Tax planning is a process of looking at various
tax options in order to determine when, whether, and how to conduct
business and personal transactions so that taxes are eliminated or
considerably reduced.
Many small
business owners ignore tax planning, and don?t even think about their
taxes until they?re scheduled to meet with their accountant; but tax
planning is an ongoing process, and good tax advice is a very valuable
commodity. You should review your income and expenses monthly, and meet
with your CPA or tax advisor quarterly to analyze how you can take full
advantage of the provisions, credits and deductions that are legally
available to you.
Although tax avoidance
planning is legal, tax evasion ? the reduction of tax through deceit,
subterfuge, or concealment - is not. Frequently what sets tax evasion
apart from tax avoidance is the IRS?s finding that there was some
fraudulent intent on the part of the business owner. The following are
four of the areas most commonly focused on by IRS examiners as pointing
to possible fraud:
A failure to
report substantial amounts of income, such as a shareholder?s failure to
report dividends, or a store owner?s failure to report a portion of the
daily business receipts.
A
claim for fictitious or improper deductions on a return, such as a sales
representative?s substantial overstatement of travel expenses, or a
taxpayer?s claim of a large deduction for charitable contributions when
no verification exists.
Accounting
irregularities, such as a business?s failure to keep adequate records,
or a discrepancy between amounts reported on a corporation?s return and
amounts reported on its financial statements.
Improper
allocation of income to a related taxpayer who is in a lower tax
bracket, such as where a corporation makes distributions to the
controlling shareholder?s children.
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Tax Planning Strategies
There
are countless tax planning strategies available to a small business
owner. Some are aimed at the owner?s individual tax situation, and some
at the business itself. But regardless of how simple or how complex a
tax strategy is, it will be based on structuring the strategy to
accomplish one or more of these often overlapping goals:
Reducing the amount of taxable income
Lowering your tax rate
Controlling the time when the tax must be paid
Claiming any available tax credits
Controlling the effects of the Alternative Minimum Tax
Avoiding the most common tax planning mistakes
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In
order to plan effectively, you?ll need to estimate your personal and
business income for the next few years. This is necessary because many
tax planning strategies will save tax dollars at one income level, but
will create a larger tax bill at other income levels. You will want to
avoid having the ?right? tax plan made ?wrong? by erroneous income
projections. Once you know what your approximate income will be, you can
take the next step: estimating your tax bracket.
The
effort to come up with crystal-ball estimates may be difficult and by
its nature will be inexact. On the other hand, you should already be
projecting your sales revenues, income, and cash flow for general
business planning purposes. The better your estimates, the better the
odds that your tax planning efforts will succeed.
Hidden
within the labyrinthine course known as the Internal Revenue Code are
valuable money-saving strategies overlooked or undiscovered by many
business owners. At the same time there are misleading passages that
have been the cause of millions of dollars mistakenly paid to the IRS.
Dollars that should have remained in business owners pocket.
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Alternative Ways to Save on Business Income Taxes
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Maximizing Business Entertainment Expenses
Another
interesting way to save on your taxes, that can be fun as well as
rewarding to you and your business, is to deduct entertainment expenses.
Entertainment expenses are great deductions to add to your taxes and
can save you money, however there are some important guidelines to
consider when including them on your return.
In
order to qualify, business must be discussed before, during, or after
any meal deducted. The surroundings must be conducive to business
discussion. For instance, a small or quiet restaurant would be an ideal
location for a business dinner. Be careful of locations that include
ongoing floor shows or other distracting events that inhibit business
discussions. Prime distractions are theater locations, ski trips, golf
courses, sports events, and hunting trips.
Starting
in 1994, the IRS allows up to a 50% deduction on entertainment
expenses. Good documentation of these expenses is required in order for
the IRS to consider these deductions. Remember that the business meal
must be arranged with the purpose of conducting specific business. Bon
appetite!
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Important Business Automobile Deductions
An
automobile is quite an expense, especially for those of you who own
more than one. There is a light at the end of the tax tunnel, though.
Recently, the IRS has accepted a new mileage deduction rate. The rates
are 44.5 cents per business mile, 14 cents per charitable mile, and 18
cents per moving/medical mile.
Another
common way to increase deductions is to include both cars (if you own
more than one car) in your deductions. This is possible since the
business miles driven determine business use. To figure business use,
divide the business miles driven by the total miles driven. You can do
this for each car driven for the business and can bring significant
deductions.
This is simply a wonderful
way to save, but remember: in order to be effective, a consistent
mileage log should be kept. Consider meeting with a professional to
determine the most efficient way of tracking mileage and other costs.
Happy driving!
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Increase Your Bottom Line When You Work At Home
The
home office deduction is quite possibly one of the most difficult
deductions ever to come around the block. Yet, there are so many tax
advantages it becomes worth the navigational trouble?Here are a few
common tips for home office deductions that can make tax season
significantly less traumatic for those of you with a home office.
Try
prominently displaying your home phone number and address on business
cards, have business guests sign a guest log book when they visit your
office, deduct long-distance phone charges, keep a time and work
activity log, retain receipts and paid invoices. Keeping these receipts
makes it so much easier to determine percentages of deductions later on
in the year.
The tax laws allows you to
immediately expense, rather than depreciate over time, up to $108,000
worth of business assets that you purchase during a year. The key is
?purchase? ...it can be new or used. All home office depreciable
equipment meets the qualification. Also, if you purchase more than
$108,000 in equipment, you can expense the first $108,000 then depreciate the rest.
Make
sure that before you start deducting all of these items on your return,
that you have qualified for the Home Office Deduction. You should
consider meeting with a tax professional for further Home Office
Deduction advice.