Originally posted by zlandar
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Originally posted by jacoavlu View PostOr to simply distribute as much as possible, and leave enough in the bank to pay expenses?
The Medicare advance is a loan isn’t it? CMS has said it intends to collect the amount after a year:
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced amended terms for payments issued under the Accelerated and Advance Payment (AAP) Program as required by recent action by President Trump and Congress. This Medicare loan program allows CMS to make advance payments to providers and are typically used in emergency situations. Under the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other Extensions Act repayment will now begin one year from the issuance date of each provider or supplier’s accelerated or advance payment.
Group also received a Medicare grant and we counted that as revenue.
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Originally posted by zlandar View Post
The group did get a sizeable advance from Medicare in the spring so I'm confident we don't have a paper profit for 2020.
Who is determining the amount of your end of year distributions? Is your goal to match distributions to Corp calendar year profit? Or to simply distribute as much as possible, and leave enough in the bank to pay expenses?
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Originally posted by White.Beard.Doc View PostEnd of year cash in an S-Corp has a relation to profits, but there are a bunch of adjustments to be made. Some examples: take off Medicare advance that has to be paid back in 2021. Take off pension contribution for 2020 that remains to be paid in 2021. Take off PPP loan to be forgiven, but take that off of taxable income, then leave it in for calculating distributions. There are more items like these, but they are unique to each practice structure or business structure.
We do have a CBP but we usually pay off the amount owed in the same year. We do run 401k profit sharing a year behind.
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That's a rough guess. But it's murky. Profit = revenue minus expenses. But you need to account for loans, depreciation, etc, that can have an effect on cash without necessarily affecting profit or vice versa. You could also write the checks for s corp distributions but not cash them for a couple of weeks.
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End of year cash in an S-Corp has a relation to profits, but there are a bunch of adjustments to be made. Some examples: take off Medicare advance that has to be paid back in 2021. Take off pension contribution for 2020 that remains to be paid in 2021. Take off PPP loan to be forgiven, but take that off of taxable income, then leave it in for calculating distributions. There are more items like these, but they are unique to each practice structure or business structure.
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Originally posted by jfoxcpacfp View PostThe practice bank account change can “somewhat” mirror profits (since you’re cash basis, right?), but becomes further away from reality the larger the practice is. There’s a lot going on and this is the wrong place to be getting these answers. I mean, glad you’re here, but free advice, even from professionals, who do not know the practice’s accounting inside-out can be very, very expensive.
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The practice bank account change can “somewhat” mirror profits (since you’re cash basis, right?), but becomes further away from reality the larger the practice is. There’s a lot going on and this is the wrong place to be getting these answers. I mean, glad you’re here, but free advice, even from professionals, who do not know the practice’s accounting inside-out can be very, very expensive.
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it’s not about what’s in the bank
S Corp profit (or loss) is about the numbers on the Corp tax return. 2020 Income minus deductible expenses.
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S corp net profit end of year
Group practice is an S-corp. Partners will receive a distribution at the end of the year with enough in the business account to cover practice expenses for one month (~$1 million). The practice has grown during the year so that figure has increased as more docs are on the payroll.
If the bank account at the beginning of 2020 was $500k and at the end of 2020 is $1 million is that extra $500k considered "profit"? I want to leave enough in the practice bank account so I don't stress if there is a revenue shortfall.Tags: None
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