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Mastering the §199A Qualified Business Income Deduction
Guest Expert: Clark Randall, CFP®, MJur, Creekmur Wealth Advisors
Date:
Attendee's Excellent Rating: 90%
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Summary: Mastering the §199A Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction


1. What is the QBI Deduction?

  • Definition: A personal tax deduction (not a business deduction) of up to 20% of qualified business income (QBI) from pass-through entities.
  • Entities that qualify: Sole proprietorships, partnerships, S corporations, certain trusts/estates, REIT dividends, and publicly traded partnerships.
  • Purpose: Created under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (2017) to reduce the disparity between the 21% C corporation rate and the 37% top individual rate for pass-throughs.
  • Made permanent under the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act.”

📖 Reference: IRS – Qualified Business Income Deduction
https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/qualified-business-income-deduction


2. How the Deduction Works

  • Deduction = 20% of the lesser of:
    1. Combined qualified business income, or
    2. Taxable income (before the QBI deduction), reduced by capital gains and qualified dividends.
  • Carried-forward losses reduce future QBI but do not offset current-year QBI.

📖 Reference: IRS – Publication 535, Business Expenses (see QBI section)
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p535


3. Thresholds and Phase-Outs

  • 2025 thresholds:
    • $394,600 MFJ ($197,600 single) – full deduction allowed.
    • Phase-out range: $100,000 (MFJ) / $50,000 (others).
    • Above $494,600 MFJ ($247,600 single) – deduction phased out for specified service trades/businesses (SSTBs).
  • Specified Service Trades/Businesses (SSTBs): Professions where the principal asset is the reputation/skill of owners (law, accounting, consulting, financial services, health, athletics).
    • Non-SSTBs get phased down (never fully eliminated).
    • SSTBs get phased out (deduction eliminated above thresholds).

📖 Reference: IRS – SSTB Definitions
https://www.irs.gov/instructions/i8995


4. Wage and Property Limitations

Once taxable income exceeds the threshold, deduction is limited to the greater of:

  • 50% of W-2 wages paid by the business, OR
  • 25% of W-2 wages + 2.5% of UBIA (Unadjusted Basis Immediately After Acquisition) of depreciable property.

Example: A business with $200K wages and $1M UBIA may qualify for a larger deduction by raising wages or purchasing new depreciable property.

📖 Reference: IRS FAQ on QBI Wages and Property
https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/questions-and-answers-on-the-qualified-business-income-deduction


5. Planning Opportunities

  • Entity choice: S corporations allow for wage planning; sole proprietors cannot.
  • Raise wages strategically: Increasing owner or employee W-2 wages can expand the wage-based limit and increase the QBI deduction, even with added FICA costs.
  • Shift contractors to employees: May increase QBI deduction but adds payroll and benefits costs—requires cost-benefit analysis.
  • Accelerate property purchases: Buying depreciable assets can expand the property-based limitation.
  • Retirement plans: Defined benefit plans, 401(k), profit-sharing, and cash balance plans lower taxable income, helping SSTBs qualify within phase-out ranges.
  • Charitable contributions, tax-loss harvesting, municipal bonds: Reduce taxable income to preserve QBI eligibility.
  • File separately (MFS): In community property states, filing separately may reduce taxable income enough to qualify for partial QBI, but trade-offs exist.

📖 Reference: Tax Foundation – “Section 199A: The 20% Pass-Through Deduction”
https://taxfoundation.org/section-199a-pass-through-deduction/


6. Special Cases

  • Insurance & Real Estate: Fixed insurance commissions and real estate brokerage are not SSTBs. Real estate property managers are also generally excluded.
  • Depreciation (Sec. 179/Bonus): Does not reduce UBIA for QBI purposes, since UBIA is calculated at original cost basis.
  • Social Security Income: Only the taxable portion counts toward AGI in QBI calculations.
  • Multiple Entities: Aggregation rules apply—QBI across entities may be combined for calculation, but SSTB/non-SSTB separation must be maintained.

📖 Reference: IRS Aggregation Rules
https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-8995-a


7. Advisor Takeaways

  • The QBI deduction is personal, not business-level. Two owners of the same business may get different deductions based on their personal returns.
  • For high-income SSTB clients, the only way to rescue QBI is to reduce taxable income into the phase-out range.
  • Non-SSTB owners above the phase-out can still optimize deductions through wages and property planning.
  • QBI planning intersects with retirement funding, charitable giving, and entity structuring—making it a multidisciplinary opportunity for advisors.

📖 Reference: Journal of Accountancy – “Tax Planning Strategies for QBI”
https://www.journalofaccountancy.com/issues/2019/mar/qbi-deduction-tax-planning-strategies.html


Bottom Line for Financial Advisors:
The QBI deduction is both powerful and complex. Advisors can add significant value by:

  1. Identifying SSTB vs. non-SSTB clients.
  2. Monitoring income thresholds.
  3. Leveraging wages, property purchases, retirement plans, and charitable strategies to maximize the deduction.
    This deduction is permanent under current law, making it a long-term planning lever for business-owner clients.

 

Attendees Comments:

A few comments from listeners when they were asked what the learned from the webinar:

I did not know how the Qualified Business Income was calculated and Clark was fantastic in teaching us who are not CPAs. Have him do more webinars related to tax issues especially for business owners.
- Patty B.

This is the first explanation I have seen that helped. Speaker is clearing an educator. High praise and many thanks.
- Cinda J.

Section 199A can provide substantial tax deductions for business owners, but would require a tax planning professional to address a client's specific situation.
- George E.

Specified Service Trade or Business is still eligible for QBI (unless the company is a C Corp) but there are more severe limits, and the company may be phased out of the deduction.
- Julie C.

missy@financia…

Fri, 10/03/2025 - 10:46

Comments
A few comments from listeners when they were asked what the learned from the webinar:

I did not know how the Qualified Business Income was calculated and Clark was fantastic in teaching us who are not CPAs. Have him do more webinars related to tax issues especially for business owners.
- Patty B.

This is the first explanation I have seen that helped. Speaker is clearing an educator. High praise and many thanks.
- Cinda J.

Section 199A can provide substantial tax deductions for business owners, but would require a tax planning professional to address a client's specific situation.
- George E.

Specified Service Trade or Business is still eligible for QBI (unless the company is a C Corp) but there are more severe limits, and the company may be phased out of the deduction.
- Julie C.
Mastering the §199A Qualified Business Income Deduction 10-03-2025