2018 Tax Reform

Nov 15, 2018 at 02:27 pm by Staff


Implications & Implementation for Healthcare

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) passed last December includes a broad range of tax changes impacting both individuals and business entities. In this article, we will address some of the changes that directly impact healthcare companies and physician practices.

One of the most complex and confusing changes in the new tax law is the individual deduction related to pass-through income (Section 199A deduction). We will address the implication of this change and its impact on healthcare companies in a subsequent article in the January 2019 issue of Nashville Medical News.


ACA

A key component of the Accountable Care Act (ACA) was the individual mandate to acquire and/or provide health insurance coverage. TCJA effectively eliminates the mandate through elimination of the individual responsibility payment effective Jan. 1, 2019.

The goal of the mandate was to provide an offset to the unfavorable economics of expanded higher cost healthcare by requiring and bringing in a younger, healthier population to health plans. The downside of this change is an anticipated 13 million fewer Americans being insured by 2027 (CBO projections). The projected reduction is due to anticipated higher premiums (10 percent above what was projected prior to the new tax law) and the non-acquisition of health insurance by the young and healthy.

On the plus side, the CBO projects $340 billion dollars in savings over 10 years through the repeal of subsidies.

The bottom line for healthcare practices is that self-pay and patient-responsible balances are likely to increase. Maintaining cash flow will require establishing consistent processes and monitoring collection of these balances.


Corporate Tax Rate & Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT)

The corporate tax rate for C-Corporations is reduced to 21 percent for years beginning after Dec. 31, 2017 (previously a flat rate of 35 percent for personal service corporations). The rate reduction has caused some entities to question whether they should convert their pass-through entities to a C-Corporation to take advantage of the low rate.

Keep in mind that to take advantage of the lower corporate rate, the corporation must retain taxable income, which may not meet the goals of a practice or healthcare entity. For C-Corporations, the 21 percent rate will be beneficial to cushion the tax implications of debt repayment and non-deductible expenses.


Depreciation

The TCJA contains several new provisions that benefit the deduction of capital assets.


Business Interest Limitation

Under prior law, interest expense has generally been allowed as a deduction in the year in which it was paid or accrued. TCJA limits the deduction for interest expense on business returns to interest income plus 30 percent of:

Net taxable income + Depreciation and amortization + Interest expense

If your annual gross receipts are below $25 million, you will be exempt from this limitation and any disallowed interest can be carried forward indefinitely.

Entertainment Expense

Under TCJA, no deduction is allowed for:

Exceptions to the above include:

Business Meals Expense

Under TCJA, the 50 percent limit for the deduction of food and beverage is generally retained. However, meals provided on premises for the convenience of the employer (i.e. meals provided to physicians to facilitate office coverage of patients) are no longer 100 percent deductible. The 50 percent limit will apply until 2025. After that, on-site meals will be non-deductible.

Two examples of meals that are 100 percent deductible are:

Limitation on Deducting Business Losses

TCJA limits the amount that can be deducted by a member in an LLC or a shareholder in an S-corporation to $500,000 for married filing jointly and $250,000 for all other taxpayers. The deduction threshold limits the losses that can be used by the taxpayer to offset wages or other sources of income. Any amount above the threshold can be carried forward to future years, subject to the TCJA's 80 percent limitation on net operating loss carried forward.


Lucy Carter, CPA, is a member and practice leader of the KraftCPAs healthcare industry team; Mark Patterson, CPA, is a member with the KraftCPAs tax services team. For more information, go online to kraftcpas.com.

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Tags: 179 Expensing 2018 Taxes ACA Affordable Care Act Business Entertaining Business Tax Deductions Capital Equipment Depreciation Depreciation Healthcare Business KraftCPAs Lucy Carter Mark Patterson Tax Cuts and Jobs Act TCJA
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