Phantom Income
Taxable income that must be reported and taxed even though the taxpayer received no actual cash payment.
What is Phantom Income?
Phantom income is taxable income that a taxpayer must recognize and pay taxes on even though they did not receive actual cash. Common sources include: partnership and S-corporation income allocated to partners or shareholders without cash distributions (pass-through taxation); original issue discount (OID) on bonds, where the accrued interest is taxable annually even before cash is received; cancellation-of-debt income, where forgiven debt is treated as income; and imputed interest on below-market loans. Phantom income is particularly challenging for investors in partnerships, limited liability companies, and real estate investment trusts (REITs) who may owe taxes on allocated income without having received a cash distribution to cover the tax bill.
Example
An investor who owns a 10% stake in a private partnership earns a $50,000 allocated share of the partnership's taxable income in 2024, as reported on their Schedule K-1. Even if the partnership reinvests all profits and makes no cash distributions, the investor owes income tax on the full $50,000 — a phantom income situation requiring them to fund the tax bill from other sources.