Partnerships

The Illinois Income Tax is imposed on every taxpayer earning or receiving income in Illinois. The tax is calculated by multiplying net income by a flat rate. The Illinois Income Tax is based, to a large extent, on the federal income tax code.

Replacement Tax, also known as Personal Property Replacement Tax, is a tax on the net income of corporations, subchapter S corporations, partnerships, and trusts. This tax replaces money lost by local governments when their power to impose personal property taxes was taken away. Replacement tax is collected from corporations, subchapter S corporations, partnerships, and trusts by the State of Illinois and paid to local governments.

Pass-through entity (PTE) tax is an elective tax on partnerships (other than a publicly traded partnership under Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 7704) and subchapter S corporations effective for tax years ending on or after December 31, 2021, and beginning before January 1, 2026.

Tax rate

Partnerships are subject to replacement tax but do not pay the Illinois income tax. The income tax is paid at the partner's level. Generally, income from a partnership is passed on to the partners. The partners must include this income in their federal adjusted gross income (for individuals) or federal taxable income (for other taxpayers). This is the starting point for Illinois income tax purposes and where the income tax is paid.

Use the Tax Rate Database to determine the replacement tax rate.

Partnerships who elect to pay PTE tax are subject to this tax for the privilege of earning or receiving income in Illinois in an amount equal to 4.95 percent (.0495) of the taxpayer's net income for the taxable year. Each partner of an electing pass-through entity is allowed a credit against their own tax in an amount equal to 4.95 percent (.0495) times the partner's distributive share of the net income of the electing partnership.

Tax base

The starting point for the Illinois Partner ship Replacement Tax Retu rn is federal taxable income, which is income minus deductions. Next, the federal taxable income is changed by adding back certain items ( e.g ., state, municipal, and other interest income excluded from federal taxable income) and subtracting others ( e.g ., interest income from U.S. Treasury obligations). The result is “base income.”

Pass-through entity net income has the same meaning as defined in Section 202 of the Illinois Income Tax Act, except that the following provisions shall not apply:

  1. the standard exemption allowed under Section 204;
  2. the deduction for net losses allowed under Section 207; and
  3. the modifications for personal service income or reasonable allowance for compensation paid to partners and income distributable to a partner subject to replacement tax.

If a taxpayer making the PTE tax election is a partner of another taxpayer who made the PTE tax election, net income shall be computed as above, except that the taxpayer shall subtract its distributive share of the net income of the electing partnership (including its distributive share of the net income of the electing partnership derived as a distributive share from electing partnerships in which it is a partner).

See the Illinois Department of Revenue Income Tax Credits and Expirations spreadsheet for information about income tax credits.

Filing requirements

You must file Form IL-1065, Partnership Replacement Tax Return , if you are a partnershi p, as defined in Internal Revenue Code (IR C ), Section 761(a), that has base income or loss as defined under the Illinois Income Tax Act (IITA). A partnership that has elect s an IRC, Section 761, exclusion from the federal partnership provisions is also excluded for purposes of the IITA.