If you’re a partner in a business, a shareholder in an S corporation, or a beneficiary of a trust, chances are you’ve come across a Schedule K-1 at tax time — and wondered what to do with it.
A Schedule K-1 is an IRS tax form that reports an individual’s share of income, deductions, credits, and losses from a pass-through entity — such as a partnership, S corporation, trust, or estate. Unlike a corporation, these entities don’t pay federal income tax themselves. Instead, profits and losses “pass through” to the owners or beneficiaries, who report the amounts on their own personal tax returns.
Every partner, shareholder, or beneficiary receives their own Schedule K-1 each year, and a copy is also filed with the IRS. Getting the numbers on your K-1 right — and knowing exactly where they belong on your Form 1040 — can be confusing, which is why so many business owners and individual filers turn to a tax professional for help with outsourced tax services.
In this guide, we’ll break down exactly what a Schedule K-1 is, who has to file one, how K-1 income is taxed, and how to read every part of the form — line by line.
A K-1 tax form (formally, “Schedule K-1”) is the document a pass-through business entity uses to tell the IRS — and each individual owner — exactly how much of the entity’s income, loss, deduction, and credit belongs to them for the year.
Think of it this way: if a partnership earns $200,000 in taxable income and has two equal partners, the partnership itself doesn’t write a check to the IRS for that income. Instead, it issues a Schedule K-1 to each partner showing $100,000 of income. Each partner then reports that $100,000 on their own individual tax return and pays tax at their personal rate.
This “pass-through taxation” is what separates partnerships, S corporations, and most trusts from C corporations, which pay corporate income tax directly before any profits reach shareholders. If your business is still deciding on the right legal structure, our business formation services can help you weigh the tax implications of each entity type before you file.
This is one of the most common points of confusion. Schedule K and Schedule K-1 are related but not the same form:
| Schedule K | Schedule K-1 | |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Summarizes the entity’s total income, deductions, and credits | Reports each individual’s share of those totals |
| Filed by | The partnership or S corporation, as part of Form 1065 or 1120-S | The entity, once for every partner/shareholder |
| Used by | The IRS to reconcile the entity’s return | Each partner or shareholder, to file their personal return |
| Quantity | One per business return | One per owner or beneficiary |
In short, Schedule K is the whole pie; Schedule K-1 is each individual’s slice.
Not all K-1s are identical. The specific version you receive depends on the type of entity that issued it.
Partnerships, and LLCs taxed as partnerships, file Form 1065 as their business tax return and issue a Schedule K-1 (Form 1065) to each partner or LLC member. If your business is organized as a partnership or multi-member LLC, our LLC, LLP & partnership tax return services can handle both the entity-level Form 1065 filing and the K-1s issued to each partner.
S corporations file Form 1120-S and issue a Schedule K-1 (Form 1120-S) to each shareholder, based on their percentage of stock ownership. Because S corp K-1s don’t include self-employment tax the way partnership K-1s often do, the tax treatment can differ meaningfully. See our S corporation tax return services if your business has elected S corp status.
Trusts and estates that distribute income to beneficiaries file Form 1041 and issue a Schedule K-1 (Form 1041) to each beneficiary. This is common in estate settlements and family trusts where income such as interest, dividends, or capital gains is passed through rather than taxed at the trust level. Learn more through our dedicated trust tax return services.
The responsibility for filing K-1s sits with the entity, not the recipient:
If you’re the recipient of a K-1, you don’t file it separately with the IRS — the issuing entity already sends the IRS its own copy. You simply use the figures on your K-1 to complete your personal Form 1040. That said, if you receive a K-1, it’s worth having a professional review it as part of your individual tax return preparation, since a single missed box can trigger an IRS notice or a need to amend your return later.
Every Schedule K-1 — regardless of entity type — is organized into three main parts.
This section identifies the business or trust that issued the K-1, including its:
This section is about the partner, shareholder, or beneficiary receiving the form. It typically includes:
This is the part that actually affects your tax bill. It reports your specific share of items such as ordinary business income, rental income, interest, dividends, capital gains, deductions, and credits — each assigned to a specific numbered box with corresponding codes.
K-1 income doesn’t get taxed at a single flat rate. Instead, each type of income or deduction on the form flows through to a different part of your personal tax return, and is taxed according to its own rules. Here’s how the most common items flow through to Form 1040:
| K-1 Box | Type of Item | Flows to (Form 1040) |
|---|---|---|
| Box 1 | Ordinary business income/loss | Schedule E, Part II → Schedule 1 → Form 1040, Line 8 |
| Box 2 | Net rental real estate income/loss | Schedule E, Part II |
| Box 5 | Interest income | Schedule B / Form 1040 |
| Box 6a | Ordinary dividends | Schedule B / Form 1040 |
| Box 9a | Net long-term capital gain/loss | Schedule D |
| Box 12 | Section 179 deduction | Form 4562, then Schedule 1 |
| Box 13 | Charitable contributions | Schedule A |
| Box 14 | Self-employment earnings | Schedule SE |
| Box 15 | Credits | Form 3800, then Schedule 3 |
A few important points to keep in mind:
Because K-1 income touches so many different schedules, this is an area where even experienced filers benefit from working with a firm that specializes in tax planning and advisory to avoid overpaying — or underpaying — based on how these items interact with the rest of your return.
People often assume a K-1 works like a 1099 or W-2, but the three forms report fundamentally different types of income.
| Schedule K-1 | Form 1099-NEC | Form W-2 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reports | Pass-through income/loss from a business you own or a trust you benefit from | Payments to a contractor for services | Wages paid to an employee |
| Tax withheld? | No | No | Yes (income tax, FICA) |
| Recipient | Partners, shareholders, beneficiaries | Independent contractors | Employees |
| Subject to SE tax? | Sometimes (often for general partners) | Yes | No (FICA withheld instead) |
It’s entirely possible to receive both a W-2 and a K-1 from the same company. For example, if you’re an S corp shareholder who also works in the business, you’d receive a W-2 for your salary and a Schedule K-1 for your share of the company’s remaining profit.
If your business is responsible for issuing K-1s, here’s the general process:
If you’re the one receiving a K-1, your job is simpler but still requires care: transfer each reported item to the correct line of your Form 1040 using the K-1 instructions and codes as your guide, and hold onto the form (along with prior years’ K-1s) in case the IRS has questions about your basis or loss limitations later.
K-1 deadlines follow the filing deadline of the issuing entity’s tax return:
Because these deadlines fall well before the typical April 15 individual filing deadline, it’s common to receive a K-1 late — or to know one is coming but not yet have the numbers. In that case, you may need to file Form 4868 for a personal extension rather than filing your Form 1040 with estimated (and potentially inaccurate) figures.
The IRS penalizes late or missing K-1s on a per-form, per-month basis (indexed annually), applied separately for failing to file with the IRS and failing to furnish a copy to the recipient. Missing even one K-1 can also delay processing of the entity’s entire return or increase audit risk. Many states impose their own separate penalties on top of federal ones.
If your business has missed a K-1 filing, the fastest way to limit damage is to file the return (or an amended return) and issue the outstanding K-1s as soon as possible. In some cases, penalty relief may be available if you can show reasonable cause — a step where professional guidance from a virtual CFO or tax advisor can make a real difference in how the request is presented to the IRS.
It's used to report an individual partner's, shareholder's, or beneficiary's share of a pass-through entity's income, deductions, and credits so they can include it on their personal tax return.
It's an IRS information return — not a tax you file and pay directly, but a form that tells you (and the IRS) how much income or loss from a business or trust belongs to you for the year.
No. Form 1065 is the partnership's main tax return. Schedule K-1 is a supporting form generated from that return, issued individually to each partner.
No. The issuing entity sends a copy directly to the IRS. You only need to use the figures on your K-1 to prepare your own return.
A loss reported on your K-1 can reduce your taxable income, but only up to the amount of your basis in the entity, and subject to at-risk and passive activity loss rules. Losses beyond those limits are typically carried forward to future years.
You're still required to file your personal return by the deadline. Many filers request a personal extension (Form 4868) if they know a K-1 is coming but hasn't arrived yet, rather than guessing at the numbers.
An LLC itself doesn't receive a K-1, but its members do if the LLC is taxed as a partnership or has elected S corp status. Single-member LLCs taxed as disregarded entities don't use K-1s at all.
Schedule K-1 sits at the intersection of business tax filings and personal tax returns, which is exactly why it causes so much confusion. A single K-1 can touch half a dozen different schedules on your Form 1040, and getting even one box wrong can mean an amended return, a missed deduction, or an unwanted IRS notice.
At KMK Ventures, we help partnerships, S corporations, trusts, and the individuals who own them get K-1s right the first time — from entity-level return preparation and bookkeeping that keeps your numbers audit-ready, to accurate K-1 issuance and personal return filing for every partner or shareholder. Whether you need help with a single K-1 or full-scale outsourced tax services for your growing business, our team is ready to help.
Contact KMK Ventures today to make sure your next Schedule K-1 season goes smoothly.

Bert Wilson serves as our U.S. representative and client success manager, specializing in U.S. tax and accounting services. With expertise in tax compliance, financial reporting, and outsourced accounting solutions, Bert helps clients navigate complex financial challenges. Holding a Master’s degree in accounting and having obtained his C.P.A. license from the state of Colorado, he ensures client expectations are exceeded through tailored solutions and seamless collaboration with our India team. Passionate about building relationships, Bert enjoys both early mornings and outdoor sports, embodying a proactive approach to success
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