Assuming you have an accountant, let him/her/they handle this for you. Its what you pay them for. If the bank is asking, it "could" be due to IRS prompts.No idea where to actually post this, so may as well necro an Aychamo thread...
My banking institution that handles my business account has asked for justification on a series of transactions. I'm not hiding anything but also not enthused about providing a bunch of details that really should be no one's business. Basically it is just the client paying me for invoices and then me moving that out as an owner distribution and payroll to myself to my brokerage account.
Here's the email I received from them:
As such, we are reviewing the transactions listed below:
Transactions
- April 13 2023 - Transfer from ((Client)) for the amount of $XX,XXX
- May 08 2023 - Transfer to ((Brokerage)) for the amount of $XX,XXX
- May 12 2023 - Transfer from ((Client)) for the amount of $XX,XXX
- June 08 2023 - Transfer to ((Brokerage)) for the amount of $XX,XXX
Please answer the following questions by responding directly to this email:
- Please advise the purpose of the transactions and purpose of the account.
- Please advise the source of the funds and wealth of the incoming transactions.
- Please provide additional details relating to incoming transfers from ((Client)) What services and/or goods were provided?
- Please provide the following documents for us to validate the aforementioned transactions:
- Any contracts or invoices for services/goods provided to ((Client))
My initial reaction is to answer:
1. Business
2. Client payments for invoices (i have no idea what "wealth of the incoming transactions" means)
3. Consulting services
4. My contract is between my business and my client so piss off
Yep, agreed. He has the email I received and is reviewing it for me.Assuming you have an accountant, let him/her/they handle this for you. Its what you pay them for. If the bank is asking, it "could" be due to IRS prompts.
The type of entity your company is can also make a difference. Sole-proprietorships/LLCs are disregarded entities in the eyes of the IRS so it all flows to your 1040 via the schedule C. So flushing cash between business and personal accounts isn't a "huge" deal. S-Corps and C-Corps are not disregarded entities so cash flowing from business to personal accounts is something else entirely.Yep, agreed. He has the email I received and is reviewing it for me.
The type of entity your company is can also make a difference. Sole-proprietorships/LLCs are disregarded entities in the eyes of the IRS so it all flows to your 1040 via the schedule C. So flushing cash between business and personal accounts isn't a "huge" deal. S-Corps and C-Corps are not disregarded entities so cash flowing from business to personal accounts is something else entirely.
we're an llc filing as an s-corp and i'm pretty sure it's all still considered pass through income, we just get taxed less on whatever is not our salary (so still disregarded but s-corp benefits maybe?) - my accountant takes care of it but that's my understanding
If ((Client)) is some unique non-standard name there is a 99% chance this is some AML/KYC thing.No idea where to actually post this, so may as well necro an Aychamo thread...
My banking institution that handles my business account has asked for justification on a series of transactions. I'm not hiding anything but also not enthused about providing a bunch of details that really should be no one's business. Basically it is just the client paying me for invoices and then me moving that out as an owner distribution and payroll to myself to my brokerage account.
Here's the email I received from them:
As such, we are reviewing the transactions listed below:
Transactions
- April 13 2023 - Transfer from ((Client)) for the amount of $XX,XXX
- May 08 2023 - Transfer to ((Brokerage)) for the amount of $XX,XXX
- May 12 2023 - Transfer from ((Client)) for the amount of $XX,XXX
- June 08 2023 - Transfer to ((Brokerage)) for the amount of $XX,XXX
Please answer the following questions by responding directly to this email:
- Please advise the purpose of the transactions and purpose of the account.
- Please advise the source of the funds and wealth of the incoming transactions.
- Please provide additional details relating to incoming transfers from ((Client)) What services and/or goods were provided?
- Please provide the following documents for us to validate the aforementioned transactions:
- Any contracts or invoices for services/goods provided to ((Client))
My initial reaction is to answer:
1. Business
2. Client payments for invoices (i have no idea what "wealth of the incoming transactions" means)
3. Consulting services
4. My contract is between my business and my client so piss off