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8 tagged with "Side Hustle"

Tax, accounting, and growth tips for side projects, freelancers, and part-time businesses

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Pet Sitting and Dog Walking Bookkeeping: A Schedule C, Rover/Wag 1099-K, and Care-Custody Guide for 2026
·mike

Pet Sitting and Dog Walking Bookkeeping: A Schedule C, Rover/Wag 1099-K, and Care-Custody Guide for 2026

How independent pet sitters and dog walkers should book Rover and Wag 1099-K income, deduct mileage at the IRS 2026 rate of $0.725 per mile, structure care-custody-and-control insurance, classify sub-walkers under the ABC test, and track visits-per-sitter-per-day as the core profitability KPI.

bookkeeping
small-business
self-employment
tax-deductions
+4
The Photo Booth Operator's Bookkeeping Playbook: ASC 606 Retainers, Section 179, and Multi-State Nexus
·mike

The Photo Booth Operator's Bookkeeping Playbook: ASC 606 Retainers, Section 179, and Multi-State Nexus

A practical bookkeeping guide for photo booth and 360 booth operators — how to recognize retainer revenue under ASC 606, capitalize equipment with Section 179, navigate multi-state sales tax nexus, and decide between 1099 and W-2 attendants.

bookkeeping
small-business
creative-industries
revenue-recognition
+4
Mobile Notary and Loan Signing Agent Bookkeeping: Schedule C, Section 1402(c)(2), and the KPIs That Matter
·mike

Mobile Notary and Loan Signing Agent Bookkeeping: Schedule C, Section 1402(c)(2), and the KPIs That Matter

Mobile notaries and loan signing agents can carve notarial-fee income out of self-employment tax under IRC Section 1402(c)(2). This guide covers Schedule C income separation, the 2026 70-cent standard mileage rate, multi-state commission costs, surety bond versus E&O insurance, and the per-signing KPIs that turn an NSA practice from side hustle into a sustainable business.

bookkeeping
self-employment-tax
tax-deductions
small-business
+4
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
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
1099-K Threshold Whiplash: What Gig Workers and Online Sellers Need to Know for 2026
·mike

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.

tax
tax-compliance
irs-reporting
self-employment
+4
Hobby or Business? The IRS Section 183 Nine-Factor Test for 2026
·mike

Hobby or Business? The IRS Section 183 Nine-Factor Test for 2026

How the IRS Section 183 nine-factor test decides whether your side activity's losses are deductible in 2026, what the three-of-five safe harbor really means, and what 2025's Young v. Commissioner reveals about the records that win in Tax Court.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-deductions
small-business
+3
Section 183 Hobby Loss Rule: How the IRS Nine-Factor Test Decides If Your Side Activity Is a Business
·mike

Section 183 Hobby Loss Rule: How the IRS Nine-Factor Test Decides If Your Side Activity Is a Business

Section 183 of the Internal Revenue Code denies loss deductions for activities not engaged in for profit. The IRS applies a nine-factor test and a three-of-five-years safe harbor (two of seven for horses) to distinguish a real business from a hobby — here is what each factor weighs and how to document profit motive before an audit.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-deductions
small-business
+4