Startups Stack Exchange Archive

Tax deduction for year(s) of no revenue?

Let’s say I am developing a product for 1 year with no revenue. Therefore, I am not taking a salary I otherwise would. Then next year I start to sell the product and end up with a profit of $100k. Is there some IRS rule where you can ‘spread’ profits back through the development timeframe, instead of getting hit with a high tax rate? In other words, could I back-pay myself $50k for the prior year and the other $50k for the current year, and get taxed on that accordingly?

If it matters, I am using savings for living expenses and have been registered as an LLC (pass through entity) for the full duration of development.

Answer 12395

I’ll give an answer, but I’m not an expert in this type of thing so hopefully someone else can confirm…

As an individual, you can’t deduct living expenses from your taxes and you can’t spread your income earned in one year over multiple years.

If you elect to have the LLC taxed as a corporation, then you can treat the LLC income separate from your own. You could do something like the following:

The above is probably a terrible idea because:

So to sum it all up, no, you can’t really do what you are asking.


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