Archive for September 2024 – Page 2

With Labor Day in the rearview mirror, it’s time to take proactive steps that may help lower your small business’s taxes for this year and next. The strategy of deferring income and accelerating deductions to minimize taxes can be effective for most businesses, as is the approach of bunching deductible expenses into this year or next to maximize their tax value.

Do you expect to be in a higher tax bracket next year? If so, then opposite strategies may produce better results. For example, you could pull income into 2024 to be taxed at lower rates, and defer deductible expenses until 2025, when they can be claimed to offset higher-taxed income.

Here are some other ideas that may help you save tax dollars if you act soon.

Estimated taxes

Make sure you make the last two estimated tax payments to avoid penalties. The third quarter payment for 2024 is due on September 16, 2024, and the fourth quarter payment is due on January 15, 2025.

QBI deduction

Taxpayers other than corporations may be entitled to a deduction of up to 20% of their qualified business income (QBI). For 2024, if taxable income exceeds $383,900 for married couples filing jointly (half that amount for other taxpayers), the deduction may be limited based on whether the taxpayer is engaged in a service-type business (such as law, health or consulting), the amount of W-2 wages paid by the business, and/or the unadjusted basis of qualified property (such as machinery and equipment) held by the business. The limitations are phased in.

Taxpayers may be able to salvage some or all of the QBI deduction (or be subject to a smaller deduction phaseout) by deferring income or accelerating deductions to keep income under the dollar thresholds. You also may be able increase the deduction by increasing W-2 wages before year end. The rules are complex, so consult us before acting.

Cash vs. accrual accounting

More small businesses are able to use the cash (rather than the accrual) method of accounting for federal tax purposes than were allowed to do so in previous years. To qualify as a small business under current law, a taxpayer must (among other requirements) satisfy a gross receipts test. For 2024, it’s satisfied if, during the three prior tax years, average annual gross receipts don’t exceed $30 million. Cash method taxpayers may find it easier to defer income by holding off on billing until next year, paying bills early or making certain prepayments.

Section 179 deduction

Consider making expenditures that qualify for the Section 179 expensing option. For 2024, the expensing limit is $1.22 million, and the investment ceiling limit is $3.05 million. Expensing is generally available for most depreciable property (other than buildings) including equipment, off-the-shelf computer software, interior improvements to a building, HVAC and security systems.

The high dollar ceilings mean that many small and midsize businesses will be able to currently deduct most or all of their outlays for machinery and equipment. What’s more, the deduction isn’t prorated for the time an asset is in service during the year. Even if you place eligible property in service by the last days of 2024, you can claim a full deduction for the year.

Bonus depreciation

For 2024, businesses also can generally claim a 60% bonus first-year depreciation deduction for qualified improvement property and machinery and equipment bought new or used, if purchased and placed in service this year. As with the Sec. 179 deduction, the write-off is available even if qualifying assets are only in service for a few days in 2024.

Upcoming tax law changes

These are just some year-end strategies that may help you save taxes. Contact us to customize a plan that works for you. In addition, it’s important to stay informed about any changes that could affect your business’s taxes. In the next couple years, tax laws will be changing. Many tax breaks, including the QBI deduction, are scheduled to expire at the end of 2025. Plus, the outcome of the presidential and congressional elections could result in new or repealed tax breaks.

© 2024

Choosing the right business entity is a key decision for any business. The entity you pick can affect your tax bill, your personal liability and other issues. For many businesses, a limited liability company (LLC) is an attractive choice. It can be structured to resemble a corporation for owner liability purposes and a partnership for federal tax purposes. This duality may provide the owners with several benefits.

Like the shareholders of a corporation, the owners of an LLC (called members rather than shareholders or partners) generally aren’t liable for business debts except to the extent of their investment. Therefore, an owner can operate a business with the security of knowing that personal assets (such as a home or individual investment account) are protected from the entity’s creditors. This protection is far greater than that afforded by partnerships. In a partnership, the general partners are personally liable for the debts of the business. Even limited partners, if they actively participate in managing the business, can have personal liability.

Electing classification

LLC owners can elect, under the “check-the-box rules,” to have the entity treated as a partnership for federal tax purposes. This can provide crucial benefits to the owners. For example, partnership earnings aren’t subject to an entity-level tax. Instead, they “flow through” to the owners in proportion to the owners’ respective interests in the profits and are reported on the owners’ individual returns and taxed only once. To the extent the income passed through to you is qualified business income (QBI), you’ll be eligible to take the QBI deduction, subject to various limitations.

In addition, since you’re actively managing the business, you can deduct on your individual tax return your ratable shares of any losses the business generates. This, in effect, allows you to shelter other income that you (and your spouse, if you’re married) may have.

An LLC that’s taxable as a partnership can provide special allocations of tax benefits to specific partners. This can be an important reason for using an LLC over an S corporation (a form of business that provides tax treatment that’s similar to a partnership). Another reason for using an LLC over an S corporation is that LLCs aren’t subject to the restrictions the federal tax code imposes on S corporations regarding the number of owners and the types of ownership interests that may be issued. (For example, an S corp can’t have more than 100 shareholders and can only have one class of stock.)

Evaluate the options

To sum up, an LLC can give you protection from creditors while providing the benefits of taxation as a partnership. Be aware that the LLC structure is allowed by state statute, and states may use different regulations. Contact us to discuss in more detail how use of an LLC or another option might benefit you and the other owners.

© 2024

6 tax-free income opportunities

Believe it or not, there are ways to collect tax-free income and gains. Here are some of the best opportunities to put money in your pocket without current federal income tax implications:

  1. Roth IRAs offer tax-free income accumulation and withdrawals. Unlike withdrawals from traditional IRAs, qualified Roth IRA withdrawals are free from federal income tax. A qualified withdrawal is one that’s taken after you’ve reached age 59½ and had at least one Roth IRA open for over five years, or you are disabled or deceased. After your death, your heirs can take federal-income-tax-free qualified Roth IRA withdrawals, with proper planning.
  2. A large amount of profit from a home sale is tax-free. In one of the best tax-saving deals, an unmarried seller of a principal residence can exclude (pay no federal income tax on) up to $250,000 of gain, and a married joint-filing couple can exclude up to $500,000. That can be a big tax-saver, but you generally must pass certain tests to qualify. For example, you must have owned the property for at least two years during the five-year period ending on the sale date. And you must have used the property as a principal residence for at least two years during the same five-year period. Note: To be eligible for the larger $500,000 joint-filer exclusion, at least one spouse must pass the ownership test and both spouses must pass the use test.
  3. People with incomes below a certain amount can collect tax-free capital gains and dividends. The minimum federal income tax rate on long-term capital gains and qualified dividends is 0%. Surprisingly, you can have a pretty decent income and still be within the 0% bracket for long-term gains and dividends — based on your taxable income. Single taxpayers can have up to $47,025 in taxable income in 2024 and be in the 0% bracket. For married couples filing jointly, you can have up to $94,050 in taxable income in 2024.
  4. Gifts and inheritances receive tax-free treatment. If you receive a gift or inheritance, the amount generally isn’t taxable. However, if you’re given or inherit property that later produces income such as interest, dividends, or rent, the income is taxable to you. (There also may be tax implications for an individual who gives a gift.)
  5. In addition, if you inherit a capital gain asset like stock or mutual fund shares or real estate, the federal income tax basis of the asset is stepped up to its fair market value as of the date of your benefactor’s demise, or six months after that date if the estate executor so chooses. So, if you sell the inherited asset, you won’t owe any federal capital gains tax except on appreciation that occurs afterthe applicable date.
  6. Some small business stock gains are tax-free. A qualified small business corporation (QSBC) is a special category of corporation. Its stock can potentially qualify for federal-income-tax-free treatment when you sell for a gain after holding it for over five years. Ask us for details.
  7. You can pocket tax-free income from college savings accounts. Section 529 college savings plan accounts allow earnings to accumulate free of any federal income tax. And when the account beneficiary (typically your child or grandchild) reaches college age, tax-free withdrawals can be taken to cover higher education expenses.
  8. Alternatively, you can contribute up to $2,000 annually to a Coverdell Education Savings Account (CESA) set up for a beneficiary who hasn’t reached age 18. CESA earnings are allowed to accumulate free from federal income tax. Then, tax-free withdrawals can be taken to pay for the beneficiary’s college tuition, fees, books, supplies, and room and board. The catch: Your right to make CESA contributions is phased out between modified adjusted gross incomes of $95,000 and $110,000, or between $190,000 and $220,000 if you’re a married joint filer.

Advance planning may lead to better results 

You may be able to collect federal-income-tax-free income and gains in several different ways, including some that aren’t explained here. For example, proceeds from a life insurance policy paid to you because of an insured person’s death generally aren’t taxable. So, don’t assume you’ll always owe taxes on income. Also, check with us before making significant transactions because advance planning could result in tax-free income or gains that would otherwise be taxable.

© 2024