How a Partnership Makes a Profit or a Loss

Financial Structure of a Partnership

Business partners have a conversation.
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A partnership is a business with several owners. Partnerships make a profit or incur a loss in the same way as other businesses, but there are some differences in the way a partnership functions that make its profits and losses different from those of other types of businesses.

Key Takeaways

  • Partnerships make money by having more income than expenses.
    Typically, a partnership's profit is distributed between its partners according to a partnership agreement.
  • Partners are taxed on their share of the partnership's profit.
  • The way partners in a partnership are taxed is different than LLC members and sole proprietors.

How Partnerships Make Money

The term "making money" to most people means making a profit. A profit is the difference between the income of the business and what it spends (expenses).

A business functions by spending money in order to sell products or services. A business also buys things (called "capital assets") to help make or sell these products or services. Then, at the end of a specified period of time, the expenses of the business are added together and compared with the income or revenue of the business.

If the revenue exceeds the expenses, the business has a profit (sometimes called "earnings" or "net income" for tax or legal purposes. If the revenue is less than the expenses, the business has a loss (or "net loss").

How Partners Get the Money

When a partner joins a partnership, the individual partner invests in the business and a capital account is set up for that partner. The way the partner's account is set up and how money is distributed to the partner is set in the partnership agreement. For example, a partnership of two people might describe in the partnership agreement that each partner receives 50% of the profits (or any other percentage they agree on).

The partnership agreement describes when partners can take money out of the business, according to the terms of the partnership. Each partner can take a draw (drawing money from his or her partnership account).

Note

Partners are not employees, so the money they get from the partnership is not a salary and they don't get a W-2 form showing their annual taxable income.

How Partner Distributions Are Taxed

When a business makes money, the money goes to the owners, in the form of net income.

Note

The partners are taxed on all of the income of the partnership each year, even if they don't receive any or all of the profits directly. Two equal partners in a partnership that has a $100,000 profit must each pay income tax on $50,000 of that profit.

After the end of the tax year, the partnership files an information return on Form 1065, showing the total net income or loss. Then each partner receives a Schedule K-1 showing his or her distributive share of this income or loss. The partner files a Schedule K-1 with their personal tax return.

Partner Taxes vs. Corporate Owner Taxes

A partnership is taxed differently from a corporation because, in a corporation, the profits are not distributed to the owners (shareholders) directly, but the owners may receive dividends. Usually, in a corporation, some of the profits are held (retained) by the business for growth.

Note

Partners, LLC owners, and sole proprietors are considered pass-through entities for tax purposes because their share of the business profits is passed through to the owner's personal tax return.

Partner Taxes vs. Sole Proprietor Taxes

A sole proprietor, like a partner, is taxed on all the profits of the business. The sole proprietor completes a Schedule C to calculate the net income of the business, which is included in the total income of the owner.

Partner Taxes vs. LLC Owner Taxes

Limited liability companies (LLC) with more than one member are taxed like and work like partnerships, except that owner titles are different, and the documents are different. LLC owners are called "members." The members get together and create an operating agreement, which serves the same purpose as a partnership agreement.

LLC members receive funds during the year in the same way as partners, and according to the terms of the operating agreement. At tax time, the multiple-member LLC files its taxes in exactly the same way as a partnership, using the same forms.

An LLC with only one member is called a single-member LLC, and it is taxed like a sole proprietorship, on Schedule C of the owner's personal tax return.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is a parntnership?

A partnership is a business with several owners (partners). If the company makes a profit, that profit is split among the partners.

How are partnerships taxed?

Partnerships are taxed on all income the partnership generates in a tax year. Each partner pays their share of income tax on the partnership's distributions based on the percentage of the company each partner owns.

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Sources
The Balance uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
  1. BK Law Group. "Distribution of Profits and Losses."

  2. IRS. "Partnerships."

  3. IRS. "Tax Information for Partnerships."

  4. IRS. "Forming a Corporation."

  5. Tax Policy Center. "What Are Pass-Through Businesses?"

  6. IRS. "Sole Proprietorships."

  7. IRS. "Single Member Limited Liability Companies."

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