211 tagged with "Tax Deductions"
Maximize tax deductions and reduce your tax liability legally
Cost Segregation Studies: How Real Estate Investors Turn a Building Into Five-Figure Tax Savings
A cost segregation study reclassifies a building's components into shorter MACRS lives, unlocking the 100% bonus depreciation permanently restored by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of July 2025. On a $1M residential rental, that swings first-year tax savings from roughly $10,700 to roughly $90,600—provided the investor clears IRC §469 passive activity loss limits.
The QBI Deduction Decoded: How Section 199A Can Cut Your Tax Bill by 20%
Section 199A lets pass-through owners deduct up to 20% of qualified business income. This guide covers the 2026 thresholds, W-2 wage and UBIA limits, the SSTB trap, rental real estate safe harbor, the aggregation election, and the new $400 minimum deduction.
Cat Food, Body Oil, and Stage Costumes: Weird Tax Stories Every Business Owner Should Know
A walk through five tax-court rulings — Seacat's cat food, Wheir's body oil, ABBA's costumes, the Hess implants case, and Capone-style evasion — and the documentation, commingling, and "ordinary and necessary" rules they expose for small business owners.
Client-Related Tax Deductions: A 2026 Guide for Service Businesses
Client meals are 50% deductible in 2026, client gifts cap at $25 per recipient (a limit unchanged since 1962), and employer-provided meals lose their deduction this year. A service-business guide to documenting meals, travel, gifts, and marketing while staying inside IRS rules.
Self-Employment Tax Deductions 2026: A Complete Guide for Freelancers
A line-by-line guide to the deductions self-employed workers can claim in 2026, including the now-permanent 20% QBI deduction under OBBBA, $72,000 Solo 401(k) limits, the 72.5-cent IRS mileage rate, and the documentation rules that hold up under audit.
How to Prepare for Tax Season: A Year-Round Checklist for Small Business Owners
A practical week-by-week, quarter-by-quarter, and year-end tax preparation checklist for small business owners — covering 2026 IRS deadlines, estimated tax payments, deductions, 1099 filing, and the bookkeeping habits that turn April from a sprint into a routine handoff.
TCJA and OBBBA Explained: A Small Business Owner's Tax Guide for 2026
The OBBBA made the QBI deduction permanent and raised it to 23% in 2026, expanded SALT to $40,000 through 2029, and lifted the estate exemption to $15 million. Here is how small business owners running pass-through entities, S corps, and LLCs should plan around it.
The Augusta Rule: How Business Owners Earn Tax-Free Rental Income (Section 280A Guide)
Section 280A(g) lets business owners rent their personal residence to their company for up to 14 days per year and exclude the income from federal tax. This guide covers eligibility, fair-market rate setting, the documentation auditors expect, and the lessons from Sinopoli v. Commissioner.
Engaged in a Trade or Business: The IRS Test That Decides Your Tax Bill in 2026
The IRS uses a nine-factor test under Section 183 to decide whether your side income is a business or a hobby. After the OBBBA took effect in 2026, hobbyists report income in full but can deduct no expenses against it — making the classification more consequential than ever.
The Small Business Software Stack for 2026 (And How to Deduct Every Subscription)
The average small business now pays for 18 software subscriptions a month. Here is which categories actually matter in 2026, what to budget, and how to deduct each one correctly on Schedule C.
Personal Tax Deductions and Credits: The 2026 Guide for Individuals
A line-by-line walkthrough of the 2026 deductions and credits that move the needle for individuals—the $16,100 standard deduction, the new $40,400 SALT cap, the $2,200 Child Tax Credit, the up-to-$8,231 EITC, and the new Schedule 1-A deductions for tips, overtime, and vehicle loan interest.
The Sales Tax Deduction in 2026: How the New $40,000 SALT Cap Could Save You Thousands
For 2026 the SALT cap rises to $40,000, reviving the sales tax deduction for homeowners and big-ticket buyers. Choose between sales tax and state income tax on Schedule A, use the IRS optional tables, and stack actual tax paid on vehicles, boats, or renovation materials on top of the table amount.