For an investment to be considered Qualified Small Business Stock, and thus eligible for the benefits of IRC § 1202, it must meet the following requirements:
Eligible Taxpayer
Only eligible taxpayers can hold QSBS. Eligible taxpayers include individuals and pass-through entities, such as partnerships, S Corps, regulated investment companies, and common trust funds. C Corporations are ineligible and can never hold QSBS.
Domestic C Corporation
For stock to be QSBS, it must be stock of a domestic C Corporation. International companies cannot qualify for this tax benefit. Similarly, a domestic company must have incorporated and existed continuously as a C Corp for its stock to be considered QSBS.
Original Issuance of Stock
Stock must be acquired directly from the corporation to the taxpayer by an original issuance in exchange for money, other property, or services rendered to the corporation. This does not have to be the initial issuance of stock when the business incorporates, but it does have to be an issuance directly from the corporation to the shareholder.
This rule does allow for some exceptions, specifically stock received by the taxpayer as a gift, an inheritance, or a distribution from a partnership. However, stock acquired from a secondary market will not be QSBS.
Small Business
At all times before the stock issuance and immediately after, the issuing company’s aggregate gross assets must not exceed $50 million. The term “aggregate gross assets” is a special term for IRC § 1202, and it does not mean the fair market value or the book value of the company. Instead, the aggregate gross assets are the business’s cash and adjusted basis of all other property held by the business. This is not necessarily the measure of a business that is commonly tracked by accountants.
Active Business
At least 80% of the company’s assets must be used in at least one “qualified trade or business.” This means that stock in a holding company will not be QSBS. Additionally, certain businesses are excluded from being considered “qualified trades or businesses”, including:
- Professional Services (health, law, engineering, accounting, etc.)
- Finance (banking, insurance, investing)
- Hospitality (hotel, restaurant, etc.)
- Farming
- Mining or natural resource production or extraction
Unfortunately, the IRS has not provided any real guidance as to the boundaries and limits of these categories.
Holding Period
Taxpayers must hold the stock for at least five years before sale. Stock received by gift, inheritance, or distribution from a partnership shall have its holding period from the prior holder tack to the new holder. Also, there is some relief for taxpayers who simply cannot hold the stock for at least five years. IRC § 1045 essentially allows a taxpayer to roll over a QSBS investment into new QSBS investment if the original investment needs to be liquidated prior to reaching the five-year mark.
Stock Sale
The tax benefit of IRC Sec. 1202 is only available upon the “sale or exchange” of QSBS. That is, the QSBS’s stock gains must be realized to be excluded from taxable income. The taxpayer holding QSBS does not have tax benefits in the stock unless and until he or she sells the stock.