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63 tagged with "Self-Employment Tax"

Self-employment tax rules, calculations, and strategies for business owners

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The Minister's Housing Allowance: Section 107, the SECA Trap, and the Retired-Pastor 403(b) Designation
·mike

The Minister's Housing Allowance: Section 107, the SECA Trap, and the Retired-Pastor 403(b) Designation

Section 107 lets ordained ministers exclude designated housing costs from federal income tax, but the allowance is still added back for SECA and only an in-advance written designation survives audit. A practical guide to the three-part cap, Form 4361's irrevocable opt-out, and the 403(b) designation that keeps a retired pastor's distribution income-tax-free for life.

tax
tax-planning
self-employment-tax
retirement-planning
+3
Mobile Notary and Loan Signing Agent Bookkeeping: Separating SE-Tax-Exempt Notarial Fees on Schedule C and Schedule SE
·mike

Mobile Notary and Loan Signing Agent Bookkeeping: Separating SE-Tax-Exempt Notarial Fees on Schedule C and Schedule SE

Mobile notaries and loan signing agents can exclude statutory notarial fees from self-employment tax under IRC Section 1402(c)(1), but only if their books cleanly split per-act notarial revenue from taxable signing, travel, and print fees. A chart-of-accounts and Schedule C/SE walk-through that can save a moderately busy LSA $800 to $2,000 a year.

self-employment-tax
bookkeeping
tax-deductions
self-employment
+3
Salon and Barbershop Booth Rental Bookkeeping: Schedule C vs Schedule E, 1099 Rules, and Self-Employment Records
·mike

Salon and Barbershop Booth Rental Bookkeeping: Schedule C vs Schedule E, 1099 Rules, and Self-Employment Records

Salon and barbershop booth rent can land on Schedule C, Schedule E, or both — and it is usually the booth renter, not the shop, who owes the Form 1099-MISC. A practical guide to worker classification, deductions, and audit-ready bookkeeping for shop owners and booth renters.

bookkeeping
small-business
self-employment
self-employment-tax
+4
Barter Transactions: How to Record Trades and Report Them to the IRS
·mike

Barter Transactions: How to Record Trades and Report Them to the IRS

Every barter trade creates taxable income equal to the fair market value of what you receive. Record it as a paired sale and expense through a barter clearing account, then report it on Schedule C—including 15.3% self-employment tax—and watch for Form 1099-B from barter exchanges.

tax
irs-reporting
bookkeeping
small-business
+4
The 2026 Form W-4 Multiple Jobs Worksheet: How Two-Earner Couples and Side-Hustlers Sidestep an April Tax Surprise
·mike

The 2026 Form W-4 Multiple Jobs Worksheet: How Two-Earner Couples and Side-Hustlers Sidestep an April Tax Surprise

A plain-English walkthrough of Form W-4 Step 2(a), 2(b), and 2(c) for two-earner households and side-hustlers — including the higher-paying-job rule, side-hustle income on Step 4(a), and the 90%/100%/110% safe-harbor numbers that prevent an April tax bill or penalty.

tax
tax-planning
tax-compliance
personal-finance
+4
Accountable Plans: How to Reimburse Owners and Employees Tax-Free
·mike

Accountable Plans: How to Reimburse Owners and Employees Tax-Free

An accountable plan lets an S corporation reimburse owners and employees for mileage, home office, and supplies tax-free under Treasury Regulation 1.62-2. It requires three things—business connection, substantiation within 60 days, and return of excess within 120 days—and replaces the employee expense deduction the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated.

tax
tax-deductions
s-corp
small-business
+4
Quarterly Estimated Taxes for the Self-Employed in 2026: Safe Harbors, Form 1040-ES, and the Annualized Income Method
·mike

Quarterly Estimated Taxes for the Self-Employed in 2026: Safe Harbors, Form 1040-ES, and the Annualized Income Method

A working guide to the 2026 quarterly estimated tax rules for freelancers and self-employed earners — the two IRS safe harbors (90% current year, 100%/110% prior year), the four uneven due dates, Form 1040-ES, the annualized income method for lumpy earners, EFTPS vs Direct Pay, and the mistakes that trigger penalties at the 6–7% federal rate.

tax
self-employment
self-employment-tax
freelance
+4
Bookkeeping for Short-Term Rental Hosts: Schedule E vs. Schedule C, the 7-Day Average Stay Rule, and Material Participation
·mike

Bookkeeping for Short-Term Rental Hosts: Schedule E vs. Schedule C, the 7-Day Average Stay Rule, and Material Participation

How Airbnb and Vrbo hosts classify income on Schedule E vs. Schedule C, calculate the 7-day average stay, and document material participation to unlock non-passive losses against W-2 wages.

airbnb
real-estate
bookkeeping
tax-planning
+4
Soroban v. Commissioner: How 'Limited Partner' Stopped Meaning Limited Partner for SE Tax
·mike

Soroban v. Commissioner: How 'Limited Partner' Stopped Meaning Limited Partner for SE Tax

The Tax Court's 2025 Soroban v. Commissioner ruling applied a functional test to Section 1402(a)(13), reclassifying tens of millions in distributive share as self-employment income for working partners in hedge funds, private equity, and professional service LPs.

tax
self-employment-tax
partnerships
tax-planning
+4
The NIL Tax Trap: What College Athletes (and Their Parents) Owe on Endorsement, Collective, and Revenue-Sharing Income
·mike

The NIL Tax Trap: What College Athletes (and Their Parents) Owe on Endorsement, Collective, and Revenue-Sharing Income

How NIL endorsements, collective payouts, and House v. NCAA revenue sharing are taxed in 2026—Schedule C mechanics, the 15.3% self-employment tax, multi-state jock-tax filings, and the planning moves that keep April manageable for college athletes and their families.

tax
self-employment-tax
independent-contractor
multi-state-tax
+4
Schedule F Survival Guide: Crop Insurance Deferral, Section 1033(e) Livestock Sales, and Schedule J Income Averaging
·mike

Schedule F Survival Guide: Crop Insurance Deferral, Section 1033(e) Livestock Sales, and Schedule J Income Averaging

Schedule F farm tax elections explained — crop insurance deferral under Section 451(f), weather-forced livestock replacement under Section 1033(e), Section 175 conservation deductions, the Section 464 prepaid-supply cap, the March 1 estimated-tax rule, and Schedule J three-year income averaging — with rules, deadlines, and worked examples.

tax
tax-planning
tax-deductions
self-employment-tax
+3
Schedule F: Farm Tax Reporting, Disaster Deferrals, and Income Averaging Explained
·mike

Schedule F: Farm Tax Reporting, Disaster Deferrals, and Income Averaging Explained

A practical walkthrough of Schedule F for farmers and ranchers, covering crop insurance deferral under Section 451, weather-related livestock relief (Section 451(g) and 1033(e)), Section 175 soil and water conservation deductions capped at 25% of farm gross income, Section 179 and bonus depreciation, and Schedule J income averaging using elected farm income across three base years.

schedule-f
tax-planning
self-employment-tax
depreciation
+4
Showing 13–24 of 63 posts