Eligibility. Before choosing to exempt your condo from Section 528, you have to know you qualify. To do so, your condo must satisfy six conditions:
Tax benefit. The federal tax rate on qualifying homeowners associations is a flat 30 percent (the income from dues, fees or assessments is not included in the condo's gross income). In contrast, the typical federal corporate tax rate ranges from 15 percent to 35 percent, depending on the taxable income. Thus, the tax benefit to filing under Section 528 is the exclusion of income from dues, fees or assessment.
No investment credit or other incentives. Section 528 election would also mean a condo association would lose eligibility for an investment credit that rewards property owners for engaging in certain activities, such as the use of clean energy. In addition, the condominium would not be entitled to a net operating loss deduction, or other corporate deductions, such as write-offs for organizational expenditures.
Locked in. Once a condominium association signs up for Section 528, it is bound for the taxable year and can only revoke its election with the consent of the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). And, add Siegler and Talel, the IRS does not automatically grant requests to revoke that status.
A prudent board should consult with an experienced tax adviser regarding eligibility and the election to be treated under Section 528, the availability of alternative tax treatment outside Section 528, and the possibility of tax exposure to individual condominium unit-owners outside of Section 528.