Beancount.io LogoBeancount.io

54 tagged with "Healthcare"

Financial management and accounting solutions for healthcare businesses

View all tags

Section 199A SSTB Limitation: Why High-Earning Doctors, Lawyers, and Consultants Lose the 20% QBI Deduction
·mike

Section 199A SSTB Limitation: Why High-Earning Doctors, Lawyers, and Consultants Lose the 20% QBI Deduction

Section 199A's 20% QBI deduction phases out entirely for high-income doctors, lawyers, consultants, and other specified service trades or businesses (SSTBs) — costing a married surgeon at $700,000 of K-1 income roughly $52,000 a year. This guide covers the 2026 income thresholds (~$394,600 MFJ phase-in, ~$544,600 fully phased out), the de minimis safe harbor at 10% / 5% of receipts, the anti-"crack and pack" rules under Reg. §1.199A-5(c)(2), and practical strategies like defined-benefit plans and W-2 wage planning to preserve the deduction.

tax-planning
tax-deductions
healthcare
legal
+3
Section 199A's SSTB Cliff: Why Doctors, Lawyers, and Consultants Lose the 20 Percent QBI Deduction
·mike

Section 199A's SSTB Cliff: Why Doctors, Lawyers, and Consultants Lose the 20 Percent QBI Deduction

Section 199A's SSTB rule denies the 20 percent qualified business income deduction to high-earning doctors, lawyers, consultants, and financial advisors. In 2026 the joint-filer phase-out runs from $403,500 to $553,500, and OBBBA added a permanent $400 minimum deduction for active business owners.

tax-planning
tax-deductions
s-corporation
small-business
+4
COBRA Notice Deadlines for Employers: The Five Windows That Decide Whether You Owe Excise Taxes
·mike

COBRA Notice Deadlines for Employers: The Five Windows That Decide Whether You Owe Excise Taxes

COBRA's notice scheme runs on five deadlines — 90, 30, 14, 60, and 45 days. Miss any one and a group health plan can face a $100-per-day Section 4980B excise tax, up to $110-per-day ERISA penalties, and private lawsuits. A practical guide for plan sponsors and HR teams.

compliance
health-insurance
employee-benefits
payroll
+4
PCORI Fee 2026: Self-Insured Plans, HRAs, and Form 720 by July 31
·mike

PCORI Fee 2026: Self-Insured Plans, HRAs, and Form 720 by July 31

For plan years ending in 2025, self-insured plan sponsors and HRA employers must file Form 720 by July 31, 2026 and pay $3.84 per covered life ($3.47 for plan years ending before October 1, 2025). This guide covers who owes the fee, the three approved methods to calculate average covered lives, why HRAs count employees only, and the common Form 720 filing mistakes that trigger IRS notices.

tax-compliance
tax-deadlines
health-insurance
employee-benefits
+4
QSEHRA vs. ICHRA in 2026: How Small Employers Without a Group Plan Can Reimburse Workers for Individual Health Insurance—Tax-Free
·mike

QSEHRA vs. ICHRA in 2026: How Small Employers Without a Group Plan Can Reimburse Workers for Individual Health Insurance—Tax-Free

For 2026, QSEHRA caps tax-free reimbursements at $6,450 self-only and $13,100 family for employers under 50 FTEs, while ICHRA has no IRS cap and lets any-size employer vary contributions across 11 federal employee classes—provided the 9.96% affordability test, MEC requirement, and 90-day notice are all met.

health-insurance
small-business
employee-benefits
tax
+4
Self-Funded vs Level-Funded vs Fully-Insured Health Plans: How Small Employers Cut Premium Costs Without Taking on Catastrophic Claim Risk
·mike

Self-Funded vs Level-Funded vs Fully-Insured Health Plans: How Small Employers Cut Premium Costs Without Taking on Catastrophic Claim Risk

A funding-model guide for small employers comparing fully-insured, level-funded, and self-funded group health plans, with the math on stop-loss coverage, ERISA fiduciary exposure, Form 5500 filings, and when each model actually saves money.

health-insurance
employee-benefits
small-business
healthcare
+4
The HSA: The Stealth Retirement Account That Beats Your 401(k) on Tax Efficiency
·mike

The HSA: The Stealth Retirement Account That Beats Your 401(k) on Tax Efficiency

How the 2026 Health Savings Account combines tax-free contributions, tax-free growth, and tax-free medical withdrawals — and how the shoebox strategy turns an $8,750 family limit into a six- to seven-figure retirement vehicle by age 65.

tax-planning
personal-finance
retirement-savings
healthcare
+4
Cash Balance Plans for High-Income Solo Practitioners: How Doctors, Lawyers, and Consultants Defer Six Figures Tax-Free
·mike

Cash Balance Plans for High-Income Solo Practitioners: How Doctors, Lawyers, and Consultants Defer Six Figures Tax-Free

U.S. cash balance pension plans let solo doctors, attorneys, and consultants deduct $100,000–$370,000 a year on top of a Solo 401(k). 2026 contribution limits, a worked example for a 54-year-old physician, and the actuarial commitments to weigh before signing.

retirement-plans
tax-planning
solo-401k
financial-planning
+4
Small Business Health Care Tax Credit: The Complete Employer's Guide to Claiming Up to 50%
·mike

Small Business Health Care Tax Credit: The Complete Employer's Guide to Claiming Up to 50%

Employers with fewer than 25 FTEs and average annual wages below the IRS cap can claim up to 50% of health insurance premiums through the Small Business Health Care Tax Credit. This guide covers 2026 eligibility, the sliding-scale math, Form 8941 mechanics, and the mistakes that kill otherwise valid claims.

tax-credits
small-business
health-insurance
tax-compliance
+4
Form 8941: The Small Business Owner's Guide to Health Insurance Tax Credits
·mike

Form 8941: The Small Business Owner's Guide to Health Insurance Tax Credits

Form 8941 lets small businesses claim up to 50% of employee health insurance premiums as a direct tax credit — but only if you have fewer than 25 FTE employees, pay average wages below ~$65,000, and purchase coverage through the SHOP Marketplace. Here's how to calculate and claim it before your two-year eligibility window closes.

tax
small-business
healthcare
payroll
+3
Tax Deductions for Therapists: The Complete Guide to Maximizing Your Write-Offs
·mike

Tax Deductions for Therapists: The Complete Guide to Maximizing Your Write-Offs

Therapists in private practice can claim deductions for office space, telehealth software, continuing education, malpractice insurance, and retirement contributions — this guide covers every major write-off plus the ones most practitioners miss.

tax-deductions
tax-planning
self-employment
healthcare
+3
Medical Practice Accounting: A Complete Guide to Healthcare Financial Management
·mike

Medical Practice Accounting: A Complete Guide to Healthcare Financial Management

Learn the essential accounting practices every medical practice needs, from revenue cycle management and accounts receivable to tax planning and profit distribution models for group practices.

accounting
financial-management
healthcare
bookkeeping
+1
Showing 37–48 of 54 posts