Max W Posted March 1, 2018 Report Posted March 1, 2018 A new client used a well known corporate organizing and legal filing firm to set up their corp. They requested that it be an S-corp. The corp was filed Nov 18, 2017, so the 2553 election was due early in Feb 1 (75 days). The reason they are giving for the late filing is that they relied on the filing firm to follow through with the S-corp requirements and since the owners are new to the corporate world, they were unaware of the 2553 election. I know that in the past, the IRS was pretty lenient about late filing, but don' know about recently. Has anyone had any recent experience and would their explanation suffice? TIA Quote
Abby Normal Posted March 1, 2018 Report Posted March 1, 2018 Almost any explanation will suffice. The IRS doesn't fight S elections. 2 Quote
Max W Posted March 1, 2018 Author Report Posted March 1, 2018 Thanks, Abby. It's good to know that the IRS is still lenient on this. 3 Quote
Catherine Posted March 1, 2018 Report Posted March 1, 2018 I had a company that was almost a year late with the S-election form. It went through, no questions. Just some scolding of the client from me... not that it helped this particular group. 2 Quote
Max W Posted March 2, 2018 Author Report Posted March 2, 2018 After preparing the 2553 and emailing it to them, I got back from them an IRS acceptance letter for the S-corp, dated Feb 26. I guess the question to them should have been - "Do you remember signing form 2553"? I am willing to bet, however, the answer would have been - "What's a form 2553."? 2 3 Quote
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