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December 30, 2019
Solved

Balance sheet does not balance

  • December 30, 2019
  • 2 replies
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Hello there,

i am trying to file corporate taxes for company that did not make any business in 2017. it had purchased inventory of $3,000 and had expenses of total $1,349 

balance sheet shows that that it does not balance for $4,349. considering that company was operating at the loss how can i balance out the balance sheet ?

 

    Best answer by Anonymous_

    You will most likely have to make a manual adjustment on Schedule L in Forms Mode (with the assumption that this is an S corporation return).

     

    Note that you can skip the balance sheet section entirely if the corporation's income and total assets are less than $250,000. 

    2 replies

    Employee
    December 30, 2019

    You will most likely have to make a manual adjustment on Schedule L in Forms Mode (with the assumption that this is an S corporation return).

     

    Note that you can skip the balance sheet section entirely if the corporation's income and total assets are less than $250,000. 

    August 1, 2022

    I made over 250,000 and I'm a C Corp and the Balance sheet is showing -19,000 and will not balance. 

    Employee
    August 1, 2022

    Balance sheet problems are tough to troubleshoot in this format unless you post all of the figures.

    March 11, 2020

    Turbotax has a problem calculating the Net Income (loss) Per Books -- I haven't the foggiest idea how it arrives at the number it arrives at.  I recommend overriding this value, which is found in Line 1 of the form "Reconciliation" -- calculate the Net Income (loss) Per Books yourself.

     

    1. The simplest version of Net income per Books (same thing as "Net Income") is:

    Net Income per Books = Revenues - Expenses
    Revenues is your total income, and expenses are the business expenses that you are deducting.
    Basically, Net Income = Taxable Income on line 28 on Page 1 of Form 1120.

     

    2. If you have Schedule D with capital gains:

    Net Income = Revenues - Expenses + Capital Gains

     

    3. If you also have Expenses that were not deducted then:

    Net Income = Revenues - Expenses + Capital Gains - Non-deducted Expenses.