Generally
A Limited Liability Company is a statutory business that may be treated as a
corporation, a partnership, or a sole proprietorship for tax purposes.
As a result, to determine the tax implications of LLC-purchased Long-Term Care Insurance, one must
first determine by which method the LLC is treated for federal income tax purposes.
Thus it follows:
- A LLC treated as Sole
Proprietorship would look to the Sole Proprietor regulations for guidance;
- A LLC treated as a
Partnership would look to the Partnership regulations for guidance; and
- A LLC treated as a Corporation would look to the
Corporation regulations for guidance.
Professional Corporations/ Professional Associations (PCs/PAs)
Generally
Professional Corporations and Associations have the ability to select the
method by which the entity will be treated for federal income tax purposes.
Generally, Professional Corporations may elect to be treated as either a
C-Corporation or an S-Corporation. The status is elected by the entity.
As a result, to determine the tax implications of PC-purchased Long-Term Care Insurance, one must
first determine by which method the PC is treated for federal income tax
purposes.
Thus it follows:
- A PC treated as C-Corporation
would look to the C-Corporation regulations for guidance; and
- A PC treated as an S-Corporation would look to the
S-Corporation regulations for guidance.