Re: tax exempt status for HOAs
From: David L. Mandel (dlmandelpacbell.net)
Date: Thu, 30 Aug 2007 00:15:43 -0700 (PDT)
This comment is accurate, but it could throw you off course, as did the word "tax-exempt" in Ken's query. HOAs are governed by IRC 528, a very specialized set of rules that exempts member fees and most other income as long as it is spent on exempt functions, which is normally the case. Earnings on investments are the main example of taxable income for an HOA. Profits from a community business would be too. California and, I presume, most states, parallel this with their own law, as I explained in a message a minute ago. The combined federal state rate of taxation for the non-exempt income is quite high by the way, which is why we put a lot of our reserves into tax-free investments like municipal bonds and bond funds.
David Mandel, Sacramento

----- Original Message ----- From: "Buzz Harris" <buzz_harris [at] yahoo.com>
To: "Cohousing-L" <cohousing-l [at] cohousing.org>
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2007 11:37 AM
Subject: Re: [C-L]_ tax exempt status for HOAs


--- Ken Lewis <kenlewisjr [at] yahoo.com> wrote:
I'm with Nevada City Cohousing in California and
last year we owed $5,000 in
tax to the state despite our non-profit status. The
federal tax was fine,
just for interest income, as expected. So, I
recently applied for tax exempt
status, hoping to avoid that large tax hit.

Hi Ken.

If the government of California deals with the issue
of nonprofit status in the same way as other states,
it will likely only recognize nonprofits that are
officially recognized by the IRS under section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.  Those are
generally charitable, educational or public service
groups.  See:

http://www.irs.gov/charities/charitable/article/0,,id=96099,00.html

I've worked with and in the nonprofit world for many
years, and it seems unlikely to me that a cohousing
community, as such, would qualify under the Internal
Revenue Code definitions.  I say that because, from an
official perspective, we look like real estate
developments which are privately owned and in which
the owners can sell their units at a profit.  I
suppose that it's possible that your state might treat
you as tax-exempt, but I'd be surprised by that.  You
might want to check with the office of your state
treasurer or secretary of state (or an attorney
knowledgeable about this area of law in CA) about it.

Please note that there is a difference between being
civic-minded, community-oriented, and environmentally
aware (which all or most cohousing communities are)
and being a nonprofit.

Good luck!

Buzz Harris
Common Hearth Cohousing
Eastern Massachusetts




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Buzz Harris
Writer, activist & political researcher

Interested in Cohousing in Massachusetts?
http://www.common-hearth.org


What used to be called liberal is now called radical,
What used to be called radical is now called insane,
What used to be called reactionary is now called moderate, and
What used to be called insane is now called solid conservative thinking.

-Tony Kushner

http://civic-oracle.livejournal.com/

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



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