Taxation

Tax Deduction for a Net Operating Loss (NOL)

Figuring out how much you can deduct for an NOL is complicated. But your potential tax savings makes it worth the time to learn how it works.
By Stephen Fishman, J.D. · USC Gould School of Law
Updated: Apr 29th, 2022
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Businesses big and small, and sometimes individuals, might have more costs and expenses than they have in income or profits. This could result in a net operating loss (NOL). Losing money is never fun. But there is at least one silver lining in this dark cloud: You can deduct your NOL from your current and future taxes. This will help you recover some—but usually not all—of your loss.

Figuring out how much you can deduct is complicated. Moreover, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), the massive tax reform law that took effect in 2018, made big changes in how NOLs are deducted. Some of these changes were postponed during the coronavirus pandemic but were reinstated later. Your potential tax savings, however, make it worth your time to learn how NOLs work.



What's an NOL and Who Can Claim It?

NOLs occur when you have more tax deductions than taxable income. NOLs usually happen when you own or co-own a business that loses money. They can occur in businesses of all sizes, from small sole proprietorships to big corporations. If you're a sole proprietor, your business losses are always deducted on your personal tax return. If you're the owner or co-owner of a business organized as a partnership, limited liability company (LLCs), or S corporation, any losses pass through the business to you and any other owners who may deduct their share on their individual returns. If you're the shareholder in a C corporation, any losses are deducted by the corporation, not by the shareholders.

It is possible for an individual who is not a business owner to have an NOL. This can occur when a person has large casualty losses—for example, a taxpayer’s home is destroyed in a federally declared disaster and the tax had no or inadequate insurance, resulting in a large deductible casualty loss that exceeds the taxpayer's income. In such cases, the casualty loss is treated the same as a business loss. Follow the rules for non-corporate taxpayers, such as sole proprietorships.

How Do You Claim an NOL?

In the past, business owners could “carry a loss back”—that is, they could apply an NOL to past tax years by filing an application for refund or amended return. This enabled them to get a refund for all or part of the taxes they paid in past years. NOLs for 2017 and earlier could generally be carried back two years. Special coronavirus pandemic relief legislation allowed NOLs for 2018 through 2020 to be carried back five years. However, starting in 2021 and continuing through 2025, an NOL may only be deducted against the current and future taxes. The old rules continue to apply to NOLs incurred before 2021.
Moreover, taxpayers may deduct NOLs for 2021 and later only up to 80% of taxable income for the year (not counting the NOL deduction). Any unused NOL amounts may be carried forward any number of future years. This means you deduct it from your future year’s taxes until you use it up.

How Much is Your NOL?

Use the information on your tax return and Form 1045, Application for Tentative Refund, to determine the size of your NOL. Be careful. The rules and formulas are complicated, and they're different for non-corporate and corporate taxpayers.

Non-Corporate Taxpayers

If you’re a non-corporate taxpayer (that is, a sole proprietor or owner of a pass-through entity such an LLC or S corporation), when you calculate your NOL you must exclude a number of deductions you may have taken on your individual tax return. For example, when calculating your NOL, you can't include:

  • net capital losses—the amount that your capital losses are more than your capital gains (capital gains and losses arise from the sale of capital assets, like stocks)
  • NOL deductions from prior years
  • the pass-through tax deduction, and
  • non-business deductions that exceed nonbusiness income, including itemized deductions or the standard deduction if you didn't itemize.

The NOL calculation does include:

  • itemized deductions for casualty and theft losses, and
  • the deduction of half of your self-employment tax.

Example. Let’s say you're the sole proprietor of a small business and you also have a part-time job. Your 2022 tax return looks like this:

Your income totals $5,500:

  • Wages from part-time job = $3,500
  • Interest income from personal savings account = $500
  • Net long-term capital gain on the sale of gold held for investment = $1,500

Your deductions total $21,900:

  • Net business losses = $7,500 (gross income $68,500 minus $76,000 in expenses)
  • Net short-term capital loss on sale of stock = $1,500
  • Standard deduction = $12,900 (you're single)

Your deductions are more than your income, so you may have an NOL. To find out, go to Form 1045, Application for Tentative Refund and take out certain items:

  • Non-business net short-term capital loss on sale of stock = $1,500
  • Non-business deductions = $10,900 (standard deduction minus non-business interest income and capital gain income, or $12,900 - $500 - $1,500)
  • Total = $12,400

You have an NOL of $4,000: Deductions minus Form 1045 removed items minus total income = NOL ($21,900 - $12,400 - $5,500 = $4,000). You may deduct this NOL in any number of future years until it is used up. However, your NOL may not reduce your taxable income for any future year by more than 80%.

Corporate Taxpayers

Regular C corporations generally figure and deduct an NOL the same way as non-corporate taxpayers. First check if you have an NOL. The key figure is on line 28, Form 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return. If it's negative, there might be an NOL.

The main differences between corporate and non-corporate NOLs are that corporations:

  • can use the deduction for dividends paid on certain preferred stock of public utilities, without limiting it to its taxable income for the year, and
  • can take the deduction for dividends received, without regard to the aggregate limits that normally apply.

The last difference is the most important for many corporations. Normally, a corporation can deduct dividends received from other U.S. corporations, but the deduction is limited to a total of 70% or 80% of the corporation's taxable income. However, if the corporation has an NOL, the taxable income limitation doesn't apply.

Example. In 2022, Corporation A had $500,000 of gross income from business operations and $625,000 of allowable business expenses. It also received $150,000 in dividends from a U.S. corporation for which it can take an 80% deduction, which would normally be limited to 80% of its taxable income before the deduction.

The corporation calculates its NOL as follows:

  • Gross income = $650,000 (business income + dividends ($500,000 + $150,00 = $650,000), minus
  • $625,000 deduction for expenses, minus
  • $120,000 deduction for dividends-received ($150,000 x 80% = $120,000).

For 2022 it has an NOL of $95,000 ($650,000 – $625,000 – $120,000 = -$95,000). It may carry forward the NOL to any number of future years to reduce its taxable income up to 80% each year until the NOL is used up.

To report NOLs, corporations use Form 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return.

Annual Dollar Limit on NOL Deduction

The TCJA limits deductions of “excess business losses” by individual business owners.
Married taxpayers filing jointly may deduct no more than $524,000 per year in total business losses. Individual taxpayers may deduct no more than $262,000. If a business is owned through a multi-member LLC taxed as a partnership, partnership, or S corporation, the $262,000/$524,000 limit applies to each owners’ or members’ share of the entity’s losses. Unused losses may be deducted in any number of future years as part of the taxpayer's NOL carryforward. This limitation took effect in 2021 and is scheduled to last through 2025. It does not apply to C corporations.

About the Author

Stephen Fishman J.D. · USC Gould School of Law

Stephen Fishman has dedicated his career as an attorney and author to writing useful, authoritative, and recognized guides on business, taxation, and intellectual property matters for small businesses, entrepreneurs, independent contractors, and freelancers. He is the author of over 20 books and hundreds of articles, and has been quoted in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Chicago Tribune, and many other publications. Among his books are Every Landlord’s Tax Deduction Guide, Deduct It! Lower Your Small Business TaxesEvery Airbnb Host's Tax Guideand Working for Yourself: Law and Taxes for Independent Contractors, Freelancers & Consultants, published by Nolo.

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