A special tax break is designed to help qualifying small C corporations raise capital by allowing long-term noncorporate investors in original issue stock to cut the tax on their profit. The investor must hold the stock for at least five years to take advantage of this exclusion of gain on the sale. Moreover, the amount of the gain varies depending upon when the stock was acquired.
| Date Stock Acquired |
Rate on Gain not Excluded from Income |
Percent Excluded from Gross Income |
| After 12/31/2011 |
28% |
50% |
| After 9/27/2010 but before 1/1/2012 |
N/A |
100% |
| After 2/17/2009 but before 9/28/2010 |
28% |
75% |
| After 8/10/1993 but before 2/18/2009 |
|
50% |
In order to qualify for this special break, taxpayers must jump through a large number of hoops.
The capital gains exclusion applies only to gain on eligible stock (1) originally issued by a qualifying corporation after August 10, 1993, and (2) held for more than five years. The highlights of this break follow:
- The stock must be acquired in an exchange for money or other property (other than stock), or as compensation for services provided to the corporation (other than acting as the stock's underwriter).
- The small business must be a regular C corporation; it must have $50 million or less in aggregate capital as of the date of stock issuance; and at least 80 percent by value of corporate assets must be used in the active conduct of one or more trades or businesses.
- The corporation cannot be involved in the performance of personal services (such as health or law) or in the finance, banking, leasing, real estate, farming, mineral extraction, or hospitality industries. A number of other types of businesses, such as mutual funds and REITs, are also disqualified.
- The exclusion for each eligible corporation applies only to the extent that the gain does not exceed the greater of (1) 10 times the taxpayer's adjusted basis in the stock disposed of during the tax year (post-issuance additions to basis are disregarded), or (2) $10 million ($5 million for marrieds filing separately), reduced by gain excluded in earlier years from sales of stock in the corporation.
- Although a post-issuance purchaser of otherwise qualified stock doesn't get the exclusion, the tax break is preserved for those who receive such stock as a gift or due to the death of the original purchaser. The transferor's holding period also carries over to the transferee. Similar rules apply to qualified stock distributed by a partnership to its partners.
- Individuals can roll over, tax-free, gain realized on the sale or exchange of qualified small business stock provided that the proceeds are used to purchase other qualified small business stock within 60 days of the sale.
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