Instructions for Schedule C (Form 1040)
taxmap/instr/i1040sc-006.htm#TXMP0865b35fIf your business activity was not a rental activity and you met
any of the material participation tests, explained next, or the exception for
oil and gas applies (explained later on page 4), check the
Yes
box. Otherwise, check the
No
box. If you check the
No
box, this business is a passive activity. If you have a loss from this business,
see
Limit on losses
on page 4. If you have a profit from this business activity but have current
year losses from other passive activities or you have prior year unallowed
passive activity losses, see the Instructions for Form 8582.
taxmap/instr/i1040sc-006.htm#TXMP76bf0939For purposes of the seven material participation tests listed
below, participation generally includes any work you did in connection with an
activity if you owned an interest in the activity at the time you did the work.
The capacity in which you did the work does not matter. However, work is not
treated as participation if it is work that an owner would not customarily do in
the same type of activity and one of your main reasons for doing the work was to
avoid the disallowance of losses or credits from the activity under the passive
activity rules.
Work you did as an investor in an activity is not treated as
participation unless you were directly involved in the day-to-day management or
operations of the activity. Work done as an investor includes:
- Studying and reviewing financial statements or reports on
the activity,
- Preparing or compiling summaries or analyses of the finances
or operations of the activity for your own use, and
- Monitoring the finances or operations of the activity in a
nonmanagerial capacity.
Participation by your spouse during the tax year in an activity
you own can be counted as your participation in the activity. This rule applies
even if your spouse did not own an interest in the activity and whether or not
you and your spouse file a joint return. However, this rule does not apply for
purposes of determining whether you and your spouse can elect to have your
business treated as a qualified joint venture instead of a partnership (see
Husband-Wife Qualified Joint Venture on page C-2 ).
For purposes of the passive activity rules, you materially participated
in the operation of this trade or business activity during 2010 if you met any
of the following seven tests.
- You participated in the activity for more than 500 hours during
the tax year.
- Your participation in the activity for the tax year was substantially
all of the participation in the activity of all individuals (including
individuals who did not own any interest in the activity) for the tax year.
- You participated in the activity for more than 100 hours during
the tax year, and you participated at least as much as any other person for the
tax year. This includes individuals who did not own any interest in the
activity.
- The activity is a significant participation activity for the
tax year, and you participated in all significant participation activities for
more than 500 hours during the year. An activity is a
significant participation activity
if it involves the conduct of a trade or business, you participated in the
activity for more than 100 hours during the tax year, and you did not materially
participate under any of the material participation tests (other than this test
4). - You materially participated in the activity for any 5 of the
prior 10 tax years.
- The activity is a personal service activity in which you materially
participated for any 3 prior tax years. A personal service activity is an
activity that involves performing personal services in the fields of health,
law, engineering, architecture, accounting, actuarial science, performing arts,
consulting, or any other trade or business in which capital is not a material
income-producing factor.
- Based on all the facts and circumstances, you participated
in the activity on a regular, continuous, and substantial basis for more than
100 hours during the tax year. Your participation in managing the activity does
not count in determining if you meet this test if any person (except you) (a)
received compensation for performing management services in connection with the
activity, or (b) spent more hours during the tax year than you spent performing
management services in connection with the activity (regardless of whether the
person was compensated for the services).
taxmap/instr/i1040sc-006.htm#TXMP2d8d35ddGenerally, a rental activity (such as long-term equipment leasing
or rental real estate) is a passive activity even if you materially participated
in the activity. However, if you materially participated in a rental real estate
activity as a real estate professional, it is not a passive activity. Also, if
you met any of the five exceptions listed under
Rental Activities
in the Instructions for Form 8582, the rental of the property is not treated as
a rental activity and the material participation rules above apply. See
Activities That Are Not Passive Activities
in the Instructions for Form 8582 for the definition of a real estate
professional.
taxmap/instr/i1040sc-006.htm#TXMP70ae3b48If you are filing Schedule C to report income and deductions
from an oil or gas well in which you own a working interest directly or through
an entity that does not limit your liability, check the
Yes
box. The activity of owning a working interest is not a passive activity,
regardless of your participation.
taxmap/instr/i1040sc-006.htm#TXMP7e9052e2Your loss may be limited if:
- You checked the
No
box on line G, or - You are a qualified joint venture reporting only rental real
estate income, but not as a real estate professional. In these situations you
may have a loss from a passive activity, and you may have to use Form 8582 to
figure your allowable loss, if any, to enter on Schedule C, line 31.
Generally, you can deduct losses from passive activities only
to the extent of income from passive activities. For details, see Pub. 925.