Prepare for the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) Certified Public Accountant Tax Compliance and Planning (CPA TCP) section with 24 free sample questions, a 68-question multiple-choice question (MCQ) diagnostic, topic drills, timed practice, and detailed explanations aligned to the 2026 blueprint.
Use this page when you are preparing for the Certified Public Accountant Tax Compliance and Planning section and want a direct practice route. The public preview gives you sample questions and a full-length MCQ diagnostic; the web app adds mixed sets, topic drills, timed mocks, progress tracking, and full practice.
Mastery Exam Prep is independent exam-prep software. These are original practice questions, not official CPA Exam questions from AICPA, NASBA, or any state board.
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Provider | American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) |
| Exam section | Certified Public Accountant Tax Compliance and Planning (CPA TCP) |
| CPA Exam role | Discipline section |
| Current blueprint focus | 2026 AICPA TCP blueprint |
| Practice reference on this site | 68-question multiple-choice question (MCQ) diagnostic plus topic drills and mixed practice |
| Time reference | 4 hours |
| Passing score reference | 75 |
| Important format note | The CPA TCP section also involves task-based simulations and exhibit-heavy work. Use the free page as a multiple-choice diagnostic, then use the full practice route for broader repetition and review. |
| Abbreviation | Meaning | Why it matters for practice |
|---|---|---|
| CPA | Certified Public Accountant | This is the professional credential path. The page supports exam practice, not licensure advice. |
| TCP | Tax Compliance and Planning | This section focuses on individual tax planning, entity compliance, entity planning, property dispositions, basis, transactions, and personal financial planning tax issues. |
| MCQ | Multiple-choice question | The public full-length page is an MCQ diagnostic. Use it for concept and pacing review, not as a promise that every live item type is represented. |
| AICPA | American Institute of Certified Public Accountants | Use the sponsor’s current materials and your state-board requirements as the final authority before exam day. |
| TCP blueprint area | Official weighting range |
|---|---|
| Tax Compliance and Planning for Individuals and Personal Financial Planning | 30-40% |
| Entity Tax Compliance | 30-40% |
| Entity Tax Planning | 10-20% |
| Property Transactions (disposition of assets) | 10-20% |
CPA TCP rewards candidates who can connect tax facts to compliance, planning, entity, owner-level, and property-transaction consequences. Strong answers consider both the immediate tax result and the planning trade-off created by the facts.
| If the stem is mainly about… | It usually belongs here because… |
|---|---|
| individual tax planning, entity compliance, entity planning, property dispositions, basis, transactions, and personal financial planning tax issues | CPA TCP is the section built around this judgment area. |
| audit evidence, engagement risk, independence, or reporting | compare with CPA AUD before drilling more CPA TCP questions. |
| recognition, measurement, presentation, or disclosure | compare with CPA FAR before drilling more CPA TCP questions. |
| systems, controls, security, privacy, or SOC reporting | compare with CPA ISC before drilling more CPA TCP questions. |
| business analysis, performance management, reporting analysis, or governmental accounting | compare with CPA BAR before drilling more CPA TCP questions. |
Use multiple-choice practice to test tax consequences, then pair it with client-fact and planning-document review. For CPA TCP, that means reading taxpayer objectives, ownership facts, entity documents, asset-disposition details, retirement or estate facts, and timing constraints before choosing a compliant planning move. When you miss an MCQ, identify whether the gap was tax consequence, planning objective, cash-flow effect, entity-owner split, limitation, or compliance constraint.
| If your misses look like… | Drill next |
|---|---|
| You miss individual planning questions | drill individual and personal financial planning tax questions |
| You miss entity consequences | drill entity compliance and entity planning questions side by side |
| You miss property transaction results | drill disposition questions and write down basis, amount realized, character, and timing |
Need concept review before timed practice? Read the CPA TCP guide on CPAExamsMastery.com, then return here for sample questions, topic drills, timed mocks, and the full practice route.
Use these child pages when you want focused Mastery Exam Prep practice before returning to mixed sets and timed mocks.
These are original Mastery Exam Prep practice questions aligned to the live CPA TCP route and the main blueprint areas shown above. Use them to test readiness here, then continue in Mastery Exam Prep with mixed sets, topic drills, and timed mocks.
Topic: Tax Compliance and Planning for Individuals and Personal Financial Planning
Alex, a single taxpayer, asks his CPA for a current-year tax projection and advice on whether to increase wage withholding before year-end. He has provided this preliminary summary, but the CPA has not yet reviewed source documents:
What should the CPA do next before recommending a withholding adjustment?
Best answer: A
Explanation: Before changing withholding, the CPA should first classify each nonroutine item from the supporting documents. Here, the nonqualified option spread is compensation, the dividends and bank interest are investment income, the forgone interest on the family loan is imputed interest income, and the 401(k) deferral and employer health coverage are deferred or excluded from current gross income. In a nonroutine gross-income planning case, the proper next step is classification based on source data, not an immediate planning recommendation. Alex’s exercise of nonqualified stock options creates current compensation income equal to the spread at exercise, even though he did not sell the shares. The qualified dividends and bank interest are investment income. Because Alex made a $200,000 interest-free demand loan to his son and the forgone interest is given as $8,000, Alex must account for imputed interest income under the below-market loan rules. By contrast, salary deferred into a traditional 401(k) is generally deferred from current federal income tax, and employer-paid group health coverage is generally excluded from gross income. Once those categories are identified correctly, the CPA can build a reliable projection and then decide whether withholding should change.
Topic: Entity Tax Compliance
Stone Corp., a domestic C corporation, is reviewing whether it must report a current-year inclusion from Nova Ltd., a foreign corporation, even though Nova paid no dividend. The tax manager wrote: “If Nova is a controlled foreign corporation and Stone is a 10%-or-more U.S. shareholder, Nova’s passive earnings may increase Stone’s U.S. taxable income.”
Which file item best supports the tax manager’s conclusion?
Best answer: C
Explanation: The best support is the ownership and income summary showing Stone owns at least 10% and qualifying U.S. shareholders collectively own more than 50% of Nova. Adding passive royalty income supports the conclusion that Stone may have a current U.S. taxable income inclusion even without a dividend. A foreign corporation is generally a controlled foreign corporation when U.S. shareholders that each own at least 10% of vote or value collectively own more than 50% of the corporation’s vote or value. If a domestic corporation is one of those 10%-or-more U.S. shareholders, certain CFC income can affect its current U.S. taxable income even when no cash distribution is made. Passive royalty income is a classic fact pattern for that concern. The strongest evidence therefore must show three things at once: Nova is foreign, Stone is at least a 10% U.S. shareholder, and the total ownership of qualifying U.S. shareholders exceeds 50%. The summary with Stone at 18%, two other domestic corporations at 22% each, and passive royalty income does exactly that.
Topic: Entity Tax Planning
Alta Machines, Inc., a calendar-year C corporation, may schedule a $400,000 maintenance project in either December 20X5 or January 20X6. The cost is fixed and fully deductible in the year performed, and the project has no business effect other than tax timing.
The controller prepared this planning schedule:
| Item | 20X5 | 20X6 |
|---|---|---|
| Projected federal taxable income before maintenance | $850,000 | $900,000 |
| Federal corporate tax rate | 21% | 21% |
| State footprint | 100% State A | 60% State A, 40% State B |
| State income tax rates | State A 4% | State A 4%; State B 9% |
Additional notes:
Which missing assumption is most critical because, if it proves false, the recommendation is most likely to change?
Best answer: A
Explanation: The recommendation to delay the deduction to 20X6 is driven by a higher projected combined tax rate next year. That rate increase depends on Alta actually becoming taxable in State B at the projected apportionment; if that assumption fails, Alta’s stated preference for an earlier deduction could make 20X5 the better choice. For C corporation timing decisions, the key comparison is the value of taking income or deductions in one year versus another, using the expected marginal tax rate in each year and whether the tax effect is usable immediately. Here, both years can fully absorb the deduction, and the federal rate is the same in both years. That means the schedule’s recommendation to wait until 20X6 rests mainly on the projected higher state tax burden after expansion into State B. If Alta does not actually have State B income tax exposure, or if the expected 40% apportionment there does not occur, the projected 20X6 tax-rate advantage largely disappears. Once that happens, Alta’s stated preference for the earlier deduction would likely favor performing the maintenance in 20X5 instead.
Topic: Property Transactions (Disposition of Assets)
Pine C Corp made a $200,000 demand loan on January 1, Year 1, to Lee, its 80% individual shareholder. The note bears stated annual interest of 2%, paid on December 31, Year 1. The applicable federal rate for Year 1 is 6%. Pine has sufficient current and accumulated earnings and profits, and no below-market loan exception applies.
How should the Year 1 foregone interest be characterized for federal income tax purposes?
Best answer: C
Explanation: For a below-market demand loan, foregone interest equals the AFR interest minus the stated interest actually charged. Here, that amount is $8,000. Because the borrower is a shareholder and the corporation has sufficient earnings and profits, the deemed transfer is a dividend, with a matching deemed interest payment back to the corporation. A below-market demand loan creates imputed interest each year. Compute the foregone interest by multiplying the loan balance by the difference between the applicable federal rate and the stated rate. Pine loaned $200,000 at 2% when the AFR was 6%, so the foregone interest is $8,000. In a corporation-shareholder loan, the tax law treats that amount as a two-step deemed transaction: first, the corporation transfers the foregone interest amount to the shareholder; second, the shareholder is deemed to pay the same amount back to the corporation as interest. Because Pine has sufficient current and accumulated earnings and profits, the deemed transfer is characterized as a dividend rather than return of capital. Thus, the correct characterization is an $8,000 deemed dividend to Lee and $8,000 of interest income to Pine.
Topic: Tax Compliance and Planning for Individuals and Personal Financial Planning
On December 20, 2026, Maya, a cash-basis sole proprietor, asks her CPA for a year-end tax-planning recommendation. Her projections, after enacted federal rate changes, are:
| Year | Projected taxable income before year-end actions | Marginal federal rate |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 | $340,000 | 35% |
| 2027 | (205,000 | 24% |
| \nMaya can still control these items: |
A)40,000 customer payment can be received on December 29, 2026, or January 4, 2027, at Maya’s direction, with no constructive receipt issue.
$18,000 of ordinary and necessary business expenses have already been incurred and are deductible when paid; Maya can pay them on December 30, 2026, or January 5, 2027. \nAssume no AMT, QBI deduction, phaseouts, or other limitations apply. \nWhat should the CPA recommend next to best minimize Maya’s combined 2026-2027 federal income tax liability?
A. Receive the $40,000 customer payment in December 2026 and pay the $18,000 expenses in January 2027.
B. Receive the $40,000 customer payment in January 2027 and pay the $18,000 expenses in January 2027.
C. Receive the $40,000 customer payment in December 2026 and pay the $18,000 expenses in December 2026.
D. Receive the $40,000 customer payment in January 2027 and pay the $18,000 expenses in December 2026.
Best answer: D
Explanation: Maya is in a higher marginal bracket in 2026 than in 2027, so the tax-efficient move is to shift income into 2027 and pull deductions into 2026. That uses the lower rate on income and the higher rate on deductions. For a cash-basis individual, income is generally taxed when received and expenses are generally deducted when paid. When the taxpayer’s current-year marginal rate is higher than the following year’s rate, the usual year-end planning goal is to defer income into the lower-rate year and accelerate deductions into the higher-rate year. Here, moving the $40,000 payment from 2026 to 2027 shifts that income from a 35% year to a 24% year, reducing tax by about $4,400. Paying the $18,000 deductible expenses in 2026 instead of 2027 places the deduction against 35% income rather than 24% income, increasing its value by about $1,980. That combined timing strategy produces the lowest two-year federal tax.
Topic: Entity Tax Compliance
Pine, Inc. is a calendar-year C corporation. Its Year 1 records show the following:
| Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| Shareholder | Nora owns 100% of Pine |
| Employment relationship | Nora does not provide services to Pine |
| Loan date | January 1, Year 1 |
| Loan type | Demand loan from Pine to Nora |
| Principal outstanding all year | $300,000 |
| Stated annual interest rate | 1%, paid on December 31, Year 1 |
| AFR for a comparable demand loan | 5% |
| Use of loan proceeds | Entirely personal |
| Pine’s current and accumulated E&P | Sufficient to cover any deemed distribution |
Based on these facts, which is the best interpretation of the Year 1 federal income tax consequences?
Best answer: B
Explanation: The loan is below market because Pine charged 1% when the AFR is 5%, so the forgone interest for Year 1 is $12,000. Since Pine lent to its nonemployee shareholder and has sufficient E&P, that forgone interest is treated as a dividend to Nora and as additional interest income to Pine. For a below-market shareholder loan, first compute the forgone interest using the loan balance and the difference between the AFR and the stated rate. Here, \(300,000 × 4% =\)12,000. Because the lender is the C corporation and the borrower is its shareholder, the forgone interest is treated as a deemed transfer from Pine to Nora. With sufficient earnings and profits, that deemed transfer is a dividend, not a capital contribution. Nora is then deemed to pay the same $12,000 back to Pine as interest, so Pine has $12,000 of additional interest income beyond the $3,000 actually received. Since Nora used the borrowed funds entirely for personal purposes, the deemed interest is personal interest rather than business-interest or investment-interest treatment.
Topic: Entity Tax Planning
On July 1, Year 5, Liam sells his entire 25% interest in Oak Partnership to Nora for $150,000 cash. Immediately before the sale:
Which result is correct?
Best answer: A
Explanation: Liam’s amount realized is $170,000, made up of $150,000 cash plus $20,000 liability relief. Subtracting his $110,000 outside basis gives a $60,000 gain; $12,000 is ordinary under §751 and the remaining $48,000 is capital, while Oak has no entity-level gain and makes a $65,000 §743(b) adjustment for Nora. In a sale of a partnership interest, the selling partner’s amount realized includes both cash received and relief of the partner’s share of partnership liabilities. Here, Liam’s amount realized is $170,000 ($150,000 cash + $20,000 liability relief). Subtracting his $110,000 outside basis produces a $60,000 gain. The problem states that $12,000 of the gain is attributable to unrealized receivables and inventory, so that portion is ordinary income under §751; the remaining $48,000 is capital gain. Oak generally does not recognize gain or loss when one partner sells an interest to another person. Because Oak has a §754 election in effect, it makes a §743(b) adjustment for Nora equal to her outside basis of $170,000 minus her $105,000 share of inside basis, for a $65,000 step-up that applies only to Nora.
Topic: Property Transactions (Disposition of Assets)
A CPA is reviewing a client’s Year 1 disposition schedule. On December 15, Year 1, Maya sold investment land for $500,000. Her adjusted basis was $320,000. She received $80,000 cash at closing and a non-readily tradable note for $420,000 payable in three equal principal installments in Years 2 through 4, with adequate stated interest. There is no depreciation recapture, no selling expense, and Maya did not elect out of installment reporting. What is the correct federal income tax treatment for Year 1?
Best answer: D
Explanation: Because Maya sold investment land and received only a down payment plus a non-readily tradable note, the installment method applies unless she elects out. Her gross profit percentage is $180,000 ÷ \(500,000 = 36%, so Year 1 gain is 36% of the\)80,000 principal collected, or $28,800. An installment sale generally lets a taxpayer recognize gain as principal payments are received rather than recognizing the entire gain in the year of sale. Here, Maya’s total gain is $180,000 ($500,000 selling price less $320,000 basis). Because the note is not readily tradable and she did not elect out, she uses the installment method. The gross profit percentage is 36% ($180,000 ÷ $500,000), and that percentage is applied to principal collected. Since Maya received only $80,000 of principal in Year 1, she recognizes $28,800 of gain in Year 1. The rest of the principal-related gain is recognized as later principal payments are collected. Any stated interest is reported separately as interest income and is not part of the installment-sale gain computation.
Topic: Tax Compliance and Planning for Individuals and Personal Financial Planning
Leslie wants to transfer (60,000 of value to her adult daughter within 30 days for a home down payment. Leslie’s stated goals are to reduce Leslie’s taxable estate, minimize the family’s current-year income tax, and avoid using Leslie’s existing cash reserves if possible. Ignore annual exclusion and gift tax return filing effects.
| Item | Amount / fact |
|---|---|
| Unrelated capital gains already expected by Leslie this year | At least)35,000 |
| Cash reserves | $60,000 |
| Publicly traded stock | FMV $60,000; basis $12,000; daughter would sell immediately after the gift |
| Vacant land | FMV $60,000; basis $95,000; ready third-party buyer at FMV; daughter would sell immediately if gifted; no sale costs assumed |
Which action is most supported by the exhibit?
Best answer: B
Explanation: The best choice is to sell the vacant land first and then gift the cash proceeds. That approach preserves Leslie’s built-in capital loss for current-year tax benefit, still removes $60,000 from her estate, and avoids dipping into her existing cash reserves. When property with a built-in loss is gifted, the donor’s loss generally is not transferred to the donee. For loss purposes, the donee’s basis is the fair market value at the date of the gift, so if Leslie gifts the land worth $60,000 with a $95,000 basis and the daughter immediately sells it for $60,000, no loss is recognized. By contrast, if Leslie sells the land first to the ready third-party buyer, Leslie recognizes the $35,000 capital loss and can use it against her own expected capital gains this year. She can then gift the $60,000 sale proceeds to her daughter, achieving the estate-reduction goal and meeting the daughter’s cash need without using Leslie’s existing cash reserves. Gifting the appreciated stock would shift a large built-in gain to an immediate sale and would not minimize the family’s current-year income tax.
Topic: Entity Tax Compliance
A CPA is preparing the 2026 fiduciary accounting schedule for the Lane Family Trust. The trust instrument requires current distribution of trust income to the sole income beneficiary and is silent on capital gains. During the year, the trust received $6,000 of bond interest, $4,000 of cash dividends, and $30,000 from selling stock held as a trust investment. Assume applicable law follows the usual fiduciary accounting rule that gains from the sale of principal assets are allocated to principal.
Which classification is correct?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Corpus means the trust principal, including property already in the trust and amounts received from disposing of that property. Trust income is the current return produced by corpus, such as interest and ordinary cash dividends, so the stock sale proceeds are corpus while the interest and dividends are trust income. In fiduciary accounting, corpus (or principal) is the underlying trust property preserved for remainder interests, while trust income is the yield generated by that property for the income beneficiary. Under the usual rule, receipts like bond interest and ordinary cash dividends are allocated to trust income because they are current returns on invested assets. By contrast, when the trust sells a principal asset such as stock, the receipt is a principal transaction, so the sale proceeds and related gain are allocated to corpus unless the governing instrument or applicable law provides otherwise. That means the income beneficiary is generally entitled to the interest and dividends, not the stock sale proceeds, for trust accounting purposes.
Topic: Entity Tax Planning
A CPA is comparing three liquidation transactions:
Which tax characterization is correct?
Best answer: C
Explanation: The correct characterization is the S corporation result. The corporation recognizes gain on the appreciated land as if it were sold, that gain passes through and increases stock basis, and only then does the shareholder compute gain or loss on the liquidating exchange of stock. Liquidating distributions are compared differently across entity types. A C corporation generally recognizes gain or loss when it distributes property in complete liquidation as if the property were sold at fair market value, and the shareholder separately recognizes capital gain or loss on the stock exchange, creating potential double taxation. An S corporation also recognizes gain on appreciated property distributed in liquidation, but that gain passes through to the shareholder and adjusts stock basis before the shareholder measures gain or loss on the stock. Here, the land gain is $60,000 ($100,000 FMV less $40,000 basis). The S shareholder’s basis rises from $50,000 to $110,000, so receiving property worth $100,000 results in a $10,000 capital loss on the stock. By contrast, a proportionate partnership liquidating distribution of property generally does not trigger immediate gain merely because the property’s FMV exceeds the partner’s outside basis.
Topic: Property Transactions (Disposition of Assets)
During a review of an asset disposition schedule, a CPA notes the following item:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Asset | Used manufacturing equipment |
| Holding period | 5 years |
| Original cost | $180,000 |
| Accumulated depreciation | $110,000 |
| Gross selling price | $120,000 |
| Selling expenses | $10,000 |
| Preparer’s conclusion | $40,000 Section 1231 gain |
Assume the equipment is Section 1245 property and there are no other asset dispositions. How should the issue on the schedule be characterized?
Best answer: B
Explanation: The schedule’s $40,000 gain is mathematically correct: $120,000 selling price minus $10,000 selling expenses equals $110,000 amount realized, and $110,000 minus $70,000 adjusted basis equals $40,000 gain. The problem is character, because Section 1245 requires ordinary income recapture up to prior depreciation. When reviewing an asset disposition schedule, first verify the amount, then verify the character. Here, the adjusted basis is $70,000 ($180,000 cost minus $110,000 depreciation). The amount realized is $110,000 ($120,000 gross selling price minus $10,000 selling expenses). That produces a correctly calculated $40,000 gain.
However, the asset is Section 1245 property. On the sale of Section 1245 property, gain is recharacterized as ordinary income to the extent of prior depreciation deductions. Because prior depreciation was $110,000 and the total gain is only $40,000, the entire $40,000 is ordinary income recapture. So this is not a math error; it is a character classification error on the schedule.
Topic: Tax Compliance and Planning for Individuals and Personal Financial Planning
Mila materially participates in an LLC taxed as a partnership. Relevant current-year facts are:
Assume Mila has sufficient outside basis, is not protected against loss, and no passive activity limitation applies.
How should Mila’s current-year LLC loss be characterized under the at-risk rules?
Best answer: D
Explanation: Mila may deduct loss only to the extent she is at risk in the activity. Her at-risk amount is $50,000: $30,000 from prior cash contributions plus $20,000 from personally borrowed full-recourse funds contributed to the LLC; the allocated nonrecourse debt does not increase her at-risk amount. Under the at-risk rules, an individual generally may deduct pass-through losses only up to the amount economically at risk in the activity. Cash contributions increase the at-risk amount, and funds the owner personally borrows on a full-recourse basis and puts into the activity also increase it because the owner bears personal liability. By contrast, an allocated share of entity-level nonrecourse debt generally does not increase the owner’s at-risk amount. Here, Mila’s at-risk amount before the current-year loss is $50,000 ($30,000 + $20,000). Because her allocated ordinary loss is $70,000, she may currently deduct $50,000 and must suspend the remaining $20,000 under the at-risk limitation. The stem removes basis and passive loss issues, so only the at-risk limit controls.
Topic: Entity Tax Compliance
The Reed Trust requires annual distribution of fiduciary accounting income to the income beneficiary. The trust instrument is silent on how corporate distributions are allocated, and the governing state follows the Uniform Principal and Income Act. During the year, the trust received a pro rata 10% stock dividend from a corporation whose shares it already held, and no cash election was offered. For fiduciary accounting purposes, how should the stock dividend be classified?
Best answer: D
Explanation: Because the trust instrument is silent, the default principal-and-income rules control. Under those rules, a pro rata stock dividend with no cash election is allocated to corpus rather than fiduciary accounting income. Trust accounting first follows the governing instrument, and if the instrument is silent, state principal-and-income law applies. Under Uniform Principal and Income Act style rules, ordinary cash dividends are generally income, but a pro rata stock dividend of additional shares is a principal receipt. The distribution increases the trust’s ownership interest without delivering cash to the income beneficiary, so it is added to corpus for the remaindermen’s benefit. This is a fiduciary accounting classification issue, not a DNI or taxable-income determination.
Topic: Entity Tax Planning
Atlas Supply, Inc., formerly a C corporation, made a valid S election effective January 1, 2024. In October 2026, while still within the built-in gains recognition period, Atlas plans to sell one asset to raise cash. Assume Atlas had a positive net unrealized built-in gain on the S-election date, the taxable income limitation will not reduce the built-in gains amount, and each asset below was owned on January 1, 2024.
| Asset | Adjusted basis on 1/1/24 | FMV on 1/1/24 | Expected sale price in 2026 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ridge tract | $120,000 | $210,000 | $230,000 |
| Lake tract | $400,000 | $460,000 | $430,000 |
| Stock portfolio | $250,000 | $220,000 | $280,000 |
| Downtown lot | $90,000 | $130,000 | $125,000 |
Which asset should Atlas sell if it wants the smallest amount of gain subject to the S corporation built-in gains tax?
Best answer: D
Explanation: The amount subject to built-in gains tax for an asset sold during the recognition period is generally the lesser of the actual gain recognized or the asset’s built-in gain on the S-election date. Because the stock portfolio had a built-in loss, not a built-in gain, on January 1, 2024, none of its later gain is subject to the built-in gains tax. For an asset held when a C corporation becomes an S corporation, recognized built-in gain is measured asset by asset. During the recognition period, the amount potentially subject to the built-in gains tax is the lesser of: the gain recognized on sale, or the asset’s built-in gain on the S-election date (FMV minus basis, if positive). If the asset had no built-in gain on that date, later appreciation is not recognized built-in gain.
Here, Ridge tract: gain $110,000, built-in gain $90,000, so $90,000 is subject. Lake tract: gain $30,000, built-in gain $60,000, so $30,000 is subject. Downtown lot: gain $35,000, built-in gain $40,000, so $35,000 is subject. Stock portfolio: basis $250,000 and FMV $220,000 on the S-election date, so it had no built-in gain; therefore its later $30,000 gain is not subject to the built-in gains tax.
Topic: Property Transactions (Disposition of Assets)
Marin, an individual, sold investment land on January 2, Year 1 for $500,000. The land had an adjusted basis of $350,000. There were no selling expenses, no debt on the property, and no depreciation recapture. The buyer paid $100,000 cash at closing and signed a note for the remaining $400,000, payable in four equal $100,000 principal installments. Before December 31, Year 1, Marin received one $100,000 principal installment and $4,000 of stated interest.
Marin’s preparer drafted this Year 1 installment sale schedule:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross profit | $150,000 |
| Gross profit percentage | 30% |
| Year 1 cash received | $204,000 |
| Year 1 recognized gain | $61,200 |
Which interpretation is most appropriate?
Best answer: A
Explanation: The preparer’s schedule overstates Year 1 gain by including stated interest in the installment payment base. Under the installment method, recognized gain equals the gross profit percentage multiplied by principal collected, so Marin recognizes $60,000 on $200,000 of principal receipts. For an installment sale, current-year recognized gain is computed by multiplying the gross profit percentage by the principal payments received during the year. Separately stated interest is not part of the installment sale payment for gain recognition; it is reported as interest income. Here, gross profit is $150,000 on a $500,000 sale, so the 30% gross profit percentage is correct. In Year 1, Marin received $100,000 down at closing plus one additional $100,000 principal installment, for total principal collections of $200,000. The $4,000 interest does not increase installment gain. Therefore, the correct Year 1 recognized gain is $60,000 ($200,000 × 30%), and the preparer’s $61,200 amount is too high.
Topic: Tax Compliance and Planning for Individuals and Personal Financial Planning
Jordan, a single taxpayer, can fund only one investment and expects to sell it after a 13-month holding period. Jordan’s federal marginal tax rates are 32% on ordinary income and 15% on qualified dividends and long-term capital gains. Municipal bond interest is federally tax-exempt. Ignore state taxes, NIIT, and AMT. Assume advisory fees are not deductible and no Sec. 199A deduction applies to any REIT distributions.
| Investment option | Initial cost | Expected cash yield during holding period | Tax character of yield | Expected sale proceeds after 13 months | Annual fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Corporate bond fund | $40,000 | $2,600 | Ordinary interest | $40,400 | $100 |
| Municipal bond fund | $38,000 | $1,950 | Tax-exempt interest | $38,100 | $75 |
| Dividend stock fund | $45,000 | $2,100 | Qualified dividends | $47,400 | $150 |
| REIT fund | $42,000 | $2,850 | Ordinary dividends | $42,900 | $100 |
Based on the exhibit, which investment gives Jordan the highest projected after-tax ROI over the holding period?
Best answer: D
Explanation: Compute after-tax net return for each option as after-tax yield plus after-tax appreciation minus the nondeductible fee, then divide by initial cost. The dividend stock fund is highest at about 8.17%, so it provides the best tax-adjusted ROI. Tax-adjusted ROI compares net after-tax profit to the amount invested. Here, ordinary income is taxed at 32%, while qualified dividends and long-term capital gains are taxed at 15%, and municipal bond interest is tax-exempt. Using those rules: corporate bond fund = (($2,600 × 68%) + ($400 × 85%) - \(100) /\)40,000 = 5.02%; municipal bond fund = ($1,950 + ($100 × 85%) - \(75) /\)38,000 = 5.16%; dividend stock fund = (($2,100 × 85%) + ($2,400 × 85%) - \(150) /\)45,000 = 8.17%; REIT fund = (($2,850 × 68%) + ($900 × 85%) - \(100) /\)42,000 = 6.20%. Because the dividend stock fund has the highest after-tax percentage return, it is the best choice.
Topic: Entity Tax Compliance
Birch Corp, a C corporation, received land from its sole shareholder in exchange for Birch Corp stock and cash.
| Contribution fact | Amount |
|---|---|
| Shareholder’s adjusted basis in the land | $90,000 |
| Fair market value of the land | $150,000 |
| Liability on the land assumed by Birch Corp | $70,000 |
| Cash boot paid by Birch Corp to the shareholder | $20,000 |
| Shareholder’s ownership immediately after the transfer | 100% |
Assume the transfer otherwise qualifies under Sec. 351, the liability assumption is not treated as boot, and the liability does not exceed the shareholder’s basis in the land.
Based on the exhibit, what basis does Birch Corp take in the land immediately after the transfer?
Best answer: A
Explanation: A C corporation generally takes a carryover basis in property received in a Sec. 351 exchange, increased by any gain the shareholder recognizes. Here, the shareholder’s basis is $90,000 and the $20,000 cash boot causes $20,000 of recognized gain, so Birch Corp’s basis is $110,000. For property contributed to a C corporation in a qualifying Sec. 351 exchange, the corporation’s basis is generally determined under the carryover basis rule. The starting point is the shareholder’s adjusted basis in the transferred property, and that amount is increased by any gain the shareholder recognizes on the transfer. In this case, the land had a $90,000 adjusted basis. The shareholder also received $20,000 of cash boot, which causes recognition of gain up to the amount of boot received, assuming sufficient realized gain exists. Because the assumed liability is not treated as boot and does not exceed the shareholder’s basis, it does not create additional recognized gain here. Therefore, Birch Corp’s basis in the land is $90,000 plus $20,000, or $110,000.
Topic: Entity Tax Planning
Willow Creek LLC, taxed as a partnership, is considering a nonliquidating distribution of a parcel of land to Mason, who will remain a 30% partner after the transfer.
Current tax facts:
What should the CPA do next?
Best answer: C
Explanation: The next step is a basis analysis, not an FMV or book-entry approach. In a nonliquidating distribution, cash reduces the partner’s outside basis first, the distributed land generally takes a carryover tax basis limited by the partner’s remaining outside basis, and the partnership usually does not recognize current gain or loss on distributing land. For a proposed nonliquidating partnership distribution, the CPA should begin by analyzing the distributee partner’s outside basis and the partnership’s inside basis in the property. Cash is applied first; a partner recognizes gain only if cash distributed exceeds outside basis. Here, Mason has $24,000 of outside basis and receives $10,000 cash, so no gain is triggered by the cash. Mason then has $14,000 of remaining outside basis, which limits the tax basis he can take in the distributed land even though the partnership’s basis in the land is $40,000 and its FMV is much higher. The partnership generally does not recognize gain or loss on a noncash nonliquidating distribution of land. Therefore, the proper next step is to compute basis consequences, not use FMV, rely on book capital, or force partnership-level gain recognition.
Topic: Property Transactions (Disposition of Assets)
Harper, a calendar-year sole proprietor, had the following 2026 results from dispositions of trade or business property held for more than one year. The amounts below are already calculated after any required recapture.
| Disposition | Section 1231 gain (loss) |
|---|---|
| Asset 1 | $80,000 |
| Asset 2 | $(30,000) |
| Asset 3 | $20,000 |
| Asset 4 | $(10,000) |
Harper also has $25,000 of nonrecaptured net Section 1231 losses from the previous five tax years.
After applying the Section 1231 netting and lookback rules, how much of Harper’s 2026 net Section 1231 result is treated as long-term capital gain?
Best answer: A
Explanation: First net the Section 1231 amounts: $80,000 - $30,000 + $20,000 - \(10,000 =\)60,000 net gain. Then apply the five-year lookback rule, which recharacterizes $25,000 as ordinary income, so $35,000 remains long-term capital gain. Section 1231 gains and losses from business property held more than one year are netted after any required recapture. If the result is a net Section 1231 loss, it is treated as an ordinary loss. If the result is a net Section 1231 gain, it is generally treated as long-term capital gain, but only after applying the five-year lookback rule.
Here, Harper’s 2026 net Section 1231 result is $60,000: $80,000 + $20,000 - $30,000 - $10,000. Harper also has $25,000 of nonrecaptured net Section 1231 losses from the prior five years. That amount causes $25,000 of the current-year net gain to be recharacterized as ordinary income. The remaining $35,000 keeps Section 1231 capital-gain treatment and is treated as long-term capital gain.
Topic: Tax Compliance and Planning for Individuals and Personal Financial Planning
Taylor, a single taxpayer, itemizes deductions and is evaluating two year-end actions for 2026.
Projected 2026 federal tax data before either action:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Regular taxable income | $220,000 |
| AMTI | $220,000 |
| Excess of regular tax over tentative minimum tax | $3,000 |
| Marginal regular tax rate | 24% |
| Marginal AMT rate | 28% |
Possible actions:
Which interpretation is best supported by these projections?
Best answer: C
Explanation: The best interpretation is that the state tax prepayment helps only on the regular tax side, while the ISO exercise affects only AMTI in the exercise year. Given the projected gap, the deduction still lowers current tax, but the ISO adjustment is large enough to trigger AMT. Total federal tax is effectively the higher of regular tax or tentative minimum tax. Here, Taylor starts with regular tax exceeding tentative minimum tax by $3,000, so there is no AMT before either action. Paying $8,000 of state estimated income tax reduces regular taxable income, saving about $1,920 at the 24% regular rate, but it does not reduce AMTI. Because the $1,920 benefit is smaller than the $3,000 gap, total current federal tax still falls. By contrast, exercising the ISO adds a $15,000 AMT adjustment but no regular taxable income in the exercise year if the shares are held. At a 28% AMT rate, tentative minimum tax rises by about $4,200, which is enough to erase the $3,000 gap and create current-year AMT.
Topic: Entity Tax Compliance
For this question, treat a U.S. shareholder as a U.S. person that owns at least 10% of a foreign corporation’s vote or value, and treat a foreign corporation as a controlled foreign corporation (CFC) when such U.S. shareholders collectively own more than 50%.
| Owner | Status | Vote and value owned |
|---|---|---|
| U.S. Parent Corp | Domestic C corporation | 40% |
| U.S. Components Inc. | Domestic C corporation | 15% |
| Foreign investors | Non-U.S. persons | 45% |
Additional facts: ForeignCo was organized outside the United States, ownership was unchanged all year, ForeignCo earned $300,000 of Subpart F income this year, and ForeignCo paid no dividends.
Based on the exhibit, which conclusion is most supported for U.S. Parent Corp’s current-year U.S. taxable income?
Best answer: B
Explanation: ForeignCo is a CFC because qualifying U.S. shareholders own 55% in total, which exceeds the 50% control threshold. Since ForeignCo has $300,000 of Subpart F income, U.S. Parent Corp must currently include its 40% share, or $120,000, even though no dividend was paid. A foreign corporation is a CFC when U.S. shareholders that each own at least 10% collectively own more than 50% of its vote or value. In the exhibit, the two domestic corporations each meet the 10% threshold, and together they own 55%, so ForeignCo is a CFC. Once that status applies, certain income such as Subpart F income is taxed currently to the U.S. shareholders on a pro rata basis, even if the foreign corporation makes no cash distribution. U.S. Parent Corp owns 40% of ForeignCo, so it must include 40% of the $300,000 Subpart F income, which is $120,000, in current U.S. taxable income.
Topic: Entity Tax Planning
Maple Co. is a calendar-year C corporation. Ava owns 100% of Maple and works full time as its president.
| Fact | Amount or description |
|---|---|
| Taxable income before any proposed transaction | $600,000 |
| Cash available for any cash proposal | Sufficient |
| Current and accumulated E&P | More than $120,000 |
| Additional compensation support | Up to $120,000 would be reasonable for Ava’s current services |
| Shareholder note | Ava previously loaned Maple $120,000 under a bona fide note; market-rate interest has been paid currently; principal is due now |
| Land available for distribution | FMV $120,000; tax basis (30,000 |
| Planning tax rates | Maple 21%; Ava ordinary income 37%; Ava qualified dividend/LTCG 20% |
| Ignore | Payroll taxes, NIIT, and state taxes |
Maple wants to transfer)120,000 of value to Ava this year with the lowest combined current-year federal income tax cost while keeping the tax treatment supportable. Which proposed transaction best meets that goal?
Best answer: C
Explanation: Repaying principal on a bona fide shareholder loan is generally not taxable to the shareholder and does not create entity-level gain or loss. That makes it more tax-efficient here than a deductible bonus, a nondeductible dividend, or a distribution of appreciated property. For C corporation planning, the best answer is the one with the lowest combined entity-and-shareholder tax cost, not just the lowest shareholder tax. A reasonable bonus helps because Maple deducts it, but Ava still recognizes $120,000 of ordinary income. A cash dividend is worse because Maple gets no deduction and Ava is taxed on the dividend since E&P is sufficient. Distributing appreciated land is usually the least efficient of these choices because Maple must recognize gain as if it sold the land for FMV, and Ava is then taxed on the distribution as well. By contrast, repayment of principal on a bona fide shareholder loan is generally a balance-sheet transaction: Ava is just getting her loan principal back, and Maple does not recognize gain or get a deduction from the repayment itself. Given the valid note, current interest payments, and maturity, loan repayment best satisfies the planning objective.
Topic: Property Transactions (Disposition of Assets)
An individual sold delivery equipment (depreciable personal property) used in a Schedule C business. The reviewer is reconciling a staff memo to the tax software output.
Original cost: $90,000
Depreciation allowed or allowable: $54,000
Selling price: $50,000
Selling expenses: $0
Holding period: more than 1 year
Tax software result:
- Adjusted basis: $36,000
- Total gain: $14,000
- Character: $14,000 ordinary income
Staff memo:
- Adjusted basis: $36,000
- Total gain: $14,000
- Character: $14,000 §1231 gain
How should the discrepancy be classified?
Best answer: B
Explanation: The discrepancy is not caused by basis or proceeds because both calculations use the same $36,000 adjusted basis and $50,000 selling price, producing the same $14,000 gain. The problem is the failure to apply depreciation recapture, which makes the gain ordinary rather than §1231 gain. For depreciable personal property used in a trade or business, §1245 recapture applies before any remaining gain can receive §1231 treatment. Here, adjusted basis is $36,000 ($90,000 cost minus $54,000 depreciation), and the sale produces a $14,000 total gain ($50,000 minus $36,000). Because prior depreciation of $54,000 exceeds the entire $14,000 gain, all of the gain is recaptured as ordinary income. That means the software’s character result is correct. Since basis, proceeds, and total gain all agree between the software and the staff memo, the discrepancy is specifically a recapture-treatment problem, not a basis or proceeds problem.