98 tagged with "Self-Employment"
Learn about self-employment taxes, LLC owner compensation, and freelancer financial management
Charter Boat and Sportfishing Captain Bookkeeping: The Captain's Guide to Running a Profitable, IRS-Ready Charter Operation
A working captain's guide to charter boat bookkeeping in the U.S.—how to track OUPV/six-pack license renewals, deferred deposits under ASC 606, mate tip pools, fuel surcharges, Section 179 vessel depreciation, and HMS permit compliance so a hard season translates into a profitable, defensible business.
Solo 401(k) vs SEP-IRA in 2026: Contribution Limits, Super Catch-Up, and Mega-Backdoor Roth for the Self-Employed
Compare the 2026 Solo 401(k) and SEP-IRA limits side by side — when each plan wins, how the SECURE 2.0 super catch-up adds $11,250 for ages 60–63, the mega-backdoor Roth strategy for after-tax conversions, the 20% versus 25% Schedule C calculation, and the Form 5500-EZ filing required once plan assets cross $250,000.
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.
OBBBA Locks In the Section 199A QBI Deduction: A 2026 Playbook for Pass-Through Owners
Section 199A is now permanent under OBBBA. Pass-through owners get a 20% deduction, wider SSTB phase-in ranges ($75K single / $150K joint above the 2026 threshold), a new $400 minimum for material participants, and the same W-2 wage and UBIA tests at the top of the band.
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.
Section 988 Foreign Currency Transactions: A Tax Guide for Importers, Exporters, and Remote Workers
Section 988 of the Internal Revenue Code makes foreign-exchange gains and losses ordinary, not capital. Importers, exporters, and remote workers paid in euros or pounds get full ordinary-loss deductions with no $3,000 cap, a same-day election to convert forward-contract gains to capital, and a $200 per-transaction de minimis exception for personal travel currency.
Solo 401(k) vs. SEP-IRA for the Self-Employed: 2026 Limits, the Roth Option, and the Pro-Rata Trap
For the self-employed, a Solo 401(k) often shelters more than double what a SEP-IRA does at the same income — a $90,000 earner can contribute $47,000 vs. $22,500 in 2026. This guide covers the limits, the Roth option, the pro-rata rule, and the December 31 deferral deadline.
1099-K Threshold Whiplash: What Gig Workers and Online Sellers Need to Know for 2026
For the 2026 tax year the Form 1099-K threshold reverted to $20,000 and more than 200 transactions, but you must still report all income whether or not a form arrives. This guide explains who gets a 1099-K, how to reconcile Box 1a from gross to taxable income, and where the numbers go on Schedule C or Schedule 1.
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.
The NYC Tax Most Freelancers Don't Know Exists Until They Owe It
New York City's 4 percent Unincorporated Business Tax applies to freelancers, consultants, and partnerships with NYC gross receipts above $95,000. A full credit eliminates the tax at $95,000 or less of taxable income, while an S-corp election can move higher earners out of the regime entirely.
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.
Solo 401(k) vs. SEP-IRA in 2026: Picking the Self-Employed Retirement Plan That Actually Shelters the Most Income
A 2026 comparison of solo 401(k) and SEP-IRA plans for the self-employed, with contribution math at $60K, $120K, and $300K of net income, SECURE 2.0 Roth catch-up and super catch-up rules, setup deadlines, and a decision framework for picking the plan that shelters the most income.