New Jersey Administrative Code
Title 18 - TREASURY - TAXATION
Chapter 7 - CORPORATION BUSINESS TAX ACT
Subchapter 20 - TREATMENT OF S CORPORATIONS
Section 18:7-20.2 - Qualified Subchapter S Subsidiaries (QSSS)
Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 18, September 16, 2024
(a) The following terms, when used in this subchapter, shall have the following meanings:
(b) A Federal S corporation is permitted to own a Qualified Subchapter S Subsidiary (QSSS) and effectively to treat the subsidiary as if it were a division. The assets, liabilities, and items of income, deduction, and credit flow through to the parent retaining the same character as do the respective allocation factor attributes of the QSSS which flow through to the parent's property, receipts and payroll factors.
(c) A New Jersey S corporation seeking recognition as a New Jersey Qualified Subchapter S Subsidiary (NJ-QSSS), must meet the following requirements:
(d) Regardless of any provision in this section, every qualified NJ-QSSS must file a Form CBT-100S and pay the applicable minimum tax. Unless the NJ-QSSS formally dissolves by making the requisite filing through the Division of Revenue and Enterprise Services, it is required to file annually a corporation business tax return, remit the required tax, and make an annual report to the New Jersey Division of Revenue and Enterprise Services. A failure to file a New Jersey Form CBT-2553 containing the corporate parent's consent to taxation by New Jersey will result in the denial of New Jersey QSSS status and will subject the entity to taxation in New Jersey as a C corporation.
(e) A Federal QSSS that elects to be treated as a NJ-QSSS for New Jersey tax purposes and that has previously filed the necessary election form (Form CBT-2553) may request to have the estimated corporation business tax payments transferred to its parent corporation's account for the year in which the New Jersey QSSS election was made. The NJ-QSSS must submit a written request, signed by an officer of the NJ-QSSS, together with a copy of the New Jersey S corporation election form (Form CBT-2553) to the New Jersey Division of Taxation. The Division of Taxation will transfer to the parent all of the NJ-QSSS's estimated payments except for a designated amount that will be used to satisfy the NJ-QSSS's current year minimum tax liability and the 50 percent estimated tax payment for the subsequent year.
(f) The following examples are provided for illustration. Example 1:
Taxpayer is an S corporation for Federal and New Jersey purposes, is headquartered in Illinois, and has branches in
New Jersey and other states. It recently set up a North Carolina QSSS, which made the appropriate election to be treated as a disregarded entity for Federal purposes. Other than being a subsidiary of the parent, the QSSS has no operations in New Jersey.
The taxpayer intends to include income of the North Carolina QSSS in its allocation factor in order to allocate the parent's income among the various states in which it does business, including New Jersey. This treatment is permitted in New Jersey provided that the North Carolina QSSS registers with New Jersey or has filed a Form CBT-2553-Cert, files a separate Form CBT-100S, and pays the minimum tax. If the foreign QSSS does not register or file a completed Form CBT-2553-Cert, the income does not flow up to the parent's return.
Example 2:
A holding company was set up in November with a calendar year end. An S election for Federal and New Jersey purposes was made for the new holding company effective from its inception. After the new company was set up, it acquired all the shares of two existing Federal S corporations having a calendar-year accounting period, from the same owner. Federal and New Jersey QSSS elections are made effective in November. One of the acquired corporations is a New Jersey S corporation, the other is a New Jersey C corporation.
The new holding company can make a timely New Jersey S corporation election since it was set up in November. The two acquired corporations, which change shareholders during their accounting year, cannot make New Jersey elections because their taxable years began in January. For the acquired corporations, the time limit to make valid New Jersey S corporation elections had already passed for that year.