Show HN: Pay Rent to Yourself and Deduct it Twice like Walmart (Save 33.5 Mil) (cameronkeng.com) 18 points by camz 14y ago ↗ HN
[–] hugh3 14y ago ↗ I'm pretty sure individuals are unlikely to be able to get away with the same thing. :( [–] sixtofour 14y ago ↗ Really rich individuals probably can. [–] camz 14y ago ↗ Technically, anyone could get away with it. But, it's the value proposition that really makes it unrealistic lol.You'd have to be at a point where you're trying to scale your business for this type of tax planning to really kick butt. [–] kaiyu 14y ago ↗ I need to start a company...
[–] sixtofour 14y ago ↗ Really rich individuals probably can. [–] camz 14y ago ↗ Technically, anyone could get away with it. But, it's the value proposition that really makes it unrealistic lol.You'd have to be at a point where you're trying to scale your business for this type of tax planning to really kick butt. [–] kaiyu 14y ago ↗ I need to start a company...
[–] camz 14y ago ↗ Technically, anyone could get away with it. But, it's the value proposition that really makes it unrealistic lol.You'd have to be at a point where you're trying to scale your business for this type of tax planning to really kick butt. [–] kaiyu 14y ago ↗ I need to start a company...
[–] BillSaysThis 14y ago ↗ "Does this still work? Federal corporate tax law has closed this loophole, so this tax model is no longer useful for federal level taxation."So individuals, corps, no one's really going to get away with this who isn't already. [–] camz 14y ago ↗ This loophole is closed for federal corp tax, but its still available for state tax planning.
[–] camz 14y ago ↗ This loophole is closed for federal corp tax, but its still available for state tax planning.
6 comments
[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 27.6 ms ] threadYou'd have to be at a point where you're trying to scale your business for this type of tax planning to really kick butt.
So individuals, corps, no one's really going to get away with this who isn't already.