The at-risk rules limit your losses from most activities to your
amount at risk in the activity. You treat any loss that is disallowed
because of the at-risk limits as a deduction from the same activity in
the next tax year. If your losses from an at-risk activity are
allowed, they are subject to recapture in later years if your amount
at risk is reduced below zero.
You must apply the at-risk rules before the
passive activity rules discussed in the first part of this
publication.
Loss defined.
A loss is the excess of allowable deductions from the activity for
the year (including depreciation or amortization allowed or allowable
and disregarding the at-risk limits) over income received or accrued
from the activity during the year. Income does not include income from
the recapture of previous losses (discussed, later, under
Recapture Rule).
Form 6198.
Use Form 6198 to figure how much loss from an activity you can
deduct. You must file Form 6198 with your tax return if:
- You have a loss from any part of an activity that is covered
by the at-risk rules, and
- You are not at risk for some of your investment in the
activity.
Loss limits for partners and S corporation shareholders.
Three separate limits apply to a partner's or shareholder's
distributive share of a loss from a partnership or S corporation. The
limits determine the amount of the loss each partner or shareholder
can deduct on his or her own return. These limits and the order in
which they apply are:
- The adjusted basis of:
- The partner's partnership interest, or
- The shareholder's stock plus any loans the shareholder makes
to the corporation,
- The at-risk rules, and
- The passive activity rules.
See Limits on Losses in Publication 541,
and
Limitations on Losses, Deductions, and Credits in
Shareholder's Instructions for Schedule K-1 (Form 1120S).
Who Is Affected?
The at-risk limits apply to individuals (including partners and S
corporation shareholders) and to certain closely held corporations
(other than S corporations).
Closely held corporation.
For the at-risk rules, a corporation is a closely held corporation
if at any time during the last half of the tax year, more than 50% in
value of its outstanding stock is owned directly or indirectly by or
for five or fewer individuals.
To figure if more than 50% in value of the stock is owned by five
or fewer individuals, apply the following rules.
- Stock owned directly or indirectly by or for a corporation,
partnership, estate, or trust is considered owned proportionately by
its shareholders, partners, or beneficiaries.
- An individual is considered to own the stock owned directly
or indirectly by or for his or her family. Family includes only
brothers and sisters (including half-brothers and half-sisters), a
spouse, ancestors, and lineal descendants.
- If a person holds an option to buy stock, he or she is
considered to be the owner of that stock.
- When applying rule (1) or (2), stock considered owned by a
person under rule (1) or (3) is treated as actually owned by that
person. Stock considered owned by an individual under rule (2) is not
treated as owned by the individual for again applying rule (2) to
consider another the owner of that stock.
- Stock that may be considered owned by an individual under
either rule (2) or (3) is considered owned by the individual under
rule (3).
Activities Covered
by the At-Risk Rules
If you are involved in one of the following activities as a trade
or business or for the production of income, you are subject to the
at-risk rules.
- Farming.
- Exploring for, or exploiting, oil and gas.
- Holding, producing, or distributing motion picture films or
video tapes.
- Leasing section 1245 property, including personal property
and certain other tangible property that is depreciable or
amortizable. See Section 1245 property, later.
- Exploring for, or exploiting, geothermal deposits (for wells
started after September 1978).
- Any other activity not included in (1) through (5) that is
carried on as a trade or business or for the production of
income.
Section 1245 property.
Section 1245 property includes any property that is or has been
subject to depreciation or amortization and that is:
- Personal property,
- Other tangible property (other than a building or its
structural components) that is:
- Used in manufacturing, production, or extraction or in
furnishing transportation, communications, electrical energy, gas,
water, or sewage disposal,
- A research facility used for the activities in (a), or
- A bulk storage facility used for the activities in (a),
- A single purpose agricultural or horticultural structure, or
- A storage facility (other than a building or its structural
components) used for the distribution of petroleum.
Exception for holding real property placed in service before
1987.
The at-risk rules do not apply to the holding of real property
placed in service before 1987. They also do not apply to the holding
of an interest acquired before 1987 in a pass-through entity engaged
in holding real property placed in service before 1987. This exception
does not apply to holding mineral property.
Personal property and services that are incidental to making real
property available as living accommodations are included in the
activity of holding real property. For example, making personal
property, such as furniture, and services available when renting a
hotel or motel room or a furnished apartment is considered incidental
to making real property available as living accommodations.
Exception for equipment leasing by a closely held
corporation.
If a closely held corporation is actively engaged in
equipment leasing, the equipment leasing is treated as a separate
activity not covered by the at-risk rules. A closely held corporation
is actively engaged in equipment leasing if 50% or more of its gross
receipts for the tax year are from equipment leasing. Equipment
leasing means the leasing, purchasing, servicing, and selling of
equipment that is section 1245 property.
However, equipment leasing does not include the leasing
of master sound recordings and similar contractual arrangements for
tangible or intangible assets associated with literary, artistic, or
musical properties, such as books, lithographs of artwork, or musical
tapes. A closely held corporation cannot exclude these leasing
activities from the at-risk rules nor count them as equipment leasing
for the gross receipts test.
The equipment leasing exclusion is also not available for leasing
activities related to other at-risk activities, such as motion picture
films and video tapes, farming, oil and gas properties, and geothermal
deposits. For example, if a closely held corporation leases a video
tape, it cannot exclude this leasing activity from the at-risk rules
under the equipment leasing exclusion.
Controlled group of corporations.
A controlled group of corporations is subject to special rules for
the equipment leasing exclusion. See section 465(c) of the Internal
Revenue Code.
Special exception for qualified corporations.
A qualified corporation is not subject to the at-risk limits for
any qualifying business carried on by the corporation. Each qualifying
business is treated as a separate activity.
A qualified corporation is a closely held corporation,
defined, earlier, under Who Is Affected?, that is not:
- A personal holding company,
- A foreign personal holding company, or
- A personal service corporation (defined in section 269A(b)
of the Internal Revenue Code, but determined by substituting 5% for
10%).
Qualifying business.
A qualifying business is any active business if all of
the following apply.
- During the entire 12-month period ending on the last day of
the tax year, the corporation had at least:
- One full-time employee whose services were in the active
management of the business, and
- Three full-time nonowner employees whose services were
directly related to the business. A nonowner employee does not own
more than 5% in value of the outstanding stock of the corporation at
any time during the tax year. (The rules for constructive ownership of
stock in section 318 of the Internal Revenue Code apply. However, in
applying these rules, an owner of 5% or more, rather than 50% or more,
of the value of a corporation's stock is considered to own a
proportionate share of any stock owned by the corporation.)
- Deductions due to the business that are allowable to the
corporation as business expenses and as contributions to certain
employee benefit plans for the tax year exceed 15% of the gross income
from the business.
- The business is not an excluded business.
Generally, an excluded business means equipment leasing as
defined, earlier, under Exception for equipment leasing by a
closely held corporation, and any business involving the use,
exploitation, sale, lease, or other disposition of master sound
recordings, motion picture films, video tapes, or tangible or
intangible assets associated with literary, artistic, musical, or
similar properties.
Separation of Activities
Generally, you treat your activity involving each film or video
tape, item of leased section 1245 property, farm, oil and gas
property, or geothermal property as a separate activity. In
addition, each investment that is not a part of a trade or business is
treated as a separate activity.
Leasing by a partnership or S corporation.
For a partnership or S corporation, treat all leasing of section
1245 property that is placed in service in any tax year of the
partnership or S corporation as one activity.
Aggregation of Activities
Activities described in (6) under Activities Covered by the
At-Risk Rules, earlier, that constitute a trade or business are
treated as one activity if:
- You actively participate in the management of the
trade or business, or
- The trade or business is carried on by a partnership or S
corporation and 65% or more of its losses for the tax year are
allocable to persons who actively participate in the management of the
trade or business.
Similar rules apply to activities described in (1) through (5)
of that discussion.
Active participation.
Active participation depends on all the facts and circumstances.
Factors that indicate active participation include making decisions
involving the operation or management of the activity, performing
services for the activity, and hiring and discharging employees.
Factors that indicate a lack of active participation include lack of
control in managing and operating the activity, having authority only
to discharge the manager of the activity, and having a manager of the
activity who is an independent contractor rather than an employee.
Partners and S corporation shareholders.
Partners or shareholders may aggregate activities of their
partnership or S corporation within each of the following categories:
- Films and video tapes,
- Farms,
- Oil and gas properties, and
- Geothermal properties.
For example, if a partnership or S corporation produces two films
or video tapes, the partners or S corporation shareholders may treat
the production of both films or video tapes as one activity for
purposes of the at-risk rules.
At-Risk Amounts
You are at risk in any activity for:
- The money and adjusted basis of property you contribute to
the activity, and
- Amounts you borrow for use in the activity if:
- You are personally liable for repayment, or
- You pledge property (other than property used in the
activity) as security for the loan.
Amounts borrowed.
You are at risk for amounts borrowed to use in the activity if you
are personally liable for repayment. You are also at risk if the
amounts borrowed are secured by property other than property used in
the activity. In this case, the amount considered at risk is the net
fair market value of your interest in the pledged property. The net
fair market value of property is its fair market value (determined on
the date the property is pledged) less any prior (or superior) claims
to which it is subject. However, no property will be taken into
account as security if it is directly or indirectly financed by debt
that is secured by property you contributed to the activity.
If you borrow money to finance a contribution to an activity, you
cannot increase your amount at risk by the contribution and the amount
borrowed to finance the contribution. You may increase your at-risk
amount only once.
Certain borrowed amounts excluded.
Even if you are personally liable for the repayment of a borrowed
amount or you secure a borrowed amount with property other than
property used in the activity, you are not considered at risk if you
borrowed the money from a person having an interest in the activity or
from someone related to a person (other than you) having an interest
in the activity. This does not apply to:
- Amounts borrowed by a corporation from its shareholders,
- Amounts borrowed from a person having an interest in the
activity as a creditor, or
- An activity described in (6) under Activities Covered
by the At-Risk Rules, earlier.
Related persons.
Related persons include:
- Members of a family, but only brothers and sisters,
half-brothers and half-sisters, a spouse, ancestors (parents,
grandparents, etc.), and lineal descendants (children, grandchildren,
etc.),
- Two corporations that are members of the same controlled
group of corporations determined by applying a 10% ownership test,
- The fiduciaries of two different trusts, or the fiduciary
and beneficiary of two different trusts, if the same person is the
grantor of both trusts,
- A tax-exempt educational or charitable organization and a
person who directly or indirectly controls it (or a member of whose
family controls it),
- A corporation and an individual who owns directly or
indirectly more than 10% of the value of the outstanding stock of the
corporation,
- A trust fiduciary and a corporation of which more than 10%
in value of the outstanding stock is owned directly or indirectly by
or for the trust or by or for the grantor of the trust,
- The grantor and fiduciary, or the fiduciary and beneficiary,
of any trust,
- A corporation and a partnership if the same persons own over
10% in value of the outstanding stock of the corporation and more than
10% of the capital interest or the profits interest in the
partnership,
- Two S corporations if the same persons own more than 10% in
value of the outstanding stock of each corporation,
- An S corporation and a regular corporation if the same
persons own more than 10% in value of the outstanding stock of each
corporation,
- A partnership and a person who owns directly or indirectly
more than 10% of the capital or profits of the partnership,
- Two partnerships if the same persons directly or indirectly
own more than 10% of the capital or profits of each,
- Two persons who are engaged in business under common
control, and
- An executor of an estate and a beneficiary of that
estate.
To determine the direct or indirect ownership of the outstanding
stock of a corporation, apply the following rules.
- Stock owned directly or indirectly by or for a corporation,
partnership, estate, or trust is considered owned proportionately by
or for its shareholders, partners, or beneficiaries.
- Stock owned directly or indirectly by or for an individual's
family is considered owned by the individual. The family of an
individual includes only brothers and sisters, half-brothers and
half-sisters, a spouse, ancestors, and lineal descendants.
- Any stock in a corporation owned by an individual (other
than by applying rule (2)) is considered owned directly or indirectly
by the individual's partner.
- When applying rule (1), (2), or (3), stock considered owned
by a person under rule (1) is treated as actually owned by that
person. But, if a person constructively owns stock because of rule (2)
or (3), he or she does not own the stock for purposes of applying
either rule (2) or (3) to make another person the constructive owner
of the same stock.
Effect of government price support programs.
A government target price program (such as provided by the
Agriculture and Consumer Protection Act of 1973) or other government
price support programs for a product that you grow does not, without
agreements limiting your costs, reduce the amount you have at risk.
Effect of increasing amounts at risk in subsequent years.
Any loss that is allowable in a particular year reduces your
at-risk investment (but not below zero) as of the beginning of the
next tax year and in all succeeding tax years for that activity. If
you have a loss that is more than your at-risk amount, the loss
disallowed will not be allowed in later years unless you increase your
at-risk amount. Losses that are suspended because they are greater
than your investment that is at risk are treated as a deduction for
the activity in the following year. Consequently, if your amount at
risk increases in later years, you may deduct previously suspended
losses to the extent that the increases in your amount at risk exceed
your losses in later years. However, your deduction of suspended
losses may be limited by the passive loss rules.
Amounts Not At Risk
You are not considered at risk for amounts protected against loss
through nonrecourse financing, guarantees, stop loss agreements, or
other similar arrangements.
Nonrecourse financing.
Nonrecourse financing is financing for which you are not personally
liable. If you borrow money to contribute to an activity and the
lender's only recourse is to your interest in the activity or the
property used in the activity, the loan is a nonrecourse loan.
You are not considered at risk for your share of any nonrecourse
loan used to finance an activity or to acquire property used in the
activity unless the loan is secured by property not used in the
activity.
However, you are considered at risk for qualified nonrecourse
financing secured by real property used an activity of holding
real property.
Qualified nonrecourse financing is financing for which no one is
personally liable for repayment and that is:
- Borrowed by you in connection with the activity of holding
real property,
- Secured by real property used in the activity,
- Not convertible from a debt obligation to an ownership
interest, and
- Loaned or guaranteed by any federal, state, or local
government, or borrowed by you from a qualified person.
Other types of property used as security.
The rules in the next two paragraphs apply to any financing
incurred after August 3, 1998. You can also choose to apply these
rules to financing you obtained before August 4, 1998. If you do that,
you must reduce the amounts at risk as a result of applying these
rules to years ending before August 4, 1998, to the extent they
increase the losses allowed for those years.
In determining whether qualified nonrecourse financing is secured
only by real property used in the activity of holding real property,
disregard property that is incidental to the activity of holding real
property. Also disregard other property if the total gross fair market
value of that property is less than 10% of the total gross fair market
value of all the property securing the financing.
For this purpose, treat yourself as owning directly your
proportional share of the assets in any partnership in which you own,
directly or indirectly, an equity interest.
Qualified person.
A qualified person actively and regularly engages in the business
of lending money. The most common example is a bank.
A qualified person is not:
- A person related to you in one of the ways listed under
Related persons, earlier. However, a person related to you
may be a qualified person if the nonrecourse financing is commercially
reasonable and on the same terms as loans involving unrelated persons.
- A person from which you acquired the property or a person
related to that person.
- A person who receives a fee due to your investment in the
real property or a person related to that person.
Other loss limiting arrangements.
Any capital you have contributed to an activity is not at risk if
you are protected against economic loss by an agreement or arrangement
for compensation or reimbursement. For example, you are not at risk if
you will be reimbursed for part or all of any loss because of a
binding agreement between yourself and another person.
Example 1.
Some commercial feedlots reimburse investors against any loss
sustained on sales of the fed livestock above a stated dollar amount
per head. Under such "stop loss" orders, the investor is at risk
only for the portion of the investor's capital for which the investor
is not entitled to a reimbursement.
Example 2.
You are personally liable for a mortgage, but you separately obtain
insurance to compensate you for any payments you must actually make
because of your personal liability. You are considered at risk only to
the extent of the uninsured portion of the personal liability to which
you are exposed. You can include in the amount you have at risk the
amount of any premium which you paid from your personal assets for the
insurance. However, if you obtain casualty insurance or insurance
protecting yourself against tort liability, it does not affect the
amount you are otherwise considered to have at risk.
Reductions of
Amounts At Risk
The amount you have at risk in any activity is reduced by any
losses allowed in previous years under the at-risk rules. It may also
be reduced because of distributions you received from the activity,
debts changed from recourse to nonrecourse, or the initiation of a
stop-loss or similar agreement. If the amount at risk is reduced below
zero, your previously allowed losses are subject to recapture, as
explained next.
Recapture Rule
If the amount you have at risk in any activity at the end of any
tax year is less than zero, you must recapture at least part of your
previously allowed losses. You do this by adding to your income from
the activity for that year the smaller of the following amounts:
- The negative at-risk amount (treated as a positive amount),
or
- The total amount of losses deducted in previous tax years
beginning after 1978, minus any amounts you previously added to your
income from that activity under this recapture rule.
Do not use the recapture income to reduce any net loss from the
activity for the tax year. Instead, treat the recaptured amount as a
deduction for the activity in the next tax year.
Pre-1979 activity.
If the amount you had at risk in an activity at the end of your tax
year that began in 1978 was less than zero, you apply the preceding
rule for the recapture of losses by substituting that negative amount
for zero. For example, if your at-risk amount for that tax year was
minus $50, you will recapture losses only when your at-risk amount
goes below minus $50.
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