tax Disputes
- Tax-Exempt Organizations
- U.S. Supreme Court
- Corporate Income Tax
- Did you Know?
- Venture Capital/Funding
- Tax
- Personal Property Tax
- Employment
- Nonprofit
- Alternative Minimum Tax
- Crowdfunding
- News & Events
- Insurance
- Collections
- Labor Relations
- Alerts and Updates
- News
- Employee Benefits
- Financing