Seller Financing and Installment Sales – What are the Tax Implications

seller financing and installment sales - what are the tax implications

With the difficulties that have arisen in the lending market and a typical buyer’s ability to obtain a standard loan, many sellers have decided to “carry their own paper”. For those unfamiliar with such a term, we are talking about Seller Financing where you play ‘bank’ and now you have the precarious reporting requirements with the IRS of an Installment Sale.

What should the Seller expect?

What are the legal pitfalls?

Are there any procedures that must be followed in the process?

The installment method of income tax accounting allows eligible sellers of eligible property (keyword “eligible”) to make deferred payment installment sales of such property and to recognize the tax gains or profits from such sales proportionately over time as the seller receives payments.

Under the installment method, the seller recognizes a portion of each payment received as gain and the remaining portion as nontaxable recovery of basis, based on various formulas. Absent a proper election out of the installment method, all sellers in eligible installment sales of property must use the installment method. This is not a bad thing!

We generally want to see our clients ‘spread out’ their tax bill over time, rather than pay all the tax up front. Additionally, a seller who reports a gain on the installment method for regular tax purposes may also report such gain on the installment method for alternative minimum tax purposes.

There are several advantages to use of the installment method:

1.It provides a method of deferring taxes associated with gains from the sale of the property.

2. A seller may structure an installment sale to defer payments and associated gains until a tax-advantaged year.

3. The installment method can be attractive to a buyer, because it provides a buyer with a full stepped-up basis in the purchased property in an amount equal to the agreed-upon purchase price, even though the buyer may have given only an installment note debt to the seller.

4. Thus, if the buyer buys a depreciable property from a seller on the installment method, the buyer can take depreciation deductions based on the fully agreed-upon purchase price of the property, without having paid for the property beyond giving the seller an installment note debt.

The installment method, however, contains a number of eligibility restrictions and special rules which limit its use. Here are some of these eligibility restrictions.

First, the installment method contains a $5 million small transaction size limitation which, in practical effect, limits the tax deferral benefits of the installment method to transactions in which a seller uses the installment method to sell properties in any one year for not more than $5 million in aggregate outstanding installment notes.

Second, sellers of property who are dealers in the type of property being sold are ineligible to use the installment method.

Third, the installment method contains anti-abuse rules to prevent misuse of the installment method through related party sales. Some opportunities still exist to structure related party installment sales without violating the installment method restrictions.

Fourth and finally the most important, gain on the sale of a property to the extent of depreciation recapture is ineligible for reporting under the installment method and must be recognized in the year of sale. Otherwise stated, ANY depreciation recapture must be reported in the year of sale and cannot be spread out over the time of the installment sale. This can be one of the greatest shocks to a seller when they have a taxable gain upon the sale but are only receiving monthly payments and don’t have enough cash to pay the tax bill.

In summary, use of the installment method represents a potential tax planning opportunity to defer taxes ineligible deferred payment sales of property.

If you are potentially interested in using the installment method for a deferred payment purchase or sale of property, we would be pleased to analyze in further detail any issues raised in this article and to help you plan carefully an advantageous installment sale in light of your particular goals and business circumstances.

How Can I Learn More and Stay Connected?

➤  Subscribe to our YouTube channel for ongoing strategies and updates throughout the year.

➤  Download Mark’s FREE “30 Tax Strategies Every Business Owner Should Know” tax guide E-Book.

➤  Learn more about becoming a tax advisor with America’s #1 Tax & Legal Expert Mark J. Kohler’s Main Street Tax Pro Certification.

➤  Navigate the 4 phases of business ownership with confidence as a Certified Main Street Business Owner.

➤  Interview a Main Street Tax Pro that Speaks like Mark: Tax Advisor Network.

➤  Get a consult with a tax lawyer to strategize and build your tax and legal plan: KKOS Lawyers.

➤  Keep Your LLC or Corp in good standing and Hide Your Address: Main Street Business Services.

➤  Take control of your retirement with a self directed IRA.

Share:

Picture of Mark Kohler

Mark Kohler

Mark J. Kohler, senior partner at KKOS Lawyers and co-founder of Directed IRA, has over 25 years of experience helping entrepreneurs achieve financial freedom. Through YouTube, books, and live trainings, he breaks down complex strategies into simple, actionable steps. His Main Street Certified Tax Advisor Program now equips CPAs and agents to share these insights with clients.

On Key

Related Posts

Person with building blocks

The 4 Phases of Business: How to Thrive from Startup to Exit

Every business has a life cycle. Whether you’re just launching your first side hustle or preparing to step away from a thriving company, your business falls into one of four essential phases: startup, optimization, scaling, and exit. Each phase comes with unique challenges—and incredible opportunities. Understanding where you are, and what you should be doing

Business person sitting typing on calculator

The 10 Accounting Terms Every Business Owner Should Know

Let’s be honest—most people don’t launch a business because they’re excited about accounting. But here’s the truth: if you’re a business owner and you don’t understand the basics of your financials, you’re putting your success at risk. Knowing your numbers is essential for everything from applying for a loan to scaling your business to building

Business man in suit

The CPA-Lawyer Advantage: Smarter Planning for Small Businesses

If you’re a small business owner, you’ve probably bounced between your CPA and your attorney more times than you’d like to admit. One tells you to ask the other. The other tells you, “That’s a tax issue, not legal.” And somehow you’re left in the middle—still unsure what to do. It’s confusing, frustrating, and usually

Business person sitting at desk in front of a computer

10 Tax and Legal Mistakes to Avoid in 2025

Starting a business, managing rentals, or just trying to get your financial house in order? You’re not alone—and if you’ve been Googling questions like “LLC vs. S Corp” or “Should I put my car in a trust?”—this guide is for you. Tax law and legal planning don’t have to be overwhelming. In fact, when you