Instructions for Form 2553 |
2003 Tax Year |
Specific Instructions
This is archived information that pertains only to the 2003 Tax Year. If you are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
Part I (All corporations must complete.)
Name and Address of Corporation
Enter the true corporate name as stated in the corporate charter or other legal document creating it. If the corporation's
mailing address is the
same as someone else's, such as a shareholder's, enter “c/o” and this person's name following the name of the corporation. Include the suite,
room, or other unit number after the street address. If the Post Office does not deliver to the street address and the corporation
has a P.O. box,
show the box number instead of the street address. If the corporation changed its name or address after applying for its employer
identification
number, be sure to check the box in item D of Part I.
Item A. Employer Identification Number (EIN)
If the corporation has applied for an EIN but has not received it, enter “applied for.” If the corporation does not have an EIN, it should
apply for one on Form SS-4, Application for Employer Identification Number. You can order Form SS-4 by calling 1-800-TAX-FORM
(1-800-829-3676) or by accessing the IRS Web Site www.irs.gov.
Item E. Effective Date of Election
Enter the beginning effective date (month, day, year) of the tax year requested for the S corporation. Generally, this will
be the beginning date
of the tax year for which the ending effective date is required to be shown in item I, Part I. For a new corporation (first
year the corporation
exists) it will generally be the date required to be shown in item H, Part I. The tax year of a new corporation starts on
the date that it has
shareholders, acquires assets, or begins doing business, whichever happens first. If the effective date for item E for a newly
formed corporation is
later than the date in item H, the corporation should file Form 1120 or Form 1120-A for the tax period between these dates.
Column K. Shareholders' Consent Statement
Each shareholder who owns (or is deemed to own) stock at the time the election is made must consent to the election. If the
election is made during
the corporation's tax year for which it first takes effect, any person who held stock at any time during the part of that
year that occurs before the
election is made, must consent to the election, even though the person may have sold or transferred his or her stock before
the election is made.
An election made during the first 2½ months of the tax year is effective for the following tax year if any person who held
stock in
the corporation during the part of the tax year before the election was made, and who did not hold stock at the time the election
was made, did not
consent to the election.
Note:
Once the election is made, a new shareholder is not required to consent to the election; a new Form 2553 will not be required.
Each shareholder consents by signing and dating in column K or signing and dating a separate consent statement described below.
The following
special rules apply in determining who must sign the consent statement.
- If a husband and wife have a community interest in the stock or in the income from it, both must consent.
- Each tenant in common, joint tenant, and tenant by the entirety must consent.
- A minor's consent is made by the minor, legal representative of the minor, or a natural or adoptive parent of the minor if
no legal
representative has been appointed.
- The consent of an estate is made by the executor or administrator.
- The consent of an electing small business trust is made by the trustee.
- If the stock is owned by a trust (other than an electing small business trust), the deemed owner of the trust must consent.
See section
1361(c)(2) for details regarding trusts that are permitted to be shareholders and rules for determining who is the deemed
owner.
Continuation sheet or separate consent statement. If you need a continuation sheet or use a separate consent statement, attach it to
Form 2553. The separate consent statement must contain the name, address, and EIN of the corporation and the shareholder information
requested in
columns J through N of Part I. If you want, you may combine all the shareholders' consents in one statement.
Enter the number of shares of stock each shareholder owns and the dates the stock was acquired. If the election is made during
the corporation's
tax year for which it first takes effect, do not list the shares of stock for those shareholders who sold or transferred all
of their stock before the
election was made. However, these shareholders must still consent to the election for it to be effective for the tax year.
Enter the social security number of each shareholder who is an individual. Enter the EIN of each shareholder that is an estate,
a qualified trust,
or an exempt organization.
Enter the month and day that each shareholder's tax year ends. If a shareholder is changing his or her tax year, enter the
tax year the shareholder
is changing to, and attach an explanation indicating the present tax year and the basis for the change (e.g., automatic revenue
procedure or letter
ruling request).
Form 2553 must be signed by the president, treasurer, assistant treasurer, chief accounting officer, or other corporate officer
(such as tax
officer) authorized to sign.
Complete Part II if you selected a tax year ending on any date other than December 31 (other than a 52-53-week tax year ending
with reference to
the month of December).
Note:
In certain circumstances the corporation may not obtain automatic approval of a fiscal year under the natural business year
(Box P1) or ownership
tax year (Box P2) provisions if it is under examination, before an area office, or before a federal court with respect to
any income tax issue and the
annual accounting period is under consideration. For details, see section 4.02 of Rev. Proc. 2002-38, 2002-22 I.R.B. 1037.
Attach a statement showing separately for each month the amount of gross receipts for the most recent 47 months. A corporation
that does not have a
47-month period of gross receipts cannot automatically establish a natural business year.
For examples of an acceptable business purpose for requesting a fiscal tax year, see section 5.02 of Rev. Proc. 2002-39, 2002-22
I.R.B. 1046, and
Rev. Rul. 87-57, 1987-2 C.B. 117.
Attach a statement showing the relevant facts and circumstances to establish a business purpose for the requested fiscal year.
For details on what
is sufficient to establish a business purpose, see section 5.02 of Rev. Proc. 2002-39.
If your business purpose is based on one of the natural business year tests provided in section 5.03 of Rev. Proc. 2002-39,
identify if you are
using the 25% gross receipts, annual business cycle, or seasonal business test. For the 25% gross receipts test, provide a
schedule showing the amount
of gross receipts for each month for the most recent 47 months. For either the annual business cycle or seasonal business
test, provide the gross
receipts from sales and services (and inventory costs, if applicable) for each month of the short period, if any, and the
three immediately preceding
tax years. If the corporation has been in existence for less than three tax years, submit figures for the period of existence.
If you check box Q1, you will be charged a user fee of up to $600 (subject to change—see Rev. Proc. 2002-1 or its successor).
Do not pay the
fee when filing Form 2553. The service center will send Form 2553 to the IRS in Washington, DC, who, in turn, will notify
the corporation that the fee
is due.
If the corporation makes a back-up section 444 election for which it is qualified, then the election will take effect in the
event the business
purpose request is not approved. In some cases, the tax year requested under the back-up section 444 election may be different
than the tax year
requested under business purpose. See Form 8716, Election To Have a Tax Year Other Than a Required Tax Year, for details on making a
back-up section 444 election.
If the corporation is not qualified to make the section 444 election after making the item Q2 back-up section 444 election
or indicating its
intention to make the election in item R1, and therefore it later files a calendar year return, it should write “Section 444 Election Not Made”
in the top left corner of the first calendar year Form 1120S it files.
Certain qualified subchapter S trusts (QSSTs) may make the QSST election required by section 1361(d)(2) in Part III. Part
III may be used to make
the QSST election only if corporate stock has been transferred to the trust on or before the date on which the corporation
makes its election to be an
S corporation. However, a statement can be used instead of Part III to make the election. If there was an inadvertent failure
to timely file a QSST
election, see the relief provisions under Rev. Proc. 98-55.
Note:
Use Part III only if you make the election in Part I (i.e., Form 2553 cannot be filed with only Part III completed).
The deemed owner of the QSST must also consent to the S corporation election in column K, page 1, of Form 2553. See section
1361(c)(2).
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