Personal Use of a Company Vehicle: Imputed Income and W-2 Reporting
Personal use of a company car is taxable wages. This guide compares the three IRS valuation methods — Annual Lease Value, cents-per-mile (72.5¢ for 2026), and the $1.50 commuting rule — with worked examples and W-2 reporting steps.
Functional Expense Allocation for Nonprofits: A Practical Guide to the Statement of Functional Expenses and Form 990 Part IX
Nonprofits must report expenses by both nature and function under FASB ASU 2016-14. This guide explains the three functional categories, audit-accepted allocation methods like time-and-effort and square footage, and how to feed both the statement of functional expenses and Form 990 Part IX from one consistent system.
IFTA Quarterly Fuel Tax Returns: A Filing and Audit Guide for Owner-Operators
IFTA returns are due quarterly on April 30, July 31, October 31, and January 31, and tax follows the miles you drove, not the fuel you bought. This guide shows owner-operators how to calculate fleet MPG, net taxable gallons, and surcharges, and which record-keeping habits survive an audit.
Cat Food, Body Oil, and Stage Costumes: Weird Tax Stories Every Business Owner Should Know
A walk through five tax-court rulings — Seacat's cat food, Wheir's body oil, ABBA's costumes, the Hess implants case, and Capone-style evasion — and the documentation, commingling, and "ordinary and necessary" rules they expose for small business owners.
The Small Business Software Stack for 2026 (And How to Deduct Every Subscription)
The average small business now pays for 18 software subscriptions a month. Here is which categories actually matter in 2026, what to budget, and how to deduct each one correctly on Schedule C.
Small Business Tax Deductions 2026: The Complete Master List
A category-by-category guide to every major small business tax deduction for 2026, including the $2,560,000 Section 179 cap, 60% bonus depreciation, the 68.5-cent mileage rate, the 50% meals rule, and the documentation needed to defend each one on audit.
Personal Appearance Tax Deductions: What You Can (and Can't) Write Off
The IRS applies a two-part test to personal appearance expenses: the item must be required by your work and unsuitable for everyday use. Most suits, makeup, haircuts, and gym memberships fail. This guide details what qualifies, with case law including Pevsner v. Commissioner and Hamper v. Commissioner.
Non-Deductible Business Expenses: What You Can't Write Off in 2026
A practical breakdown of business expenses the IRS disallows in 2026—commuting, entertainment, fines, political spending, life insurance, and the gray areas that cause audit problems—with the Section 162 reasoning behind each rule.
Form 8829: The Complete Guide to Home Office Deductions for Self-Employed Individuals
Self-employed workers can deduct home office expenses on Form 8829, but millions miss it each year. Learn the exclusive-use test, how to calculate your business-use percentage, when to claim depreciation, and which method—simplified or regular—yields a larger deduction.
The Home Office Deduction: A Complete Guide for Self-Employed Workers and Small Business Owners
The home office deduction can save self-employed workers and small business owners up to $1,800 with the simplified method — or significantly more via actual expenses — but W-2 employees can't claim it. Here's how to qualify, calculate, and document it correctly without triggering IRS scrutiny.
The Small Business Owner's Complete Guide to Deducting Employee Benefits
A practical guide to every deductible employee benefit—health insurance, HSAs, retirement plans, life insurance, education, and bonuses—with 2026 contribution limits, IRS rules, and documentation requirements for small business owners.
Business Meal and Entertainment Tax Deductions: What You Can (and Can't) Deduct
The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated entertainment deductions while preserving 50% meal deductions—but the rules are strict. Learn what qualifies, the five IRS documentation requirements, the 2026 phaseout of on-premises meal deductions, and the common mistakes that cost businesses their deductions.