Self Employment

January 26, 2011

Small Business Income Tax Tips

Did you know the IRS offers tax help to small business owners through its Small Business and Self-Employed Tax Center? The tax center offers extensive resources and online tools to small businesses and the self-employed.

The IRS Small Business and Self-Employed Tax Center offers tax help resources:

  • Small business forms and publications
  • Employer Identification Number online application
  • Employment tax information – federal income tax, Social Security and Medicare taxes, FUTA and self-employment tax
  • Tax-related news that could affect your business
  • Small business educational events
  • IRS videos for small businesses
  • A-Z Index for Business – find information fast using the A-Z listing

The site provides tax tips and important information available for all stages of owning a business. Whether you’re starting, operating, or closing a business, visit the site for federal income tax help

Other tax tips and resources available on the IRS small business website include a virtual small business tax workshop, video and audio presentations, a guide to IRS audits, and a tax calendar designed for small business taxpayers.

The IRS Video Portal:
Tax Questions? Learn about tax topics through video and audio presentations on the IRS Video Portal. The video portal contains archived versions of live panel discussions, archived webinars, video clips, and audio archives of national phone forums.

IRS Audits Video Series:
“Your Guide to an IRS Audit” takes the viewer through the steps of an audit from notification to closing. The video series is composed of scenarios that demonstrate the stages of each type of audit: correspondence, office and field. The scenarios address issues that are common to audits of small businesses.

Virtual Small Business Tax Workshop:
The IRS Virtual Small Business Tax Workshop is an interactive resource to help small business owners learn about their federal tax rights and responsibilities. The workshop contains nine stand-alone lessons that can be selected and viewed in any sequence. The workshop is available online 24 hours a day, seven days a week from any computer. It can also be ordered on CD.

Tax Calendar for Small Business Taxpayers:
The Tax Calendar for Small Businesses and Self-Employed – Publication 1518 – is available online or as a printable PDF file. This 12-month calendar is filled with information on general business taxes, IRS and Social Security Administration customer assistance, electronic filing and paying options, retirement plans, business publications and forms, and common tax filing dates. Each page highlights different tax issues and tips that may be relevant to small-business owners, with room on each month to add notes, state tax dates or business appointments. You can also download the tax events into your calendar or subscribe to the tax calendar events. The calendar provides the small business owner with a ready resource for meeting their tax obligations.

Small business owners and the self-employed should take advantage of the tax tips and tax help provided by the IRS small business website.

Source: irs.gov

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December 4, 2009

3 Year-End Tax Strategies For Individuals

The end of the year is approaching but it’s not too late to reduce this year’s tax bill. However you need to be careful not to do anything that will cause you to pay more in 2010 than you would save on your 2009 federal income tax. Here are three year-end tax strategies for individuals from the experts at smartmoney.com

1. Sell Loser Stocks Held in Taxable Accounts

Cut your losses by selling those doggy investments held in taxable brokerage firm accounts. The amount you lose can lower your 2009 tax bill because you can deduct capital losses against your capital gains for the year. If your losses exceed your gains, you’ll have a net capital loss for the year. You can deduct up to $3,000 of net capital loss against your 2009 ordinary income from salary, self-employment activities, alimony received, interest or whatever (the net capital loss deduction limit is only $1,500 if you used married filing separate status). Any excess net capital loss is carried forward to 2010 and beyond and will generate future tax savings.

2. Take the Standard Deduction

If your total itemized deductions are usually close to the standard deduction amount each year, consider the strategy of bunching together expenditures for itemized deduction items every other year. Itemize in those years to deduct more than the standard deduction figure. Then claim the standard deduction in the intervening years. Over time, this drill can save hundreds or even thousands in taxes by significantly increasing your cumulative write-offs. Why?

Because you’ll bag higher itemized deductions in alternating years and relatively generous standarddeductions in the other years. Regardless of what happens with future tax rates, you’ll come out ahead. For 2009, the standard deduction is $11,400 for married joint-filing couples versus $5,700 for singles and $8,350 for heads of households. For 2010, the numbers remain the same — except the standard deduction for heads of households increases ever so slightly, to $8,400.

3. Give to Charities

Thanks to this year’s stock market rebound, you probably have some appreciated shares (currently worth more than you paid for them) that you’ve owned for over a year. If so, consider donating them to IRS-approved charities. You can generally claim an itemized charitable contribution deduction for the full market value at the time of the donation and avoid any capital gains tax hit. On the other hand, don’t donate loser stocks. Sell them, book the resulting capital loss, and give away the cash sales proceeds. That way, you can generally write off the full amount of the cash donation while keeping the tax-saving capital loss for yourself.

Warning: You must itemize deductions to gain any tax-saving benefit from these charitable donation ideas.

source: smartmoney.com – Year-End Tax Prep Strategies for Individuals

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