Form 1125-A is used by business return filers (Form 1065, 1120 and 1120-S) to calculate and then deduct the cost of goods sold by a corporation or partnership. This calculation must be separately reported on the return as set forth below. Specifically, business entities that produce or purchase items for sale with the intent to create income are required to accurately report the cost of the items that are sold. To meet this reporting requirement, a business entity must maintain certain accounting and inventory records. Personal service companies (doctors, lawyers, painters, carpenters, etc.) that do not engage in the production or sale of items, or businesses that engage solely in investment or rental activities, typically have inventory, thus no cost of goods sold, and thus do not need to include Form 1125-A with their tax return.
The cost of goods sold calculation adds all purchased materials or products for resale and any direct labor or other direct expense that was incurred in the manufacture, production, or acquisition of the products being offered for sale by the entity to the beginning inventory. This subtotal, the Cost of Goods Available for Sale, minus the ending inventory equals Cost of Goods Sold.
To reflect taxable income accurately, the entity must determine the beginning and ending inventory values for the tax year. Inventory includes both finished and partly finished goods, raw materials, and/or supplies which the business has acquired for sale or will become physically part of the merchandise intended for sale. For more information, see IRC Section 1.471-1ff.
To complete Form 1125-A in TaxSlayer Pro, from the Main Menu of the tax return (Form 1065, Form 1120, or Form 1120-S) select:
- Income Menu
- Cost of Goods Sold (Form 1125-A)
1. Inventory at Beginning of the Year - This amount is the calculated dollar amount for the inventory of all finished or partly finished goods, raw materials and/or supplies which were acquired for sale or were physically part of the merchandise intended for sale at the beginning of the tax year. The amount entered here should correspond to the ending inventory that was reported on the previous year's Form 1125-A for this entity. If last year's return was done in TaxSlayer Pro, the ending inventory amount from the prior year return will pull forward to the current year as the Inventory at the Beginning of the Year.
If the amount that the taxpayer reports is different from what was reported as the ending inventory on the prior year tax return, a Preparer Note should be submitted with the return explaining the difference.
This beginning inventory amount is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 1 and also transfers to Schedule L- Balance Sheets per Books, Line 3b.
2. Purchases - Enter the amount of all purchases for raw materials and merchandise for re-sale that were made by the business during the tax year. This amount should not include any amount for purchases or products that were consumed by any owner of the business for personal consumption. If any purchase (or product) was consumed by an owner, it should be reported by the entity as a distribution to that owner and not included in the cost of goods sold calculation.
The amount entered for purchases is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 2.
3. Cost of Labor - Typically, labor costs are only an element of cost of goods sold in a manufacturing or mining business. These are direct labor costs, the wages that are paid to employees who spend their time working directly on the product being manufactured (or mined) for sale.
Retailer and other merchandisers do not usually have direct labor costs that can be charged to cost of goods sold, even though they may have the other elements of cost of goods sold.
This amount is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 3
4. Additional Section 263A Costs - These are indirect costs that are not capitalized under IRC Code Section 263A. Such costs involve certain purchasing costs indirectly associated with the production or procurement of the items being sold by the business. Examples of such items would be warehousing fees, processing fees, repacking and assembly costs, and support payroll costs, all of which were incurred in connection with the production of the product. These section 263A costs are itemized on an attached schedule to this Form 1125-A, which will go with the return if electronically filed. In this section, enter each Section 263A cost, including both a description and amount.
This provision does not apply to taxpayers whose three year average annual gross receipts ending with the preceding tax year are less than $10,000,000. See IRC Section 263A for more information on the Uniformed Capitalization rules and how to calculate any applicable Section 263A costs.
The total is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 4.
5. Other Costs - This is the amount of other costs directly associated with the manufacturing or mining process. Examples of such costs are the shipping costs of the raw materials, direct overhead, or supplies directly used in the manufacturing process.
This amount is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 5.
6. Total - This amount is a calculated automatically and is the sum of the above amounts. This total represents the Cost of Goods Available for Sale during the tax year.
This amount is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 6.
7. Inventory at End of Year - This is the inventory amount of all finished or partly finished goods, raw materials, and/or supplies which were acquired for sale or were physically part of the merchandise intended for sale at the end of the tax year.
This inventory amount is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 7 and will be the beginning inventory amount reported on next year's return. This ending inventory amount also transfers to Schedule L- Balance Sheets per Books, Line 3d.
8. Cost of Goods Sold - This amount is automatically calculated by subtracting the ending inventory amount from the Cost of Goods Available for sale.
The Cost of Goods Sold is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 8.
9. Method Used For Valuing Ending Inventory - This menu identifies the methodology being used to value the ending inventory. There are three options: Cost, Lower of Cost or Market, and Other. If Other is selected, you must enter the approved method being utilized to value the ending inventory. Taxpayers who use the Cash method of accounting are required to use the Cost method to value ending inventory. Taxpayers who use Accrual or another approved accounting method may select any applicable option.
The answer to this question is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 9a.
10. Writedown of subnormal goods - This question is defaulted to NO, and for any entity using the Cost method of inventory valuation will not require any further response. However, for business entities that value their inventory in a method other than Cost, this question will only require an additional response only if they have marked down the valuation of the inventory. The answer to this question is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 9b.
11. Was LIFO Inventory adopted this tax year for any goods? - This question is defaulted to NO, and the answer to this question is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 9c. Answer YES if the taxpayer has adopted LIFO (Last In, First Out) this year as their inventory valuation method.
Form 970, Application to Use LIFO Inventory Method, should be attached to the tax return. Form 970 is not available in TaxSlayer Pro, but it can be completed online here, printed to PDF, and attached to an electronically filed tax return.
12. Amount of Closing Inventory computed under LIFO - An entity using LIFO as the method to value inventory is required to enter the amount of the closing inventory here. Entities valuing inventory using Cost can ignore this line.
The answer to this question will be reported on Form 1125-A, Line 9d.
13. Do the rules of section 263A apply? - This question is defaulted to NO. For smaller businesses, this is correct. Answer YES if the business entity's three year average annual gross receipts ending with the preceding tax year were $10,000,000 or greater. Such a business is subject to Section 263A.
See IRC Section 263A for more information on the Uniformed Capitalization rules and whether the taxpayer is subject to reporting under this section.
The answer to this question is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 9e.
14. Change in Determining Quantities, Cost, Valuations? - This question is defaulted to NO. Answer YES if the business changed its methodology for determining the quantities, cost, or valuations during the year and include a statement explaining the change.
The answer to this question is reported on Form 1125-A, Line 9f.
Note: This is a guide on entering Form 1125-A, Cost of Goods Sold into the TaxSlayer Pro program. This is not intended as tax advice.
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