At-Risk Limitation Rules for S-Corporation Owners

What Is the At-Risk Limitation?

The at-risk limitation determines how much of your S-Corporation losses you can deduct on your U.S. tax return.
In simple terms:
You can only deduct losses up to the amount you have personally “at risk” in the business. This rule exists to prevent taxpayers from deducting losses they’re not financially responsible for. For expat business owners, this rule often becomes confusing — especially when businesses are funded from abroad or structured across borders.

What Counts as “At Risk” for S-Corp Owners

You are generally considered at risk for:

  • Cash you personally invest in the business
  • Property you contribute
  • Loans you personally guarantee

You are not at risk for:
  • Business loans you did not personally guarantee
  • Losses allocated beyond your actual financial exposure
  • Certain relatedparty or foreign loans
This distinction matters because losses exceeding your at-risk amount are suspended, not lost — but they cannot be deducted until your at-risk amount increases.

Why At-Risk Rules Are Tricky for Expats

Expats often face additional complexity due to:

Example:

An American living abroad funds an S-Corp using a foreign bank loan that is not personally guaranteed. Even though the business incurs losses, those losses may not be deductible under at-risk rules.
This is where many expats unintentionally overclaim losses — and later face IRS adjustments.

At-Risk Limitation vs. Basis Limitation

Many S-Corp owners confuse basis rules with at-risk rules — but they are separate tests.
You must pass both:

Basis limitation

Do you have enough ownership basis?

At-risk limitation

Are you personally financially exposed?

Failing either test means your loss deduction is limited.
Understanding the order and interaction of these rules is essential for proper planning.

What Happens to Disallowed Losses?

If your losses exceed your at-risk amount:

They are suspended, not eliminated

They carry forward to future years

They become deductible when your at-risk amount increases

Strategic planning — such as additional capital contributions or restructuring loans — can often unlock suspended losses legally.

Smart Planning Strategies for Expat S-Corp Owners

Proper planning can make a significant difference. Strategies may include:

Structuring loans to increase at-risk amounts

Timing capital contributions strategically

Coordinating at-risk rules with foreign tax credits

Reviewing entity choice for international operations

The goal is not just compliance — it’s maximizing allowable deductions without triggering IRS scrutiny.

How We Help Expat Business Owners

At eTax Global, we specialize in helping U.S. business owners who live and operate internationally.
We help expat S-Corp owners:

Analyze at-risk and basis limitations

Structure funding correctly from the start

Recover suspended losses where possible

Coordinate business losses with overall expat tax strategy

And make sure your S-Corp losses are deductible — the right way.