To Get You Started: Five Smart Tax Strategies
For The Savvy Small Business Owner
(Reprinted with permission from Urban Miyares, director of the Disabled Businesspersons Association,
San Diego, Calif.)
How tax savvy a business owner you are has a great impact on how much money is in your pocket at
the end of the year. You are probably aware that the U.S. tax code allows you to deduct costs of doing business
from your gross income. What you are left with is your net business profit. This is the amount that gets taxed.
So knowing how to use business-expense tax deductions to your advantage can reduce, if not eliminate, your business'
tax burden.
Here are but five (of many) smart tax strategies for the savvy business owner:
Tax Strategy #1: Choosing the Right Business Structure
One of the most common questions that small business owners ask is: Which entity should I choose? The answer
depends on a large number of details; the exact nature and size of the business, the source and type of income,
the number of family members, etc.
The form you choose, though, can make a big difference when it's time to pay taxes, respond to a lawsuit or split up
the business.
Most businesses start off with little or no taxable income. The key word here is "taxable"
income. That's because in the beginning, even if you're running a business that makes money, you're probably also
discovering the hidden business deductions that can lead to more tax write-offs. The income is spent for staff,
getting new technology and often, in discovering what doesn't work for product lines, customer fulfillment and
marketing...and may include many daily living expenses that may now qualify as business operating tax deductions.
In 95% of the cases, for new businesses, one of two structures makes sense: (1) An S Corporation or (2) An LLC
(limited liability company). You avoid the 15.3% self-employment tax with an S Corporation. With both
legal structures, you protect your personal assets from business activities that go awry, have the most flexibility
available as you make your business work and most importantly, get to offset losses in those earlier year with other
earned income.
Note: If your planned business structure is based mainly on a strategy to best accommodate
\disability benefits and not, necessarily the business and its potential business tax consequence, you should first
consult with a qualified CPA/accountant, along with a benefits counselor/advisor, before forming your business'
organizational structure.
Tax Strategy #2: Full Home Office Write-off.
The rules allowing a taxpayer to claim the home office deduction have been loosened, beginning January 1, 1999. No
longer does the home office need to be the "principal place of business" for the taxpayer. The home
office test can now be satisfied if the taxpayer uses the home office for "administration or management activities"
and there is no other fixed location in which the taxpayer performs such activities for his business. The home office
still must be used exclusively for business purposes to qualify. This will allow more taxpayers who conduct business
outside of their office, but use their home to perform administrative tasks, to qualify for the home office deduction.
Tax Strategy #3: Writing Off Family Medical Expenses.
This strategy is a little more complicated but is well worth the extra effort. To use this strategy, first you must
hire a spouse or other trusted family member to work for your home or small business; either full-time or part-time status
will work. Next, you need to set up and sign a medical reimbursement plan. You may need the advice of an accountant
to help you with this. This plan allows any sole proprietor to convert all family out-of-pocket medical expenses into
legitimate business deductions. Finally, your spouse or family member pays all out-of-pocket medical expenses for the
family, keeping receipts and documenting miles driven for medical purposes. At a specified time, your business reimburses
your spouse or family member for these expenses and deducts them as a business expense.
The tax strategy has tremendous benefits for business owners or family members who have a pre-existing medical condition.
Tax Strategy #4: Writing Off Your Child's College Education Expenses.
If you frown at the high cost of a college education, this tax strategy is for you. You can put your child on
the payroll of your business for performing office chores and other business-related tasks. The most common way to utilize
young children in your business is for them to provide cleaning services, or routine copying, filing and typing. These
are jobs that even an 8- or 10-year-old is clearly capable of performing, and jobs that you'd arguably have to pay someone
to do if your child were not available.
In 2007, a child can earn up to $5,150 and pay no federal income taxes on the earnings because of the standard
deduction. Your business can deduct wages paid to your child-provided the amount is reasonable and for bona fide
work. Bottom line: You'll escape federal income taxes of up to $5,150 of your business income, and if you are a sole
proprietorship, you will eliminate self-employment tax on the income as well.
Any income your child earns over and above the $5,150 standard deduction is taxable at your child's rate. Since
the 10% tax bracket extends to $7,825 for a single filer, your child could earn an additional $7,825 and owe just $782.50
of federal income tax on the money. Because your marginal tax rate is likely much higher, the extra money your child
earns may result in substantial family tax savings. Even better, if your business is not incorporated, you won't have
to withhold or pay FICA (Social Security and Medicare) payroll taxes on the earnings of a child under age 18.
Tax Strategy #5: Make Your Kids Eligible For A Roth IRA.
This is an incredible tax saving that is often being under-utilized. This tax strategy is related to Strategy Number 4
but takes it a step further. Hire your children, pay them at least $4,000 and put the proceeds in a Roth IRA. All
earnings in a Roth IRA are tax-free!
The U.S. Tax Court has validated a parent hiring his 7-year-old son to work for his business and allowed the
deduction for reasonable wages paid. So if your child takes the yearly $4,000, from age 7 to 18, and invests
it under the Roth IRA umbrella at 10% per year, compounded monthly, that child will have accumulated about $81,000 by age 18.
Read on – it gets even getter. If you leave all the money untouched, but contribute nothing after your child hits 18,
by the time the child is 60, he or she will have accumulated more then $4.4 million that can be withdrawn tax-free. Not a bad
saving at all!
There are a number of other tax strategies that you can use in your small business. And if you have a disability,
knowing these and the many other possible ways to plan for your financial independence, and that of loved ones, is
best done by consulting with a professional CPA or tax advisor.
For additional information, contact Urban Miyares, Disabled Businesspersons Association,
email Urban@DisabledBusiness.com.
The Disabled Businesspersons Association, also known as the National Disabled Veterans Business Center, is a
charitable organization founded in 1985 by business owners, executives and professionals with disabilities.
