On June 12, 2023, Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont signed the budget bill (H.B. 6941), which includes three notable tax provisions: (1) an extension of the corporation business tax (CBT) surcharge for three years; (2) changes to the pass-through entity (PTE) tax; and (3) a reduction in personal income tax rates.
H.B. 6941 extends the CBT surcharge from income tax years beginning before January 1, 2023, to those beginning before January 1, 2026.
The surcharge is 10% of a taxpayer’s CBT owed. It continues to apply to companies that have more than $250 in CBT liability and (1) have at least $100 million in gross income for that year or (2) file unitary combined returns.
For tax years before 2024, Connecticut’s PTE tax is – and remains – mandatory. For tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2024, the budget bill changes the PTE tax to an elective one. The PTE tax election will be made annually by submitting written notice to the Commissioner of Revenue no later than the due date of the PTE’s return, including extensions.
H.B. 6941 requires electing PTEs to use the alternative base method to calculate their tax liabilities. Under that method, an electing PTE’s tax base is Connecticut-source income that directly or indirectly flows through to resident and nonresident members who are individuals plus income not sourced to Connecticut that directly flows through to members who are resident individuals. Income passed through to corporate members is excluded from an electing PTE’s tax base.
The bill also eliminates the PTE tax credit used by corporations to offset any CBT liability. Because distributive shares of corporate members are not included in an electing PTE’s tax base, an offsetting credit is no longer needed. However, the bill preserves the partial 87.5% pass-through tax credit for individual members.
Although the PTE tax is elective under the bill, Connecticut is reverting to its pre-2018 requirement that PTEs file a composite return for any nonresident members whose only source of Connecticut income is from the PTE. The PTE is again required to pay Connecticut composite tax on behalf of those nonresident members. The composite tax is offset by each nonresident members’ PTE tax credits.
For tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2024, the budget bill reduces the lowest two marginal income tax rates: from 3% to 2% for individuals with Connecticut taxable income not exceeding $10,000, and from 5% to 4.5% for those with taxable income exceeding $10,000 but not over $50,000.
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