73 tagged with "Financial Statements"
Understand and prepare balance sheets, income statements, and cash flow reports
Corporate Alternative Minimum Tax (CAMT): How the 15% Book-Income Levy on $1B+ Companies Actually Works
The Corporate Alternative Minimum Tax imposes a 15% levy on Adjusted Financial Statement Income for corporations averaging over $1 billion in AFSI. A practical guide to who qualifies, how AFSI is computed under section 56A, the FPMG $100M U.S. test, Form 4626 mechanics, and the interim simplified safe harbor.
ASC 350 Goodwill Impairment: A Private Company Guide to the Amortization Alternative and Triggering-Event Testing
ASC 350 lets private companies amortize goodwill over up to ten years and test for impairment only when a triggering event occurs. This guide walks through ASU 2014-02 and 2021-03 elections, the single-step Step One quantitative test after ASU 2017-04, and how to keep auditors and lenders aligned.
Schedule UTP: How Corporations Disclose Uncertain Tax Positions Without Handing the IRS a Roadmap
Schedule UTP requires corporations with $10M+ in assets and an ASC 740-10 reserve to disclose uncertain tax positions on Form 1120. This guide covers who must file, how to rank major tax positions, what the concise description must include, the columns added for tax year 2022, and the drafting mistakes that trigger IRS Letter 5191.
Schedule M-1 and M-3: Reconciling GAAP Book Income to Taxable Income
Schedule M-1 and M-3 reconcile a corporation's GAAP book income to taxable income. This guide explains the $10M and $50M asset thresholds, permanent versus temporary differences, and the recurring reconciling items — depreciation, meals, federal tax expense, bad debt reserves, and stock-based compensation — that draw IRS scrutiny.
The Stress-Free Tax Season Workflow: How to Catch Up, Organize, and File With Confidence
A six-week framework for small business owners to catch up unreconciled books, assemble a standardized year-end financial package, and hand off cleanly to an accountant—anchored by the 2026 federal filing deadlines.
EIDL Loan Recordkeeping Requirements: What Small Businesses Must Know
EIDL borrowers must maintain records for decades—five years current plus three years after final payoff. This guide covers which documents to keep, SBA audit powers, approved fund uses, and how to build an audit-ready bookkeeping system.
How to Prepare for a Business Loan Application: A Complete Guide
Nearly 80% of small business loan applications are rejected on first submission — not because the business is weak, but because the owner wasn't prepared. This guide covers the Five Cs of Credit, DSCR calculation, required documentation, loan type selection, and the common mistakes that sink applications before they start.
Double Declining Balance Depreciation: Complete Guide with Examples
The double declining balance (DDB) method front-loads depreciation deductions, letting businesses write off more in the early years when assets lose value fastest — with a step-by-step formula, worked example, and comparison to straight-line depreciation.
How to Read Your Income Statement: A Complete Guide for Small Business Owners
Your income statement reveals whether your business model actually works—not just whether the bank balance is positive. Learn every line item from revenue to net income, how to calculate all three profit margins, and how to spot cost trends before they compound.
Historical Bookkeeping: What It Is and Why Your Business Might Need It
Historical bookkeeping (catch-up bookkeeping) reconstructs unrecorded financial transactions from past periods. Learn when businesses need it, how IRS rules apply, and a step-by-step approach to getting your books current without losing deductions or facing penalties.
How to Use Financial Statements to Drive Better Business Decisions
A practical guide to reading income statements, balance sheets, and expense trend reports as monthly decision-making tools—with specific ratios to track, red flags to catch, and concrete actions to take before problems compound.
What Is a Bookkeeper? Definition, Roles, and Responsibilities
A bookkeeper records and organizes daily financial transactions—sales, payroll, bank reconciliations, and financial statements. Learn what bookkeepers actually do, how they differ from accountants, and when your business needs one.