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  2. What Investors Need to Know about C Corporation Dividends - AOL

    www.aol.com/investors-know-c-corporation...

    On the Schedule B, the taxpayer lists the name of the corporation that paid the dividend as well as the amount of ordinary dividends. Taxpayers report any qualified dividends from Box 1b of the ...

  3. S corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S_corporation

    The term "pass through" refers not to assets distributed by the corporation to the shareholder, but instead to the portion of the corporation's income, losses, deductions or credits that are reported to the shareholder on Schedule K-1 and are shown by the shareholder on his or her own income tax return. A distribution to a shareholder that is ...

  4. Flow-through entity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flow-through_entity

    In the United States, the statement of allocated income is known as a K-1 (or Schedule K-1). Depending on the local tax regulations, this structure can avoid dividend tax and double taxation because only owners or investors are taxed on the revenue. Technically, for tax purposes, flow-through entities are considered "non-entities" because they ...

  5. Partnership taxation in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partnership_taxation_in...

    This treatment is similar to corporations entity approach. Thus a partnership for tax purposes is a person, it can sue and be sued and can conclude legal contracts in its own name. The entity concept governs the characterization "income, gain, losses and deductions from the partnership operations, are initially determined at entity level.

  6. The Key Differences Between MLP Distributions and ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/key-differences-between-mlp...

    Both dividends and distributions are payouts of company profits, serving as income for investors. The terms are often used interchangeably but have very different tax implications. C-corporations ...

  7. Qualified dividend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qualified_dividend

    To be taxed at the qualified dividend rate, the dividend must: be paid after December 31, 2002; be paid by a U.S. corporation, by a corporation incorporated in a U.S. possession, by a foreign corporation located in a country that is eligible for benefits under a U.S. tax treaty that meets certain criteria, or on a foreign corporation’s stock that can be readily traded on an established U.S ...

  8. Taxation of cooperative corporations in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxation_of_cooperative...

    Cooperative corporations are formed to provide some mutual benefit for their members, and because of this, the Congress of the United States beginning in 1951 has allowed them a deduction from their income for "patronage dividends." [2] A "patronage dividend" is money paid by a cooperative to its patrons on the basis of business done with these ...

  9. Understanding the Differences Between Dividends and Distributions

    www.aol.com/news/understanding-differences...

    Dividends stand out as the most common form of cash payout for C Corporations, the type of company that trades on the major exchanges. In fact, many investors who buy into C-Corporations care ...