Most people seem to stumble over this. The problem can arise with any multi-word phrase that needs a possessive but ends in S, and so sounds awkward using the clitic apostrophe-S. I've heard this particular one variously rendered as:
- You guys'
- You guys's
- Your guys' / your guy's
What's you guys...your...guises...what's your take on it?
Answer
Regardless of the various permutations being thrown around these days, the correct possessive of you guys is you guys’, spoken or written, and I quote (emphasis mine):
To form the possessive case of a plural noun ending in s, add only the apostrophe.
EXAMPLES
- highways’ intersection
- the beetles’ legs
John E. Warriner, Warriner's English Grammar and Composition (Orlando, FL: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1986), 243
Since you guys is a plural noun, it is subject to the above rule, which has no exception, as far as I know.
Indeed, you guys's is not an uncommon colloqiualism (I have even used it myself on occasion) but it is grammatically incorrect, and thus has no place in standard, proper or formal contexts, whether spoken or written.
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