Changing Your Business or Getting Out of Business
Selling Your Business
The sale of a business is not usually a sale of one asset. Instead,
all of the assets of the business are sold. Generally, when this occurs, each asset is
treated as being sold separately for determining the treatment of gain or loss.
A business usually has many assets. When sold, these assets
must be classified as capital assets, depreciable property used
in the business, real property used in the business, or property
held for sale to customers, such as inventory or stock in trade.
The gain or loss on each asset is figured separately. The sale of
capital assets results in capital gain or loss. The sale of real
property or depreciable property used in the business and held longer
than one year results in gain or loss from a section 1231 transaction
(discussed in Publication
544). The sale of inventory results in ordinary income or loss.
Partnership interests. An interest in
a partnership or joint venture is treated as a capital asset
when sold. The part
of any gain or loss from unrealized receivables or inventory items
will be treated as ordinary gain or loss. For more information,
see Disposition of Partner's Interest in Publication
541.
Corporation interests. Your interest
in a corporation is represented by stock certificates. When you
sell these certificates,
you usually realize capital gain or loss. For information on the
sale of stock, see Publication
550.
Corporate liquidations. Corporate liquidations of property
are generally treated as a sale or exchange. Gain or loss is generally recognized by the
corporation on a liquidating sale of its assets. Gain or loss is also generally recognized
on a liquidating distribution of assets as if the corporation sold the assets to the
distributee at fair market value. In certain cases in which the distributee is a
corporation in control of the distributing corporation, the distribution may not be
taxable. For more information, see Internal Revenue Code section 332 and its regulations.
Reporting requirement. Both the buyer
and seller involved in the sale of business assets must report to
the IRS the allocation of the sales price among section 197 intangibles
and the other business assets. Use Form
8594, Asset Acquisition Statement Under Section 1060,
to provide this information. The buyer and seller should each attach
Form 8594 to their federal income tax return for the year
in which the sale occurred.
For more information about: dispositions of intangible property,
including patents, franchise, trademark, or trade name, see Publication
544.
Important References
Publication
544
Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets
Publication
541 Partnerships
Publication
542 Corporations
Publication 550 Investment Income and Expenses
Form
4797 Sales
of Business Property
Form
8594 Asset
Acquisition Statement Under Section 1060
Schedule
D (Form 1040) Capital Gains and Losses
Instructions for Form 4797
Instructions for Form 8594
Instructions for Schedule D (Form 1040)