IRS Allows Use of Pass-Through Business Alternative Taxes to Bypass 2017 Tax Act’s Limitation on SALT Deductions – Effectively Blessing New Jersey Statutory Work-Around
On Monday, November 9th, the IRS issued Notice 2020-75 stating that it intended to issue proposed regulations to clarify that state and local income taxes imposed on and paid by a partnership or an S corporation would be deductible by such entity regardless of whether the liability for such taxes is the result of an election by the entity or whether the partners or S shareholders receive a partial or full state or local deduction, exclusion, credit, or other tax benefit that is based on their share of the amount of such taxes paid by the entity. Taxpayers will not need to take such tax payments into account in applying the 2017 Tax Act’s $10,000 cap on state and local taxes. Notice 2020-75, effective immediately, appears to directly support the efficacy of New Jersey’s work-around (S-3246/A-4807) adopted early in 2020 to address the federal 2017 Tax Act’s $10,000 cap on state and local taxes (SALT). Because that cap applies predominantly to real property taxes and sales taxes in addition to income taxes, business taxpayers who can use the work-around and remove business income taxes from the $10,000 cap will effectively be allowed to deduct an additional amount of other SALT taxes under the cap. The New Jersey law, commonly called the Pass-Through Business Alternative Income Tax,...