K-1 shows income but you got no cash? That is phantom income.

One of the most frustrating situations in partnership investing: your K-1 shows taxable income in Boxes 1 through 11, but Box 19 shows zero. You owe the IRS money on income you never received. Here is why it happens and what you can do about it.

What phantom income is

Phantom income is taxable income allocated to you on a K-1 that was not distributed as cash. The partnership earned money on paper, your share was allocated to you, and the IRS expects you to pay tax on it — even though the cash stayed inside the entity.

Why it happens

  • Debt paydown: The partnership used cash flow to pay down the mortgage. This does not create a deduction but the operating income is still taxable to you.
  • Capital reserves: Cash is being held for future improvements, lease-up costs, or operating reserves.
  • Depreciation fade: In later years of a hold, depreciation deductions decline and income exceeds deductions.
  • Capital gains on sale: The partnership sold an asset at a gain. Your share of the gain is taxable even if proceeds have not been distributed yet.

Example: phantom income

Box 1 (taxable income)$18,400
Box 19 (cash received)$0
Tax owed (at 32% bracket)$5,888

The investor owes approximately $5,888 in federal tax on income that was never received as cash.

Strategies to manage phantom income

  • Offset with passive losses: If you have K-1 losses from other investments, they can offset this income.
  • Request a tax distribution: Some partnership agreements require the GP to distribute enough cash to cover partners' tax obligations. Check your operating agreement.
  • Invest in loss-generating partnerships: Strategically investing in real estate deals with front-loaded depreciation can create losses to offset phantom income.
  • Plan your estimated payments: If you expect phantom income, adjust your quarterly estimated tax payments to avoid an underpayment penalty in April.

Questions for your CPA

  • Do I have passive losses from other investments to offset this phantom income?
  • Should I adjust my estimated tax payments?
  • Does my partnership agreement include a tax distribution provision?
  • Is the phantom income likely to continue in future years?

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Frequently asked questions about Schedule K-1

Common questions from investors receiving their first K-1 or looking to better understand what the form means.