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Small Business Tax Tips
Small business owners,
it's never too early to organize and prepare for the current tax year.
Here are some tax tips and suggestions to
help you maximize deductions for small business.
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Accounting Fees. If you paid a bookkeeper or
accountant for services related to your business, those expenses are
deductible.
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Advertising. Deductions for advertising
include...
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Pay-Per-Clicks and other paid Internet ads
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Flyers, post cards, mailers and brochures
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Business stationary such as business cards,
letterhead and envelopes
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Newspaper, magazine, and radio ads
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Yellow pages, newspaper, magazine, and radio ads
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Signs and billboards
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Promotional items with your business name printed on
them such as pens, key chains, etc.
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Bank Fees (business account). Safe deposit boxes, bank overdraft fees, and other
incidental bank charges are all deductible.
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Bookkeeping Costs. Costs associated with payroll services
are deductible.
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Computer Supplies and Peripherals. Ink
cartridges for printers and fax machines, RAM upgrades, USB cables, mouse
pads, etc.
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Continuing Education Costs/Seminars. Educational expenses
incurred as part of
your existing business are deductible.
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Delivery Costs. The costs associated with shipping your product or
delivering your service is deductible except for those costs that you
recover from your customers.
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Entertainment Costs. Although a certain
portion of entertainment expenses are deductible, be careful with these
deductions. Be sure to educate yourself and consult with your accountant.
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Equipment. The cost of maintaining equipment used in your
business, whether rented or purchased, may be deductible. (We suggest that
you
consult your accountant about this issue because equipment deductions may
fall under capital
improvements rather than business equipment expenses.)
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Facsimile Costs. Costs associated with sending
or receiving faxes are deductible.
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Insurance Premiums. Insurance premiums for casualty, inventory, credit,
business interruption, overhead payment, vehicle, employee medical,
workers' compensation, state unemployment, liability (all different types),
and even some types of life insurance on key employees (so long as you are
not the beneficiary) are all possible deductions.
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Interest Expenses. This relates to interest on
loans for your business. As long as the loan is for your business, the
interest you pay is deductible.
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Internet Access/Web Hosting Fees If your business has a reason to be on the web, or if
you need access to the web as part of your business, then deduct away!
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Legal Fees. Any legal fees arising from managing your business or
producing or collecting income are all deductible.
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Licenses. Any license or regulatory fees paid to governments as
part of your business are deductible.
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Office Supplies. These expenses include pens
and pencils, paper, file folders, calendars, staplers, letter trays, etc.
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Postage. Stamps are deductible. Keep your receipts.
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Rental Payments. If you rent office or storage
space for your business, the expenses are deductible.
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Repairs and Simple Maintenance. Expenses
related to your business site are deductible. But once again, this is an
area that may fall under capital expenses, so we suggest consulting with
your accountant for guidance.
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Subscriptions. Subscriptions for magazines,
periodicals and newspapers that relate to your business are deductible.
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Travel. Deductions for travel expenses carry
very specific rules. You must be able to prove that travel expenses were
actually related to your business. For example, if you take a Caribbean
cruise and then deduct the cost as a business expenditure, you had
better be able to prove that trip was indeed related to business. Keep
track of hotel and car rental receipts, as well as meals, transportation
costs, etc. Not all of your expenses are deductible, i.e., dry cleaning. We
suggest that you consult with your accountant for guidance.
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Utilities. You can deduct a pro-rated portion
of your utility bills for a home business, as long as you maintain a
separate space that is used exclusively for your business, i.e., a spare
bedroom. If you use a corner in the living room or the dining room table as
an office, you can't take this deduction.
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Wages. Wages paid to employees are deductible.
However, this is another area where specific rules apply. We suggest that
you consult with your accountant for guidance.
General Rules for Small Business Tax Deductions
There are certain threshold issues that apply to all
small business and home business deductions.
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Appropriateness of the expense. Was the expenditure
ordinary and necessary for your business?
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Relation to a business activity. The IRS is keenly
aware that taxpayers may be tempted to write off expenses against their business
that are actually nondeductible personal expenses. If the expense
was only partly for business, you'll need to allocate it between the
business and personal portion.
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Do you have adequate records. In a tax audit, the IRS
agent will ask you to show that the expense was in fact paid. This is where
your record keeping comes into play. If you have kept good records,
proving your deductions won't be a problem. Remember, on most tax matters,
the IRS can require you to prove that your deduction (or other item on your
personal or business return) is legitimate. If you can't do this, the IRS will
disallow the deduction and your tax liability will increase.
Potential Tax Deductions for Small Business
Deductions for business expenses depend upon your
ability to prove a profit MOTIVE. You are NOT in business unless you are
trying to produce a profit. If you are conducting business in order to make
a profit, you are allowed to deduct "ordinary and necessary" business
expenses.
The key to maximizing your deductions is thorough and
complete documentation. If you can't prove that the expense was actually
incurred, it's likely the expense will be disallowed.
GENERAL SUGGESTIONS
In order to prove that you are conducting business for
profit rather than as a hobby, you need to create a paper trail that will
validate your business activities.
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Maintain a business checking account separate from
your personal account.
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Use a separate business credit card. Keep copies of charge
card receipts for travel, entertainment, and gas and oil
purchases. Both the interest and annual fee is an allowable business expense.
Also, pay the credit card bill with a check from your business account.
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Install a separate business phone line. Your primary
home line is NOT a deductible business
expense but a second line may be.
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Keep copies of any ads and flyers that you create, or
have made by an outside source, in order to validate
that your business is real and in pursuit of profit.
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Document your expenses in your calendar or planner DAILY.
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Copies of checks are NOT enough. You must also have
receipts.
ENTERTAINMENT
Beginning in 1994, the tax code began limiting most entertainment expenses to 50% of the amount spent.
Receipts are not required for
entertainment expenses under $75 per expense.
In order to deduct the cost of meals, business must be discussed
during the meal. Surroundings MUST be conducive to a business discussion.
Who, What, Where,
When and Why...
You can deduct a portion (50%) of the following
expenses as "associated entertainment" as long as you
document them properly...
Here's an example of proper documentation...
or
Limits on customer and colleague gifts is $25 UNLESS youve documented it as an associated
entertainment expense, in which case there is no limit.
BUSINESS MEALS
You MUST be there!
Your spouse can be included in the meal along with your
business contact, as long as business is discussed during the meal.
You can even deduct a portion of meals that are "Dutch
Treat" as long as business is discussed during the meal.
HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Home entertainment expenses are allowable deductions IF you discuss
business and IF you document who and why. IF your home entertainment
revolves around a sales seminar, formal presentation, or a workshop, refreshment
expenses can be increased to a 100%
deduction.
To ease documentation requirements, keep parties
small...fewer than 12 people.
Photograph product displays as part of your
documentation to prove business was actually conducted.
CLUB DUES AND GROUP MEETINGS
You can deduct business club dues, and meals consumed at
association and/or organization meetings provided they are "ordinary and
necessary" for your business. They must be meant for networking and
making contacts that are vital to your business. Just make certain to document who
you made contact with and note it in your calendar or planner.
TRAVEL
According to the IRS, you are "traveling" when you are
away from home, overnight, or for a period of time sufficient to require
sleep.
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On-the-road expenses include:
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Lodging
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Meals
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Laundry and/or dry cleaning
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and whatever else would be required to sustain life
while traveling
One additional note about dry cleaning clothes soiled
while traveling and then dry cleaned after you return home can be counted
as an expense. Keep your receipts and write notes on them referring to the
travel with which they are associated.
Receipts are NOT required for travel
expenses under $75 per expense with the exception of LODGING.
Travel expenses can become 100% deductible with the
exception of meal costs.
To Increase Travel Deductions...
Hire Your Spouse. Not only can this enable you to
increase your travel deductions, but doing so can also impact
health insurance deductions.
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Drive the car you use in business car for family travel.
Regardless of the presence of family members, you would be using that car
for business anyway.
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Deduct your portion of food and lodging
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Take U.S. Cruise Ships theyre the only ones
eligible for tax deductions
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Make weekends deductible Schedule Friday and Monday
meetings...the weekend expenses becomes a write-off
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Days spent in transit count as business days
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Visit colleagues when out of town and make a notation
of the visit and of your business discussion(s) on your
calendar or planner.
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Get educated out-of-town
To Audit-Proof your Travel Deductions...
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Lodging receipts are REQUIRED
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Receipts for all expenses in excess of $75
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If you dont keep good records, youll also need
receipts for expenditures of less than $75
HIRING FAMILY MEMBERS
Hire your spouse in your sole proprietorship, and pay
him or her at least minimum wage.
Employing a spouse can increase your deduction for health insurance and
medical expenses to 100%, based upon how your "employee" benefits plan is
set up.
The IRS allows a self employed individual to hire
their spouse and elect Family Coverage under a Self Insured Medical
Reimbursement Plan. Consult your tax advisor for details on how to make
this work for you.
Employ your dependant children who are over age 7 and
under age 18 in your small business (sole proprietorships). The first $4,400 you pay them is tax-free
to that child and you can deduct those wages as a business expense. According to the IRS, single tax-payers receive a standard
deduction of $4,400 and then pay tax on the first $26,250 in taxable income
at the 15% rate.
Example: You pay your child $4,400 in wages for the
year. You deduct the $4,400 in wages on your Schedule C. You pay no social
security or unemployment taxes. Your child reports the $4,400 as income
from wages on IRS Form 1040 and then deducts $4,400 as his/her standard
deduction.
What does this benefit you? In effect, Uncle Sam
underwrites the education, weddings, and other uses to which your children
could put that money you have paid them.
Documentation
A weekly time sheet must be maintained in order to prove
that actual work was performed.
Pay family members with a check written against your
business account.
There are numerous tasks that children can perform for
a small business or home business, so hire them to help you...it's a true
WIN-WIN situation.
AUTOMOBILE EXPENSES
Document expenses thoroughly. Poorly documented
expenses runs the risk of being
disallowed.
Remember...Who, What, Where, When and Why
Record mileage when you start and again when you stop
Repairs & Maintenance
Depreciation Limits on luxury vehicles can be avoided
if the vehicle weighs in excess of 6,000 pounds.
You may be able to claim a loss when you sell your
vehicle, thereby having an impact on your decision whether to sell or trade-in
your vehicle when you buy a new one.
Sell cars that produce deductible losses trade cars
that produce taxable profits. Claim the appropriate percentage of your
losses or gains on the business usage of the vehicle only, not the entire
value of the car.
HOME OFFICE DEDUCTIONS
You may only take a home office deduction if it is your principal place of business. Photograph
your office to document that it is, indeed, used exclusively for business.
To determine the deduction percentage of the allowable expenses, divide the
total square footage of your home by the total square footage of your home.
Example:
Home Office = 144 sq ft
Total Home = 2000 sq ft
144 divided by 2000 = 7.2%
Your home's square footage can be verified using blueprints or drawings.
Deduct 7.2% (or whatever your home office percentage
is) of your mortgage and/or rent, maintenance costs, basic utility
expenses, etc. Good record keeping is essential.
Prominently display your home office phone number and
address on your business cards.
The primary phone line into your home is NOT deductible.
However, long distance charges can be if well documented.
Legally REDUCE Your Income Tax
One of the best self-study courses I have ever
taken is one created by Sandy Botkin of the Tax Reduction Institute. With
his experience as a former trainer of IRS auditors
and as a tax attorney, he is an expert on taxes.
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It is also important that your find an accountant or
CPA who is knowledgeable about small business and home based businesses. Many are not and, as
a result, could miss important allowable deductions.
Log on to the
IRS website and
request all manuals and documentation they have related to home office tax deductions.
Theres a lot of FREE information available from government offices that
will help you enormously.
get free
tax information
How's Your Record Keeping?
Answer these questions and rate yourself on a 1-5
scale, 1 being not true and 5 being very true:
1. I have a large network of people I can call upon
when I need help, information, or a resource. _____
2. When I meet someone new, I record and file
information about that person within 24 hours. _____
3. I add somebody new to my database at least every
week. _____
4. I follow up with new contacts right away writing
a note, making a phone call, or sending a clipping. _____
5. I keep track of special things that matter to my
contacts like their family, hobbies and achievements. _____
6. I can easily find out when I was last in contact
with someone. _____
7. When I mail something out a resume, sales
letter, change of address, etc., I can count on having correct name
spellings, titles, addresses for everyone in my database. _____
8. I know about and acknowledge special dates like
birthdays, anniversaries and graduations. _____
9. When I want to give a business gift, I can count on
information in my database to provide me with an excellent idea of what the
person might like. _____
10. I make it easy for others to add me to their
network by providing my business card, notifying them of address changes,
and informing them about my career progress. _____
11. When friends ask me for the name of a good
resource, I have no trouble providing one. _____
12. When the moment comes, I can really "wow" a client,
prospect or colleague with special information or an idea that shows I
care. _____
Total the points and score yourself.
0 24 Youre in rough shape. Its time to make some
changes.
25 36 Youre doing some things right but lots of
improvements are needed.
37 44 Youre off to a great start. Keep building.
45 55 Youve got superstar potential. All you need is
polish.
56 60 Youre already there. Keep up the great
effort!!!
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