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470 tagged with "Tax Planning"

Strategic tax planning to minimize liability and maximize savings

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Axe Throwing Venue Bookkeeping: Lane Bookings, League Memberships, Corporate Events, and Waiver Liability
·mike

Axe Throwing Venue Bookkeeping: Lane Bookings, League Memberships, Corporate Events, and Waiver Liability

How axe throwing venues should structure five distinct revenue streams—walk-in lanes, league memberships, corporate events, bar sales, and BYOB pour fees—under ASC 606, including pass-through IATF dues, refundable damage deposits, cost-segregation reclassifications of $40K–$100K of build-out, and the revenue-per-lane-hour KPI that signals when to expand.

bookkeeping
small-business
revenue-recognition
section-179
+4
Section 1202 QSBS Exclusion: A Founder's Guide to $15 Million in Tax-Free Gains
·mike

Section 1202 QSBS Exclusion: A Founder's Guide to $15 Million in Tax-Free Gains

Section 1202 lets founders, early employees, and angel investors exclude up to $15 million of capital gains from federal tax. This guide covers the OBBBA changes, the five eligibility gates, the new 3/4/5-year tiered holding period, Section 1045 rollovers, and stacking strategies that multiply the per-issuer cap across family members and non-grantor trusts.

tax-planning
capital-gains
startup
equity
+4
Stacking the Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction with the Premium Tax Credit, HSA, and Augusta Rule: A 2026 Owner Compensation Playbook
·mike

Stacking the Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction with the Premium Tax Credit, HSA, and Augusta Rule: A 2026 Owner Compensation Playbook

A field guide to coordinating the Section 162(l) self-employed health insurance deduction with the Premium Tax Credit's circular calculation, HSA contributions, and the Augusta Rule (Section 280A(g)) — including Form 7206 mechanics, S-corp W-2 Box 1 reporting under IRS Notice 2008-1, Medicare Part B and D deductibility, and 2026 contribution limits.

tax-planning
tax-deductions
health-insurance
self-employment
+4
The Full-Time Creator's Bookkeeping Playbook: Twitch's Two 1099s, ASC 606 Sponsorships, and Section 179 Gear
·mike

The Full-Time Creator's Bookkeeping Playbook: Twitch's Two 1099s, ASC 606 Sponsorships, and Section 179 Gear

A practical bookkeeping guide for full-time Twitch streamers and YouTubers — how Twitch splits payouts across 1099-MISC Box 2 and 1099-NEC, when to recognize sponsorship revenue under ASC 606, when to choose Section 179 over 100% bonus depreciation on a $20,000 studio buildout, how to defend a home office deduction under Section 280A, and the ARPS, eCPM, and cost-per-hour KPIs that separate a hobby channel from a viable creator business.

creative-industries
self-employment-tax
bookkeeping
revenue-recognition
+4
The Augusta Rule: How Business Owners Rent Their Home to Their S-Corp for 14 Days a Year Tax-Free
·mike

The Augusta Rule: How Business Owners Rent Their Home to Their S-Corp for 14 Days a Year Tax-Free

Internal Revenue Code Section 280A(g) lets a business owner rent a personal residence to their own S-corporation for up to 14 days a year and exclude every dollar from personal gross income while the business deducts the rent under Section 162. The Sinopoli case shows what survives an audit and what does not.

tax
tax-planning
tax-deductions
s-corp
+4
Form 3115 for Small Businesses: A Practical Walkthrough of Section 481(a), Automatic Consent, and the Audit Protection Traps
·mike

Form 3115 for Small Businesses: A Practical Walkthrough of Section 481(a), Automatic Consent, and the Audit Protection Traps

How small businesses use Form 3115 to fix prior-year accounting methods without amending returns — covering the Section 481(a) catch-up math, automatic vs. non-automatic consent under Rev. Proc. 2015-13, three worked examples (cash-to-accrual, cost segregation, repair regs), and the five filing mistakes that forfeit audit protection.

tax-compliance
small-business
cost-segregation
depreciation
+4
Personal Chef Business Bookkeeping: The Schedule C Playbook for Solo Culinary Pros
·mike

Personal Chef Business Bookkeeping: The Schedule C Playbook for Solo Culinary Pros

A 2026 bookkeeping guide for personal and private chefs covering ASC 606 principal-vs-agent grocery treatment, the 72.5¢ standard mileage rate, Section 179 equipment, cottage food law constraints, and quarterly estimated tax safe harbors for Schedule C filers.

bookkeeping
self-employment-tax
sole-proprietorship
section-179
+4
Section 1361 S-Corporation Eligibility: The Hidden Rules That Can Quietly Terminate Your Election
·mike

Section 1361 S-Corporation Eligibility: The Hidden Rules That Can Quietly Terminate Your Election

Section 1361 sets five eligibility rules for S-corporations—domestic incorporation, 100-shareholder cap, eligible shareholders, one class of stock, and entity type. Routine business decisions like uneven distributions or a relocated shareholder can terminate the election; Section 1362(f) offers PLR-based relief that costs $30,000+ in user fees.

s-corporation
s-corp
tax-compliance
tax-planning
+4
Section 1402(a)(13) After Soroban: The Limited Partner SE Tax Exemption in 2026
·mike

Section 1402(a)(13) After Soroban: The Limited Partner SE Tax Exemption in 2026

Since the Tax Court's 2023 Soroban decision, a state-law limited partner label no longer shields distributive share from 15.3% self-employment tax. This guide walks through the functional test under Section 1402(a)(13), the Renkemeyer line of cases, the 2024 proposed regulations, and the planning moves that still hold up for fund managers, LLC members, and operating partners in 2026.

self-employment-tax
partnerships
tax-compliance
tax-planning
+4
The Section 199A QBI Deduction in 2026: A Permanent 20% Tax Break for Pass-Through Business Owners
·mike

The Section 199A QBI Deduction in 2026: A Permanent 20% Tax Break for Pass-Through Business Owners

OBBBA made the Section 199A pass-through deduction permanent and widened the 2026 phase-in to $201,750 single / $403,500 MFJ. Here is how the 20% QBI deduction, the W-2 wages and UBIA caps, the SSTB phase-out, the new $400 minimum, and Form 8995-A aggregation actually work for S-corps, LLCs, and partnerships.

tax-deductions
tax-planning
s-corp
llc
+4
The R&D Tax Credit in 2026: How OBBBA Restored Section 174 Expensing, the Section 41 Four-Part Test, and the $500,000 Payroll Tax Offset for Qualified Small Businesses
·mike

The R&D Tax Credit in 2026: How OBBBA Restored Section 174 Expensing, the Section 41 Four-Part Test, and the $500,000 Payroll Tax Offset for Qualified Small Businesses

OBBBA restored immediate Section 174 domestic R&E expensing in 2026 and gives small businesses until July 6, 2026 to amend 2022–2024 returns. A practical guide to the Section 41 four-part test, the 14% Alternative Simplified Credit, the Section 280C reduced-credit election, and the $500,000 payroll tax offset for qualified small businesses.

tax-credits
tax-planning
tax-compliance
startup
+3
Solo 401(k) vs SEP-IRA in 2026: Contribution Limits, Super Catch-Up, and Mega-Backdoor Roth for the Self-Employed
·mike

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.

solo-401k
sep-ira
retirement-planning
self-employment
+3
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