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Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Designed for rental property owners where WCG CPAs & Advisors supports you as your real estate CPA.
Everything you need from tax return preparation for your small business to your rental to your corporation is here.
WCG’s primary objective is to help you to feel comfortable about engaging with us
Posted Monday, July 6, 2026
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Partnership Tax Preparation – Form 1065 and Schedule K-1 preparation for multi-member LLCs, general partnerships, LLPs, and real estate partnerships
Partnership taxation is arguably the most complex area of the entire tax code. That is not opinion – that is the consensus of pretty much every tax professional who has ever cracked open Subchapter K. If you have a multi-member LLC, a general partnership, an LLP, or a real estate venture with more than one owner, you are living in this world whether you like it or not.
And look, we get it. You started a business or invested in a property with a partner because it made financial sense. Nobody was thinking about substantial economic effect rules or Section 704(b) capital accounts at the closing table. You were thinking about returns, strategy, and maybe splitting the workload. But now it is tax time, and suddenly you are staring at a Form 1065, Schedule K-1s, and a bunch of terms that sound like they were invented to keep accountants employed. Huh?
Here is the good news. We handle this. A lot. Partnership returns are one of the areas where WCG earns its keep, because getting these wrong creates cascading problems – for every single partner, across every state where they file, sometimes for years.
A partnership does not pay federal income tax. Period. Full stop. Instead, the partnership files Form 1065 as an informational return, and all the income, deductions, credits, gains, and losses flow through to the individual partners via Schedule K-1.
Sounds simple enough. It is not.
Every partner gets a K-1 that reports their share of the partnership’s activity. That K-1 then feeds into each partner’s personal Form 1040 (or their trust return, or their corporate return, depending on the partner type). The K-1 has to be right, or the partner’s personal return is wrong. And when we say “right,” we mean every line, every code, every supplemental statement.
Here we go - the core components of a partnership return:
That is a lot of moving parts for a return that does not even owe tax. We get the irony.
Not all partnerships are created equal. We handle the full range-
Multi-Member LLCs Taxed as Partnerships. The most common structure we see. Two or more members form an LLC, and by default, the IRS treats it as a partnership. No election needed. Sidebar: married couples in community property states can sometimes elect out of partnership treatment under the Qualified Joint Venture rules. Worth exploring if it applies to you.
General Partnerships and LLPs. Traditional ventures with two or more people, often seen with professional service firms – law firms, medical practices, accounting firms. LLPs give partners some liability protection while maintaining the partnership tax structure.
Real Estate Partnerships. Whether it is two people who bought a rental duplex, a group of investors in a syndication, or a developer flipping properties, real estate partnerships come with their own layer of complexity. Passive activity rules, at-risk limitations, cost segregation allocations, Section 1250 recapture – all flowing through K-1s. We see a lot of these.
Investment and Family Partnerships. Investment partnerships pool capital and trigger different reporting depending on whether the partnership is a trader versus investor. Family partnerships require extra attention under IRC Section 704(e) to ensure the IRS recognizes the allocation of income as legitimate.
We said it at the top. Subchapter K is the most complex part of the Internal Revenue Code. Some tax professors spend entire careers on nothing else. Here is why.
Partnership returns that come to us from other preparers tend to have a familiar set of problems. Here we go-
Our approach comes down to a few principles-
Sidebar: if you have a partner who contributed appreciated property years ago and your previous preparer did not track the Section 704(c) allocations, you have a mess on your hands. We can clean it up, but fair warning – it takes time and involves digging through historical records.
Real estate is the most common reason people end up in partnership structures, and it adds layered rules on top of everything above.
Form 1065 is due March 15 for calendar-year partnerships. An automatic six-month extension pushes it to September 15. We recommend filing or extending by March 15 so K-1s are available for partners to file their personal returns.
Yes. A multi-member LLC is treated as a partnership by default. You need to file Form 1065 and issue K-1s to each member. Exceptions include S or C corporation elections, or the Qualified Joint Venture election for married couples in community property states.
The penalty under IRC Section 6698 is $235 per partner per month (or fraction of a month) the return is late, up to 12 months. For a four-partner partnership, that is $940 per month. It adds up fast.
Guaranteed payments are payments to a partner for services or capital use, determined without regard to partnership income. They are ordinary income to the partner and deductible by the partnership. Distributions are returns of capital and are generally tax-free to the extent of basis. Mixing these up changes the tax result for everyone.
Maybe. Losses flow through on your K-1 but face three layers of limitation – basis, at-risk, and passive activity. If the activity is passive (as most rentals are), losses can only offset passive income unless you qualify as a real estate professional or fall under the $25,000 rental loss allowance.
A 754 election allows the partnership to adjust inside basis when a partner sells their interest or dies. It can prevent the new partner from paying tax on gains already reflected in their purchase price. Having said that, once made, it is irrevocable. We model the impact before recommending it.
Generally yes – the partnership files in every state where it does business or has nexus. Individual partners may also need to file in states where the partnership operates. We handle the multi-state analysis as part of the engagement.
Since 2020, the IRS requires capital accounts on Schedule K-1 be reported using the tax basis method – tracking contributions at tax basis, distributions at fair market value, and allocations of taxable income and deductions. The IRS uses this to cross-check partner basis.
Yes, and we recommend it. When we prepare both, the K-1 data flows directly into each partner’s personal return without sending documents between firms. It eliminates errors and ensures everything ties together.
A cost segregation study accelerates depreciation by reclassifying building components into shorter-lived categories. Let’s say a study on a $3,000,000 building generates $600,000 of first-year depreciation. A 50% partner picks up $300,000 on their K-1. But that $300,000 is still subject to basis, at-risk, and passive activity limitations on the partner’s personal return.
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The tax advisors, business consultants and rental property experts at WCG CPAs & Advisors are not salespeople; we are not putting lipstick on a pig expecting you to love it. Our job remains being professionally detached, giving you information and letting you decide within our ethical guidelines and your risk profiles.
We see far too many crazy schemes and half-baked ideas from attorneys and wealth managers. In some cases, they are good ideas. In most cases, all the entities, layering and mixed ownership is only the illusion of precision. As Chris Rock says, just because you can drive your car with your feet doesn’t make it a good idea. In other words, let’s not automatically convert “you can” into “you must.”
Let’s chat so you can be smart about it.
We typically schedule a 20-minute complimentary quick chat with one of our Partners or our amazing Senior Tax Professionals to determine if we are a good fit for each other, and how an engagement with our team looks. Tax returns only? Business advisory? Tax strategy and planning? Rental property support?
Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Designed for rental property owners where WCG CPAs & Advisors supports you as your real estate CPA.
Everything you need from tax return preparation for your small business to your rental to your corporation is here.
WCG’s primary objective is to help you to feel comfortable about engaging with us