S Corps Archives - WCG CPAs & Advisors Sat, 30 May 2026 13:53:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://wcginc.com/wp-content/uploads/cropped-logo-01-192x192-1.png S Corps Archives - WCG CPAs & Advisors 32 32 California Pass-Through Entity Tax Deduction https://wcginc.com/blog/california-pass-through-entity-tax-deduction/ Sat, 30 May 2026 13:43:20 +0000 https://wcginc.com/?p=107494 The post California Pass-Through Entity Tax Deduction appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Key Takeaways

  • Model the PTET Prepayment Before June 15. California’s PTET prepayment is based on last year’s tax, not this year’s expected income. If your profits are dropping, you could be forced to send a much larger payment to the state than your actual PTET liability requires.
  • Overpayments Can Leave Cash Trapped at the FTB. A PTET overpayment cannot be used toward next year’s June 15 PTET prepayment. Instead, the excess is refunded or applied to other California obligations only after your return is filed, potentially tying up cash for most of a year.
  • The 2026 Rule Change Created Flexibility, Not a Solution. Beginning in 2026, underpaying the June 15 PTET installment no longer disqualifies the entire election. However, owners lose PTET credits equal to 12.5% of their share of the unpaid amount, creating a new cost-benefit analysis rather than eliminating the problem.
  • Paying Less PTET Up Front Might Make Sense in Some Cases. Businesses with strong investment opportunities, higher costs of capital, or cash flow constraints may find that intentionally underpaying and accepting the credit reduction is preferable to having large amounts of cash sit with the state. The right answer depends on the math.
  • Volatile Businesses Need Proactive PTET Planning. If current-year income is expected to be materially lower than the prior year, project PTET liability well before June 15 and compare the cost of overpaying versus the cost of the credit reduction. Waiting until tax season usually means the planning opportunity is gone.

Briefing for California Business Owners

California’s Pass-Through Entity Elective Tax (PTET) is the state’s workaround for the federal SALT deduction cap. It generally saves owners real federal tax dollars. But the rules for the mid-year prepayment have a structural flaw that hurts businesses with volatile income. If you had a great year in 2025 and expect a weaker 2026, the prepayment formula will force you to overpay California, and the state will not let that overpayment be designated as your next PTET prepayment. It gets refunded, or applied to other obligations like your LLC annual fee or S corporation estimates, only after your return is filed the following spring. That means your cash sits at the FTB for most of a year. Yuck.

How the Prepayment Works

By June 15 of each tax year, your entity must pay the greater of $1,000 or 50% of last year’s PTET liability. The remainder is due by the original return due date in March of the following year. The PTET rate is 9.3% of qualified net income. The prepayment is calculated by looking backward, not forward, which is the root of the problem.

Your example, in numbers, and yes, these are crazy exaggerated, but illustrative just the same.

Imagine $10M of business profit in 2025 and $2M expected in 2026:

  • 2025 PTET liability at 9.3%: $930,000.
  • Required June 15, 2026 prepayment (50% of 2025): $465,000.
  • Actual 2026 PTET liability at 9.3% on $2M: $186,000.
  • Overpayment: $279,000, refunded only after the 2026 return is filed in 2027.

The Franchise Tax Board has stated in its official guidance that a PTET overpayment cannot be applied as next year’s June 15 prepayment. It can be refunded, or applied to your LLC annual fee or S corporation estimates, but it cannot reduce next year’s PTET prepayment. The float sits with the state.

What Changed in 2026 (and what didn’t)

California passed SB 132 in June 2025, extending PTET through 2030. It also softened a brutal old rule. Before 2026, missing or underpaying the June 15 deadline by even $1 disqualified your entity from making the PTET election for the entire year. Starting in 2026, you can still make the election even if you underpay, but each owner’s PTET credit is reduced by 12.5% of the owner’s pro rata share of the unpaid amount. Good new and bad news, right?

This new flexibility gives you a real option: intentionally underpay on June 15 if you know your income will be lower this year, accept the 12.5% credit haircut on the shortfall, and keep your cash. Whether that comes out ahead is a real math question, not an automatic yes.

Doing the math on your example

Two paths, two costs:

  • Path A (pay in full, accept refund): $279,000 trapped for about ten months. At a 6% cost of capital, that is roughly $14,000 of lost return. At 10%, roughly $23,000.
  • Path B (intentionally underpay, accept the credit haircut): 12.5% of $279,000, or about $35,000 in lost owner credits.

On these numbers, Path A is cheaper. Path B becomes attractive at higher costs of capital (a venture-stage business with strong reinvestment opportunities), if cash flow is genuinely tight, or if other owner-level factors change the calculus. The point is that the decision needs to be modeled, not defaulted in either direction.

Pick your poison depending on your cost of capital.

A Cleaner Fix Was Proposed And Rejected (shocker)

Senator Glazer’s SB 1501 would have solved this more proportionally by combining interest at the federal underpayment rate (currently 6% for ordinary underpayments) with a smaller 10% credit reduction. The interest piece would scale with how long the shortfall actually sat unpaid, which is the economically correct way to penalize the timing mismatch. SB 1501 was held in Assembly Appropriations Committee on the suspense file in August 2024 and never advanced. The Legislature later adopted the simpler 12.5% flat credit reduction in SB 132 instead. We have not identified any successor bill specifically targeting this overpayment issue.

What You Should Do

  1. Project your 2026 PTET liability by early May. If your projection is materially lower than 50% of your 2025 PTET, you have a planning decision to make.
  2. Have us model both paths with your actual cost of capital and any cash flow constraints. Do not assume one is better.
  3. For LLCs, ask us to apply any overpayment to the following year’s annual tax and fee. For S corporations, apply to next year’s estimates. This recovers a small slice of the trapped cash.

Bottom Line

California knows this rule punishes volatile businesses. The FTB documented the trap in its own guidance. The Legislature had a more proportional fix in front of it and chose not to pass it. The responsibility falls on you and your tax team to project your income early and model the two paths deliberately. If your 2026 looks meaningfully smaller than your 2025, please reach out before June 1 so we have time to run the numbers together.

Tax-Planning-Strategies

Tax Planning Services

Read about our essential tax planning services and how we work together to plan and reduce taxes.

tax savings strategy

Pass Through Entity Tax Deduction

Pass-through entity tax (PTET) allows you to pay  state income tax with business funds, reducing your federal income tax.

Tax Reduction Strategies

Advanced Tax Reduction Strategies

Go Beyond the Basics: Advanced Tax Strategies for high earners who want the real story.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a pass-through entity tax (PTET)?

A state tax on partnerships and S corporations that can reduce federal taxable income.

Why does PTET exist?

To work around the $10,000 SALT deduction cap from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

How does PTET save money for business owners?

Payments made by the business are deductible federally and credited on your state tax return.

Do all states allow PTET?

No, rules, deadlines, and benefits vary widely by state.

Can I enroll retroactively for PTET?

In many states, retroactive enrollment is not allowed (e.g., California).

Are there penalties for missing PTET payments?

Yes, some states charge significant underpayment penalties.

How does PTET affect my K-1 and state taxes?

PTET is reported on the K-1 and credited against your state income tax liability.

When should PTET payments be made?

Ideally within the tax year to maximize federal deduction; timing varies by state.

Does PTET always reduce my taxes?

Not necessarily; benefits depend on income, state rules, and other tax considerations.

Where can I find state-specific PTET rules?

Each state’s revenue department or a qualified tax professional can provide guidance.

The post California Pass-Through Entity Tax Deduction appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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The,Rate,Of,Taxes,In,The,State,Of,California,Usa, Tax-Planning-Strategies tax savings strategy Tax Reduction Strategies
FinCEN Beneficial Ownership Information https://wcginc.com/blog/fincen-beneficial-ownership-information/ Wed, 26 Feb 2025 10:46:58 +0000 https://wcginc.com/?p=1324 The post FinCEN Beneficial Ownership Information appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Key Takeaways

  • New federal filing for most small businesses (99% affected) — part of the Corporate Transparency Act starting Jan. 1, 2024.
  • Purpose: create a secure government database to identify owners of companies and prevent illegal activities.
  • Who must file: corporations, LLCs, and similar entities (rental LLCs included); exemptions include sole proprietors, large businesses, nonprofits, and certain regulated industries.
  • What you must report: each owner’s full name, birth date, residential address, ID number, and an image of the ID.
  • When to file:
    • Businesses formed before 2024 — file by Jan. 1, 2025.
    • Businesses formed in 2024 — file within 90 days.
    • Businesses formed on/after Jan. 1, 2025 — file within 30 days.
  • How to file: online through FinCEN’s Beneficial Ownership Secure System (BOSS); no filing fee.
  • Penalties for non-compliance: $500 per day up to $10,000.
  • One-and-done filing — update only if ownership changes (must update within 30 days).
  • WCG can guide you but cannot file for you (due to AICPA/State Board rules); flat-fee legal filing available through Ian Burrell, Esq. ($150+).
  • Pro-tip: have your driver’s license or passport image ready before starting; FinCEN ID is optional unless registering multiple businesses.

URGENT: No later than March 21, 2025, FinCEN intends to issue an interim final rule that extends BOI reporting deadlines, recognizing the need to provide new guidance and clarity as quickly as possible, while ensuring that BOI that is highly useful to important national security, intelligence, and law enforcement activities is reported.

 

If you are a small business owner, you just had another chore added to your list. After years of delays, the first stage of the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) goes into effect on January 1, 2024. It imposes a new federal filing requirement for most corporations and limited liability companies (LLCs) with very few exceptions. 99% of the small business owners out there must complete FinCEN’s Beneficial Ownership Information filing. Yuck!

However! It is super easy. You will spend way more time scanning your drivers license than completing the form. And No, unfortunately, our governing bodies (AICPA, State Boards) prevent us from completing this for you (we can help, we just can’t do). See below!

The CTA’s purpose is to prevent the use of anonymous shell companies for money laundering, tax evasion, and other illegal purposes. Just like any rule or law, it casts a wide net and generally inconveniences the vast majority just to find a few bad people. Then again, if you a bad person you likely don’t care about laws, rules and fines so some of this is just window-dressing.

Also, before you lose your mind and start looking at property on Mars, banks have been doing a version of this for years. Lots of years. Some businesses are exempt, including-

  • sole proprietors (those who have not created an entity with the Secretary of State)
  • large businesses—businesses with more than 20 full-time employees and $5 million in receipts on their prior-year tax return,
  • certain businesses already heavily regulated by the government, such as banks and insurance companies,
  • nonprofits, and
  • several others (see list here)

The CTA’s purpose is to compile a massive government database containing the identities and contact information of the “beneficial owners” of most types of business entities. Beneficial owners are the humans who own or exercise substantial control over the entity.

For most reporting companies, identifying the beneficial owners is simple. For example, a three-member LLC in which each member has a one-third ownership interest has three beneficial owners. Identifying beneficial owners for reporting companies with complex ownership structures can be more difficult.

Here’s what happens if you form a new LLC or corporation in 2024. Within 90 days of formation, you must file the beneficial owner information report with the Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN)—the Treasury Department’s financial intelligence unit. The report must contain the following for each beneficial owner:

  • Full legal name
  • Date of birth
  • Complete current residential street address
  • A unique identifying number from a current U.S. passport, state or local ID document, driver’s license, or foreign passport
  • An image of the document that contains the unique identifying number

You must provide similar information for the people who filed the documents to form the entity, such as the articles of incorporation or articles of organization for an LLC.

The beneficial owner information report is filed online at a new federal database called BOSS (an acronym for Beneficial Ownership Secure System). You can’t file until January 1, 2024. You don’t pay any filing fees. The information in the BOSS database is strictly for use by law enforcement, the IRS, and other government agencies. FinCEN does not disclose the BOSS information to the public. Read that again. If you’ve created entity structures for anonymity, then that is preserved.

BOSS reporting is separate from your state and local filings when forming a new business entity. But from now on, filing the BOSS report must become a routine part of creating most new business entities.

This is no joke. Failure to comply (or softly put, “non-compliance”) is $500 per day up to $10,000.

Additional quick thoughts-

  • Rental properties held in an LLC must comply and file (eye roll, we get it, but it is what it is)
  • If you own or control 25% or more of a “reporting company,” you are deemed a beneficial owner, and the information above must be supplied (excluding minor children)
  • Businesses formed in 2024 have 90 days (was 30 days), and businesses that exist prior to 2024 have 1 year to comply
  • Compliance is a one-and-done situation unless the beneficial ownership changes (and then you have 30 days to file the update)

Online Tax Accountant

WCG has been built for remote tax preparation as online tax accountants from the beginning of our firm (thank you pilots and flight attendants!). Over 80% of our clients are outside Colorado. In addition, WCG has been built for all staff members to work from home. Long before all this craziness, we already had remote setups including telephones (both physical handsets and apps on our cell phones). Employees were already encouraged to work from home one day per week.

We’ve had this figured out! And we can handle all your tax needs without disruption. Thanks again!

FinCEN Compliance Guide

Learn about BOI reporting requirements and how to comply with FinCEN’s new regulations.

FAQs

FinCEN FAQs (READ ME)

Learn more about Beneficial Ownership Information Reporting and related rules.

Tax Center

Access comprehensive tax services, including refunds, audits, and consultations, all in one place!

FinCEN Beneficial Ownership Report Filing

There are two general ways to submit the filing-

  1. Complete a PDF (here is a sample) and upload, or
  2. Complete online form.

As stated earlier, our governing bodies (AICPA and our State Boards) prevent us from completing this filing on your behalf. It is so easy a caveman could do it, as Geico says. Having said that we, are here to answer your questions and even do a screenshare (in May, June or July). Keep in mind that if your business existed on December 31, 2023, then you have until December 31, 2024 to comply (and we suspect this will be extended as well since everyone is freakin’ out).

Here is an excerpt from the BOI FAQs

B. Reporting Process

B. 1. Should my company report beneficial ownership information now?

FinCEN launched the BOI E-Filing website for reporting beneficial ownership information (https://boiefiling.fincen.gov) on January 1, 2024.

    • A reporting company created or registered to do business before January 1, 2024, will have until January 1, 2025, to file its initial BOI report.
    • A reporting company created or registered in 2024 will have 90 calendar days to file after receiving actual or public notice that its creation or registration is effective.
    • A reporting company created or registered on or after January 1, 2025, will have 30 calendar days to file after receiving actual or public notice that its creation or registration is effective.

[Updated January 4, 2024]

Pro-Tip: Having done this for a few rental LLCs that Tina and I own, you will need a drivers license or passport or similar documentation in electronic format for uploading. Also, you do not need to create a FinCEN ID unless you have several businesses to register, and want a little bit of efficiency.

Also! WCG’s corporate attorneys, Ian Burrell and Chris Wilhelmi, and their law firm, have offered to do the filing for our clients at a flat rate of $150 (sure, if you have some crazy ownership scheme with a bunch of layers, then this will change naturally). As of January 21, we are waiting to obtain a sample of Ian’s engagement letter. For now, here is his contact information. Because this is a federal filing, his law firm can file this regardless of your location-

Ian P. Burrell, Esq.
Stinar Zendejas Burrell & Wilhelmi, PLLC
121 E. Vermijo Avenue, Suite 200
Colorado Springs, CO 80903
(719) 635-4200 ext: 209
(719) 635-2493 Facsimile
E-Mail: ian@coloradolawgroup.com

We also use a company called CorpNet to help us form businesses in certain states that have a bunch of hoops such Arizona, New York State and Pennsylvania. Their PDF handout is below as well.

BOI E-Filing System (Fun!)

Access the BOI E-Filing System to submit your Beneficial Ownership Information Report.

BOI Fillable PDF

Access the BOI E-Filing PDF top submit your Beneficial Ownership Information Report under the CTA.

CorpNet PDF Handout

Access the CorpNet PDF Handout for accurate and detailed guidance today.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does every small business have to file?

Almost all corporations and LLCs must file unless specifically exempt (sole proprietors, large companies, nonprofits, heavily regulated industries).

What information is required?

Full legal name, date of birth, residential address, ID number, and image of a valid ID for each beneficial owner (anyone owning or controlling 25%+).

When is my filing due?

– Pre-2024 businesses: by Jan. 1, 2025
– 2024 businesses: within 90 days of formation
– 2025+ businesses: within 30 days of formation

Is this filing public?

No. The database (BOSS) is only accessible to law enforcement, IRS, and certain government agencies — not the public.

What happens if I don’t file?

Penalties are $500 per day, up to $10,000.

How do I file?

Submit online at FinCEN’s BOI E-Filing site or upload a PDF form.

Do I need to re-file every year?

No. It’s one-time unless your company’s ownership changes, then you have 30 days to update.

Can WCG complete the filing for me?

No, but WCG can guide you through it. A partner law firm can file for $150+.

Do rental property LLCs have to file?

Yes, even single-property LLCs must comply.

Do I need a FinCEN ID?

Only if you’re filing for multiple businesses and want to streamline the process.

The post FinCEN Beneficial Ownership Information appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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FinCEN-Beneficial-Ownership-Information FAQs
Address Changes Are Messy https://wcginc.com/blog/address-changes-are-messy/ Tue, 28 May 2024 13:08:15 +0000 https://wcginc.com/?p=856 The post Address Changes Are Messy appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Key Takeaways

  • Changing your business or home address involves multiple agencies and forms, including IRS, state revenue departments, and local tax authorities.
  • IRS updates: Form 8822 for individuals, Form 8822-B for business entities, plus ensure payroll filings match your new address.
  • State Secretary of State: Update mailing and physical addresses for your LLC or corporation; fees may apply.
  • Registered agents need updated mailing addresses if you use one.
  • FinCEN BOI filing: Required under the Corporate Transparency Act starting 2024 for most corporations and LLCs.
  • Payroll processors (ADP, Gusto, etc.) must have the new address to avoid mismatched filings and IRS/state confusion.
  • Other updates: Banks, employers, W‑9s for 1099 reporting, and regulatory bodies must reflect the new address.
  • Moves across state lines add complexity: entity conversion, name availability, and overlapping payroll accounts may be required.
  • Notify your CPA or advisors immediately to streamline the process and avoid missed filings or penalties.

A lot of small business owners, especially solo operators, work from their home office. This is wonderful, however people change homes often and this can kickoff a bunch of address changes. Here are the considerations-

IRS

We can notify the IRS simply with a new address on a tax return. There are possibly three areas where this needs to the change- your 1040 naturally, and then on the business entity tax return (corporation or partnership). The business entity tax return has two places- the business itself, but then also you as the shareholder or member (the human). As such, if you receive K-1’s from other businesses where you do not control the tax return preparation, you should notify the CPA firm or the investment point of contact.

Where things get messy is when an address is changed on a tax return, but it is not updated with payroll processing. When a Form 941 is filed with an old address, the IRS will update (or revert in this case) your address using the newly filed Form 941. Now you start chasing your tail.

Form 8822 is used to update an address with the IRS for humans, and Form 8822B is used for business entities.

State Revenue Department

Similar to the IRS above. However, you might have local agencies too such a City or School District that collects taxes through tax returns.

Secretary of State

The Secretary of State is different than revenue departments. This is the agency that registers new businesses and administers renewals, conversions and dissolutions (closures). If you have a registered business, such as an LLC, we will need to update your mailing and physical address accordingly. There is usually a state filing fee associated with this as well, and varies from state to state.

If you are using a registered agent, then mailing address information will need to be updated with them. You might have two updates- one with the Secretary of State for physical address and one with the registered agent for mailing address. See! Messy!

FinCEN Beneficial Ownership Information (BOI)

If you were required to register your business with FinCEN’s Beneficial Ownership Secure System (BOSS), then your address will need to be updated there as well. Not sure what this is? Sounds scary, right?

After years of delays, the first stage of the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) goes into effect on January 1, 2024. It imposes a new federal filing requirement for most corporations and limited liability companies (LLCs) with very few exceptions. 99% of the small business owners out there must complete FinCEN’s Beneficial Ownership Information filing. Yuck!

Payroll Processing

If payroll is being processed for your business either as shareholder payroll for your 1-person S Corp or a whole gaggle of team members, the payroll processor (ADP, Gusto, Paychex, Intuit, etc.) must have your new address. Payroll is where a simple address change becomes a big mess-

  • We file a tax return on March 15 with a new address. Everyone is happy.
  • ADP files Q1 payroll filings (Form 941 and state equivalents) on April 30 with the old address. Everyone remains happy, for now.
  • The IRS and likely the state sends a letter, “Hey, thanks for updating your address. We will now send everything to your old address. Good luck.” Everyone is not happy.
  • Form 8822 is filed with the IRS plus the state equivalent.

Other Considerations

You will need to update your address with your bank, your employer and any regulatory bodies as well. A new W-9 should be drafted and submitted to all those who send you 1099s.

Moves Across State Lines

These address changes get quite messy fast. In addition to the basics above, your business might also have the following-

Entity Move

Moving your business entity varies state by state, but the general process goes like this- we create a foreign entity in your new state, we dissolve the entity in your old state and we convert your foreign entity into a domestic entity. This continuity preserves the EIN. Not every state allows for this process. For example, Texas (as of this writing) does not have a conversion option.

You might also run into your business name not being available. This adds to the mess since all the address change stuff above also requires a name change.

Payroll Accounts

Payroll accounts in your old state must be closed and new ones must be opened. We usually overlap one quarter since opening payroll accounts varies between 1 day to 6 weeks depending on the state (Wyoming? 16 weeks! Woah!). For example, we might run payroll in Illinois on July 10 while we are setting up your new payroll accounts in Missouri. If all goes well, we process payroll (assuming shareholder only payroll) on August 10 in Missouri. Then, in October we close the Illinois payroll accounts.

As you can see, this can get tricky.

Let Us Know Right Away

Please let us know right away about any upcoming address changes. Our fees vary depending what is needed. A simple address change that can be done with a tax return? No charge. In-state move with Secretary of State and payroll updates? A full-blown move across state lines? Please see our fee page.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which IRS forms update my address?

Form 8822 for individuals and Form 8822-B for business entities.

Do I need to update my payroll provider?

Yes, to ensure tax filings match your new address and avoid IRS/state issues.

What about the Secretary of State?

Update both physical and mailing addresses for your registered business entity; fees usually apply.

Do I need to notify my registered agent?

Yes, especially if your mailing address changes.

What is FinCEN BOI and why does it matter?

It’s a federal requirement under the Corporate Transparency Act starting 2024 for most corporations and LLCs to report beneficial ownership and addresses.

What other organizations need my new address?

Banks, employers, regulatory agencies, and anyone issuing 1099s require updated information.

How do moves across state lines affect my business?

You may need entity conversion, new payroll accounts, and possibly a new business name if unavailable in the new state.

When should I notify my CPA about an address change?

As soon as you know, to avoid filing errors, missed updates, or fees.

Can address updates be done for free?

Simple updates with a tax return are usually free, but full moves or multi-state changes may incur fees.

The post Address Changes Are Messy appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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May 2024 Book Updates https://wcginc.com/blog/may-2024-book-updates/ Thu, 25 Apr 2024 13:34:25 +0000 https://wcginc.com/?p=1381 The post May 2024 Book Updates appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Key Takeaways

  • Passive investor status can reduce self-employment taxes, allow deductions against passive income, and avoid mandatory salaries in S Corps, but qualifying is tricky due to material participation rules.
  • Short-term rentals are often best held in multi-member LLCs (partnerships) to lower audit risk, properly document at-risk capital, and provide extra layers of reporting protection via Form 8825.
  • Using partnerships for rental activities increases reporting complexity and may incur additional state taxes and preparation fees.
  • LLC holding companies can own assets like airplanes, boats, or art without commercial activity, simplifying ownership transfers among members.
  • Non-operating LLCs still require an EIN for banking but generally do not trigger a tax return.

We are just coming out of tax season with a stack of notes with mostly good ideas, and likely some bad ones too. One of those pieces of paper (well, virtual paper with a fancy reMarkable tablet) had updates to our Taxpayer’s Comprehensive Guide to LLCs and S Corps. Here we go…

Being Considered a Passive Investor in a Business

This is aimed at business owners where they no longer materially participate in the business activity, and as such they are now considered passive investors. Seems easy right, but why would you care? You would like to be considered a passive business owner to either-

  • have passive losses be deductible against your newfound passive income,
  • to avoid having to pay yourself a reasonable salary in an S Corp environment (and only take shareholder distributions), or
  • have your income avoid self-employment taxes in a sole proprietor, single-member LLC or partnership environment.

The world is always trending towards harmony, so here are the passive business owner downsides. It is difficult to claim passive business owner given the material participation tests.

Rental Property in a Partnership

WCG encourages short-term rentals to be owned by partnerships (ie, a multi-member LLC). Why? For three reasons-

First, the historical audit rate of partnerships (Form 1065) is 0.4%. Super low compared to individual tax returns (Form 1040). Why does this matter? When you have a big cost segregation depreciation plus your big startup expenses such as furniture and supplies, and you then have a big tax deduction against your big W-2 income because your passive losses are no longer limited with your big material participation, it increases your audit risk a ton. Putting all this action into a partnership tax return reduces the risk right back down to an acceptable amount.

Second, with a partnership tax return, we can mechanically show your capital contribution (at-risk money) including recourse loan debt. Why does this matter? Let’s say you invest $250,000 into a new business, and that business loses money. The IRS sees your “partner basis,” the $250,000, within your 1040 tax return, and suddenly the $100,000 first-year loss doesn’t seem so out-of-whack. Conversely, rental property activities reported on Schedule E of your 1040 tax return do not present the same way.

Third, all rental activities, including short-term rental (STR) activities, within a partnership tax return are reported on Form 8825. This is another layer of cloaking within the 1065 tax return and allows your rental income and deductions to fly just a little closer to the ground as compared to Schedule E page 1 of your 1040 tax return. There are three degrees of separation… the 1040 to the K-1 to the 1065 to the 8825, all wrapped with nice basis information.

Downsides include the additional tax return preparation fees and perhaps unnecessary state taxes such as California’s franchise tax and LLC fee which can be summarized as money-grabs or pleasure to do business in our state fees. You need to consider your exposure versus the cost of reducing your exposure and therefore subsequent risk.

LLC Holding Company

We have written about holding companies versus management companies, but this particular LLC holding company variant does not have any commercial activity. What are we talking about here? Let’s say two people want to own an airplane. They could title it in their own names such as Buzz Aldrin and Amelia Earhart JTWROS. The fancy JTWROS is joint-tenancy with rights of survivorship. This means that should Amelia die before Buzz, typically Buzz would absorb her interest in the airplane.

Time moves along, and Buzz and Amelia want to bring in Pete Mitchell as a third owner. They could add Maverick to the title because no one really knows who Pete Mitchell is, but this gets a bit cumbersome. If you add financing with personal loan guarantees to the mix, it could get messy if the bank wants to re-write the loan docs to add Pete… err… Maverick.

Rather, Buzz and Amelia would create a multi-member limited liability company (MMLLC) called The Little Red Bus LLC. This entity would hold title to the airplane, but would not have any commercial activity. The LLCs’s Operating Agreement would dictate how members could come and go, what happens if one member passes away, and other entity governance items. Therefore, when Pete Mitchell wants to be a part-owner, he would simply acquire member interest in the LLC. Title would not change since The Little Red Bus LLC owns the airplane, and Buzz, Amelia and Maverick own the LLC. Loan documents would not change, but perhaps an additional personal guarantee would be required.

LLCs are being used more and more in non-commercial or non-operating environments to make transfer of ownership super easy. We see this with boats, exotic car collections, art, among other things. Also, since there is no commercial activity, a tax return would not be required. Yes, an EIN would be necessary for a business banking account, but that in itself does not trigger a tax return filing requirement.

Passive Investor

Learn how passive investment income and losses are reported in partnership tax returns.

Rental Partnership

Learn how cost-segregation and partner basis impact tax deductions for short-term rentals.

Download our Book

Learn about self-employment taxes and how to keep them organized with our book!

Frequently Asked Questions

Why become a passive investor?

To reduce self-employment taxes, deduct passive losses, and avoid paying a salary in an S Corp.

What is material participation?

It’s the IRS test that determines whether you are actively involved in a business or considered a passive investor.

Why hold short-term rentals in a partnership?

Lower audit risk, properly document your capital contribution, and provide extra reporting layers to protect income and deductions.

Are there downsides to partnerships for rentals?

Yes, additional tax return fees and possible state taxes like franchise or LLC fees.

What is an LLC holding company?

An LLC that owns assets without running a business, allowing easy transfer of ownership among members.

Do non-operating LLCs file tax returns?

No, if there is no commercial activity, a tax return is generally not required.

Why use an LLC instead of individual ownership for assets?

It simplifies adding or removing owners without changing the asset’s title or loan documents.

Do LLCs still need an EIN?

Yes, for banking purposes, even if no tax return is required.

Can multiple people co-own an asset through an LLC?

Yes, ownership is represented by LLC membership interests, not the asset title itself.

The post May 2024 Book Updates appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Pass-Through Entity Tax Deduction https://wcginc.com/blog/pass-through-entity-tax-deduction/ Wed, 21 Feb 2024 14:32:57 +0000 https://wcginc.com/?p=1403 The post Pass-Through Entity Tax Deduction appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Key Takeaways

  • Pass-through entity tax (PTET) allows you to pay for your state income tax with business funds, reducing your federal income tax.
  • PTET acts as a workaround for the $10,000 SALT deduction limit introduced by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. Today, this is $40,000 with the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
  • The business pays a state-determined percentage of net income (e.g., 9.3% in California), which is deductible federally and credited against state income taxes.
  • Benefits depend on your marginal tax rate, business income, and state-specific rules.
  • PTET payments are reported on K-1s and flow through to your state return as credits or a reduction in taxable income.
  • Not all states allow retroactive enrollment, and deadlines vary widely (e.g., California, New York, Oklahoma, Utah, Wisconsin).
  • Some states impose underpayment penalties, roll forward excess payments, or have complex online enrollment systems.
  • Timing of payments is important for maximizing current-year federal deductions, especially for cash-based businesses.

Pass-Through Entity Tax (PTET) DeductionAs you consider your tax planning strategies this year, please be aware that you might live in a state that has a pass-through entity tax (PTET) on the books for 2023. Why do you care? Well, it could provide you increased federal tax savings. Keep reading if you dare-

Way back in 2017, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act was passed with a lot of cool tax deductions like the Section 199A qualified business income deduction. But life is one big equalizer, and Congress wanted to limit state and local taxes (SALT) to $10,000. This means either state income taxes or real estate taxes, or both, were severely muted. People in South Dakota owning a $600,000 house were like “what’s the big deal?!” People living in Oregon (second highest state income tax rate next to California) owning the same house were like “WTF, over?!”

So! States got creative and created a state tax that was deducted on partnerships and S corporations (otherwise called pass-through entities… or PTE if you are a cool kid) resulting in lower federal taxable income. This tax, paid by the PTE, was then credited on the business owner’s state income tax return. This also called the great SALT work-around.

Cash is cash to a business owner whether it is spent by the business or the human.

There are all kinds of rules, and not every business owner will benefit from the PTET deduction. As such, the tax planning for determining the efficacy of using this tax deduction is challenging.

How PTET Works

For those of you who are saying “Woah” this is news to me. Here are the nuts and bolts-

  1. The state has determined a percentage to be used. For example, in California it is 9.3%.
  2. This percentage is multiplied by the net ordinary income (profit) of the business. So, quick math… $100,000 in profit means $9,300 PTET payment to California (as an example) made by the business.
  3. This $9,300 is a federal tax deduction on your business (but it is also added back to the state). As such, you might have a $90,700 taxable profit to the IRS but $100,000 to California.
  4. Figure how much of your state income tax bill is not deductible on your Schedule A of your 1040. Compare that to the $9,300 (again, our current example). Multiply that by your marginal tax rate. Let’s say all of the $9,300 is benefiting you, and you are in the 32% marginal tax bracket… you just saved $2,383 in taxes (cash). Yay! There is a also small reduction in the qualified business income deduction (so… the math is 9,300 x 0.80 x 0.32).
  5. Wait! There’s more. This $9,300 is also detailed on your K-1 from the business, and it flows through to your state tax return, and it is credited (like an estimated tax payment) against your state income tax.

Bottomline is this- does it feel better to pay your state income tax with personal dollars or business dollars? It’s a bit rhetorical… no need to say it out loud or call us. Additionally, the IRS has released Notice 2020-75 which summarizes the behind the scenes tax deduction if you can’t get enough.

Not All That Glitters

As Led Zeppelin once sang, Not all that glitters is gold. The pass-through entity tax deduction is one of those things. Here is a quickie list of problem states-

  • California- you must have made at least a $1,000 payment by June 15 of the previous year to enroll. So, if you are working on 2023 tax returns in 2024, you needed to have made at least a $1,000 payment last year. So… no retro.
  • Colorado- these clowns have screwed up PTET to the point where only a narrow body of business owners benefit. It depends on your income and if you are deemed a specified service trade or business.
  • Michigan- irrevocable for 3 years like the roach motel.
  • New York- must enroll in the current year using some online system completely separate from your tax returns.
  • Oklahoma- must enroll by March 15 of the tax year. So, must enroll by March 15, 2024 for 2024 tax returns.
  • Utah- must enroll by end of the year. So, not as bad as Oklahoma but a bit friendlier than California.
  • Wisconsin- my home state is terrible. They deduct the business income away from your overall Wisconsin income. So, if you have low salaries (which is your goal in an S Corp), the savings disappear or even in some cases becomes a higher tax bill. In other words, you need non-business income to be higher (ie, salaries, other household income) so it makes sense. Wisconsin is definitely a “usually not” state.

There are other states with issues, and as you can see some of this stuff is tricky.

Other general pitfalls are-

  1. Some states charge massive underpayment penalties if payments are not paid on time.
  2. Some states will not refund excess payments, but rather roll them forward to future years.
  3. Some states have a clunky online enrollment / election system that is separate from what we can do on a tax return.
  4. Most estimated tax payment schedules include a payment in the next year. For example, PTET payments for 2024 will have a 2025 payment for Q4 or the second half of the year. Make all payments in 2024 to maximize your PTET deduction in the current year if your business uses cash-based accounting.

Tax-Planning-Strategies

Tax Planning Services

Read about our essential tax planning services and how they can help you reduce your taxes!

Tax Reduction Strategies

Tax Reduction Strategies

Discover practical strategies for tax reduction/avoidance to maximize your financial savings.

Tax-Center

Tax Center

Access comprehensive tax services, including refunds, audits, and consultations, all in one place!

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a pass-through entity tax (PTET)?

A state tax on partnerships and S corporations that can reduce federal taxable income.

Why does PTET exist?

To work around the $10,000 SALT deduction cap from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

How does PTET save money for business owners?

Payments made by the business are deductible federally and credited on your state tax return.

Do all states allow PTET?

No, rules, deadlines, and benefits vary widely by state.

Can I enroll retroactively for PTET?

In many states, retroactive enrollment is not allowed (e.g., California).

Are there penalties for missing PTET payments?

Yes, some states charge significant underpayment penalties.

How does PTET affect my K-1 and state taxes?

PTET is reported on the K-1 and credited against your state income tax liability.

When should PTET payments be made?

Ideally within the tax year to maximize federal deduction; timing varies by state.

Does PTET always reduce my taxes?

Not necessarily; benefits depend on income, state rules, and other tax considerations.

Where can I find state-specific PTET rules?

Each state’s revenue department or a qualified tax professional can provide guidance.

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How to Annoy Your Tax Accountant in 6 Easy Steps https://wcginc.com/blog/annoy-your-tax-accountant/ Tue, 03 Oct 2023 14:43:26 +0000 https://wcginc.com/?p=862 The post How to Annoy Your Tax Accountant in 6 Easy Steps appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Key Takeaways

  • Don’t read instructions carefully: Reply without understanding, then blame your accountant when issues arise.
  • Compare yourself to others: Assume neighbors or coworkers’ tax situations apply to you and complain about differences.
  • Question every detail: Ask for full explanations of tax calculations, worksheets, and rates, even if it’s overly complex.
  • Forget to provide documents: Act surprised when your accountant requests information you’ve sent before.
  • Ignore communication: Delay reviewing your tax return and respond last-minute, claiming you were too busy or out of town.
  • Act unaware: Ask last-minute questions about deductions, rental property setups, trusts, or LLCs without doing prior research.

While WCG clients are wonderful, occasionally a client of another CPA firm will ask us for advice. How should I set up my next business? Can I deduct donations made to United Way? (spoiler, Yes you may) At times these inquiring minds also ask us how to annoy their tax accountant for whatever reason. Being the helpful CPA firm that we are, WCG feels compelled to help those who ask. So, here it is- How to annoy your tax accountant in 6 easy steps.

Yes, we are being playful and having some fun here… a satire if you will. After all, we chose this profession!

Step 1: Don’t Read

Don’t fully read correspondence from your tax accountant yet respond with “Sounds good. Thanks.” Then, when a tax notice arrives about 2-3 months after the tax return has been filed, ask “I am not sure why the IRS says I owe them money.” You can also safely assume that any letter from the IRS means your tax accountant messed something up. Of course the IRS has the best computers and certainly the brightest accountants.

Step 2: Take Inventory in Others

Compare yourself to your neighbor or fellow co-worker. Believe everything they say is accurate and say to yourself “they are just like me. Yay!” Then ask your tax accountant why your neighbor only pays $50 in taxes while you pay so much more. Don’t consider that they might be married while you are single. Don’t consider that they might not actually know their own tax consequence but purport nonsense as hand on the bible fact. Don’t consider that there are at least a dozen variables that might make your tax world completely and materially different than theirs. You can also tell yourself that everyone should pay taxes except you.

Step 3: Doubt Water is Wet

Just like when you ask your surgeon what scalpel they intend to use or inquire about the exact chemistry behind anesthesia, ask your tax accountant how the tax was computed. Ask them to show you the tax rate tables including the capital gains worksheet, and then comment that your co-worker, who earns exactly the same as you to the penny, pays absolutely zero taxes. Ever. You can go in a different direction and tell your tax accountant that you aren’t asking for much explanation, but you do want to know “how taxes work” since synthesizing 4 millions words of tax code (excluding case law) into a 20 minute chat is an easy request. Seriously, what’s the big deal here? Sure, the King James Bible has 788,280 words; War and Peace runs 560,000 words; and the entire Harry Potter series is just over 1 million words. What’s another 3 million?

Step 4: Play Hide the Ball

Act completely surprised when your tax account asks for a brokerage statement that was on your prior year tax return but seems to be missing from your document upload. Even though you’ve supplied the same brokerage statement for 6 years running, respond with “I didn’t think you needed that.” Better yet, respond with “I am out of the country” which universally means while most of the free world has internet access, somehow being in a foreign country prevents a brokerage statement PDF from being downloaded and sent to your tax accountant.

Step 5: Ghost Your CPA

Be a champ by providing all your tax documents early, and then sit on your delivered tax return for several weeks. Of course you can’t be bothered since playoff hockey is right around the corner. Next, ignore the multiple emails, text messages and phone calls asking if you have any questions about the tax return. Then, on April 12 or so, email your tax accountant and request a tax return review. Act baffled how time just zipped by. If nothing else, claim both: time zipped by and you were out of the country. What’s the big deal? It’s only your wealth. It’s not like the club team coach needs you for something. When in doubt, you can also claim a monopoly on the human condition of being busy and use that as your reason. Just like Charlie says to Maverick, “So, you’re the one.”

Step 6: Be Unaware

Because YOUR tax returns are filed, email your tax accountant on April 12 and ask to discuss a rental property that you might buy at the end of the year, maybe. Ask about the zillion of tax deductions your bartender claims are 100% L-E-G-I-T on your hypothetical rental property. Ask if you should put the rental in a trust because you also heard you can save even more in taxes from the grocery store cashier the other day. Or was it an LLC? The possibilities are endless! Don’t wait to take your intellectual curiosity and execute some Google searches to find some basic answers, and then schedule a meaningful meeting in May, June or July. That’s crazy talk. Instead just pepper your tax accountant’s inbox on April 12. It’s a search bar after all, right? Use ASAP in your plea for information because you are going to start rental property shopping next week. Everyone loves that and springs into action; not just tax accountants.

How Tax Accountants Annoy Clients

In the interest of equal airtime, we will work on another blog post about how tax accountants annoy their clients. Some things that come to mind- radio silence, use industry jargon, incomplete answers to questions, use “audit risk” in every response. Oh, we’ll have some fun with this!

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this advice serious?

No, it’s a playful satire meant to highlight common client behaviors that frustrate accountants.

Can ignoring your tax documents cause problems?

Yes, delayed responses can lead to errors, missed deadlines, or stress for both you and your accountant.

Should I compare my taxes to friends or neighbors?

No, everyone’s tax situation is unique and comparisons are usually misleading.

Why is it bad to ask for overly detailed explanations?

Tax laws are complex, and expecting a short summary of millions of words in code is unrealistic.

What happens if I fail to provide required statements?

Your return may be incomplete, delayed, or trigger IRS notices.

Is it smart to email last-minute questions on April 12?

No, this can overwhelm your accountant and risk mistakes or missed deadlines.

Can acting unaware affect my tax planning?

Yes, it can lead to missed opportunities and poor decision-making.

What’s the main lesson from this satire?

Being organized, proactive, and informed makes working with your tax accountant smoother and more effective.

The post How to Annoy Your Tax Accountant in 6 Easy Steps appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Pay More Taxes https://wcginc.com/blog/pay-more-taxes/ Sat, 16 Sep 2023 14:47:49 +0000 https://wcginc.com/?p=1407 The post Pay More Taxes appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Key Takeaways

  • Focus on wealth, not just tax savings: Sometimes paying more taxes strategically can help grow your business and personal wealth.
  • Balance deductions with borrowing needs: Limiting certain deductions (like 401k contributions or business expenses) can improve cash flow and make lenders more willing to provide loans.
  • Discretionary spending matters: Skipping optional expenses such as business meals or home office reimbursements can improve reported cash flow for financing purposes.
  • Depreciation affects perceived cash flow: Lenders often add depreciation back to cash flow, so choosing when and how to depreciate assets can impact borrowing capacity.
  • Business valuation consideration: Showing higher, more accurate cash flow can make your company more attractive to buyers or investors.
  • Strategic tax planning is key: Decisions about spending, deductions, and timing of expenses can help optimize both borrowing capacity and long-term wealth.

Yeah, you’re reading that right. Our website and various articles express ways to save on taxes, but they also had an undertone of building wealth. Building wealth is your primary and perhaps only mission; not saving taxes. If we can do both, Yay! This article will take building wealth one step further and broach a topic not often discussed- paying more in taxes. Wait! What? That sounds crazy, especially from a tax accountant.

Stay with me for a bit. Why would you want to pay more in taxes?

Business Tax Deductions

There are a small handful of reasons to pay more in taxes, but let’s start with borrowing. When a lender looks to give you a pile of money based on your good looks and charm, in the back office they are doing two things. First, they are ensuring you can service the debt. Do you have enough cash flow to make the payments? Second, they are looking for collateral to secure the debt in case your good looks weather away, and you can no longer service the debt. Charm only takes you so far, just ask Tina.

As a side bar, lenders are in a continuous conundrum. They need to pay their investors and pay their bills, and on top of that they need to add a risk-adjusted premium to the interest rate. This can be a self-fulfilling prophecy since if the risk-adjusted premium is too high (ie, risky borrower), the lender might be putting too much debt service pressure on the loan and unintentionally push it into default. A bank that does not have any defaults will eventually fail for being too conservative.

Ok, back to the two-pronged approach- cash flow and collateral. This might come as a surprise, but most people want to pay the least amount of taxes, and to that end most people want to maximize their tax deductions. Crazy! Say it isn’t so! However, when a lender looks at your tax return, they might envision the guy from Monopoly with the empty pockets.

There is a balance here, right? On one end, you want to pay the least amount of taxes and on the other end you want that big fat loan (and one at a respectable interest rate). It might seem counterintuitive in taxes, but you’ve heard the saying- you have to spend money to make money. Taxes might be one of those “spends” to make money.

How?!

Many tax court cases remind that “deductions are a matter of legislative grace and a taxpayer must satisfy the specific statutory requirements of the deductions he claims.” These are literally the words woven into many tax court rulings. As such, tax deductions are not a requirement… they are an allowance.

Here we go-

Limit Your 401k Deduction

There are certain tax deductions that you can elect to not do, and therefore not list on your tax returns. A great example is your company’s discretionary 401k contribution. In a solo 401k situation, a business owner might want to have their company put 25% of their officer compensation into the 401k plan. Perhaps hold off a year or two during “borrowing times.”

Eliminate That Home Office

Another good example is reimbursements from your company for home office, cell phone, internet and mileage. You are not required to reimburse yourself for the business use of your personal assets (home, phone, car, etc.).

Skip Business Meals

Business meals are purely discretionary and skipping business meals does not mean literally skipping them, unless you are on a diet. As a good steward of your business, you should continue to collaborate with colleagues and recruit new customers, and all the things in between. However, you are not required to use business funds and report the expenses as tax deductions.

Spending Diet

You can also do a little dieting with your spending. While this is a short-term change in habits that might not have a lot of punch on a tax return or set of financial statements, it is a good consideration. Do opt for that used van or truck that the business requires? Do you take it a step down or two when purchasing the next round of laptops? A lot of personal vanity worms into company expenditures and bifurcating your tastes and spending habits between you and your business is tough. If you have nice things at home, you likely have nice things at the office, and nice things cost money, and this ends up on tax returns.

As a lender reviews your company’s financials, they are determining discretionary cash flow. How much cash does this company throw off after paying its operational expenses and other commitments? For lack of better information, any expense and eventual tax deduction listed on a tax return must be ordinary and necessary for the company to operate.

So, as you attempt to stuff a bunch of expenses into your company to lower your tax bill (yes, that happens from time to time), please understand the downstream effects on your borrowing capacity. Want some math? Of course!

Lenders bounce around 40% to 45% debt to income ratio (DTI) for debt servicing limits. They total all your income streams and multiply by 40%, and compare this to your pooled obligations plus whatever you are considering purchasing. If you increase your “tax reported” cash flow by $20,000 annually, a DTI of 40% suggests that you can afford an additional $8,000 in debt servicing. At 7% interest rate, this equates to an additional $100,000 in borrowing capacity.

Is this overly simple? Yes, but it still illustrates a good point.

Depreciation Conundrum

Let’s talk about that big fancy truck that you want your company to buy and therefore depreciate.

Depreciation is a funny thing. Depreciation is built to offer you some tax relief for mortgaged purchases of real estate, machinery, equipment, etc. For example, you spend $100,000 on some equipment that lasts 7 years. The bank gives you a loan for 7 years. Match made in heaven. However, those loan payments are not tax deductible, so to help with the “expense of purchase,” depreciation comes in with a tax deduction.

This makes sense too since most machinery and equipment goes down in value. But what about rental residential real estate? Typically, these purchases increase in value, yet you are allowed to depreciate the building over 27.5 years which is similar to most loan terms of 30 years. Even if you pay cash for real estate or equipment, there is still a cost of your equity that you are wanting to recoup. Ergo depreciation.

Another side bar- Canada tax law allows you to opt out of depreciation on real estate. In the United States, however, allowed depreciation is assumed depreciation. If you don’t depreciate your rental, the IRS will assume you had when you go to sell which can be very bad (but there are depreciation catch-up solutions if you need it).

Back to depreciation and cash flow. A lender is going to typically add depreciation expense back to your tax return, plus other little odds and ends to arrive at your global cash flow since depreciation expense is not a cash expense. However, if your depreciation is associated with a purchase made with borrowed funds, those loan payments of course count against your cash flow.

Business Valuation

One of the other good reasons to perhaps pay more in taxes is selling your company. We have seen a lot of small business sales lately; some good, some bad. Similar to a lender, a buyer wants to know how much cash flow your company produces since most small businesses are selling their future cash flow (and perhaps some assets here and there). But here’s the rub; if you want to sell your company today, you better had started thinking about it 5 years ago as you tighten up your decisions and financial documents.

A lot of things can be explained away to a prospective buyer when they review your tax returns and financial statements. However, the more you explain and the more things you have to explain, the more doubt you cast on the veracity of that future cash flow.

Additionally, a buyer might not be as concerned about your cost structure since they are more focused on your revenue and how it will apply to their cost structure (think merger versus acquisition). However, to beat a dead horse, a lot of business mergers and acquisitions rely on financing, and we circle back to lenders. Said differently, if you want to sell your business, you need to make it attractive from a cash flow perspective in order for your buyer to obtain financing.

Pay More Taxes Summary

As mentioned, paying more in taxes might yield more wealth and that is truly what you are after in this world. By paying more in taxes, with careful consideration and calculation, you might actually put yourself into a better wealth building position over time.

Please don’t confuse what we are saying here. Making certain choices about 401k contributions, or reimbursements, or deferring certain expenditures into the future, etc. are not the same as manipulating your financial documents to not show actual expenses. If your business needs to survive by spending money on certain things, those expenses / tax deductions must be expressed on your tax return. While orange might look good from time to time, it is not a good look on a daily basis.

As such, there is a balance between accurate financial reporting and representing the health of your business accurately, and wanting to increasing your company’s “good looks and charm.”

Having said all this, if you want to review some tax reduction strategies or consider tax planning, here are some helpful resources-

Tax Reduction

Discover practical strategies for tax reduction/avoidance to maximize your financial savings.

Tax Strategies Agenda

Read how income ranges, deductions, and tax credits impact tax liability and savings potential.

Tax Planning

Discover year-round tax planning strategies to save money and avoid last-minute stress.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why would I want to pay more in taxes?

Paying more taxes in a controlled way can increase reported cash flow, helping with loans or business valuation.

Which deductions might I limit intentionally?

401(k) contributions, home office reimbursements, business meals, or discretionary spending can be deferred to improve cash flow.

Does skipping deductions reduce actual wealth?

Not necessarily; it’s about timing and strategy, not avoiding real business expenses.

How does depreciation affect lending?

Depreciation is added back to cash flow by lenders, impacting borrowing limits and financing options.

Can strategic tax choices help sell my business?

Yes, accurate reporting of cash flow and financial health makes your business more attractive to buyers.

Is this the same as manipulating financial records?

No, legitimate business expenses must always be reported; strategy is about timing and prioritization.

What’s the overall goal of this approach?

To build wealth efficiently by balancing tax savings, cash flow, and business growth.

Should I consult a professional before limiting deductions?

Yes, tax planning with a professional ensures legal compliance and maximizes financial benefits.

The post Pay More Taxes appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Roth 401k Versus Traditional 401k https://wcginc.com/blog/roth-401k/ Sun, 03 Jul 2022 12:23:06 +0000 https://wcginc.com/?p=1527 The post Roth 401k Versus Traditional 401k appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Key Takeaways

  • Roth 401k vs. Traditional 401k: Roth 401k contributions are post-tax, have higher limits, and no income phaseouts, unlike Roth IRAs.
  • Contribution limits: In 2022, you can contribute $20,500 to a Roth 401k plus $6,500 if 50 or older. Traditional 401k limits are the same, but contributions are pre-tax.
  • Wealth-building perspective: After-tax (Roth) contributions often build more wealth long-term than pre-tax contributions because taxes are paid upfront.
  • IRS “free loan” concept: Pre-tax contributions reduce current taxes, letting you invest the saved taxes now, but the impact may be modest over time.
  • State tax strategies: Pre-tax contributions can reduce state income taxes now; some retirees may relocate to tax-friendly states later.
  • RMD considerations: Roth 401k withdrawals are generally tax-free, and 401k RMDs can be delayed if still working and owning ≤5% of the company.
  • Recommendation for company employees: Split contributions 50/50 between Roth and pre-tax to balance tax-free growth and tax deferral.
  • Recommendation for self-employed: Maximize Roth contributions, plus a discretionary pre-tax company contribution to leverage tax deferral benefits.

Financial planning: Always defer to your financial advisor for personalized strategy and ensure alignment with long-term wealth goals.

Summer is tax planning time and we get a lot of questions about solo 401k contributions, and whether they should be Roth 401k contributions or traditional (pre-tax) 401k contributions. Our general answer is Roth for a few reasons.

Before we get into that, let’s review a couple of things. First, when we say Roth 401k we are not talking about Roth IRAs. We truly are talking about a post-tax contribution to a 401k plan. 401k plans and IRAs are totally different.

Next, unlike a Roth IRA, a Roth 401k does not have income limits. So, while you might be phased out based on income from a Roth IRA (modified adjusted gross income cannot exceed $214,000 for the 2022 tax year), you can make a zillion dollars and contribute to a Roth 401k.

Wait, there’s more! You can contribute $20,500 for the 2022 tax year into a Roth 401k plus another $6,500 if you are 50 or older. This is in stark contrast to a Roth IRA which is $6,000 + $1,000.
Most 401k plans, both solo 401k plans and full-blown big-biz 401k plans, have two “accounts.” One for pre-tax or traditional 401k contributions, and another for Roth 401k contributions.

Quick recap- Roth 401k contributions have higher limits and do not have any income phaseouts. Let’s not forget about tax-free growth.

So… Roth or pre-tax… which do you use?

401k Plan Theory

Two arguments abound when considering a pre-tax 401k contribution. The argument goes like this- your retirement tax rate will be lower than your wage-earning tax rate. For those in the 32%, 35% or 37% marginal tax brackets, this is likely true. However, those earning big bucks probably continue to earn big bucks during retirement from investments, real estate, consulting, etc.

The other argument is about the free loan from the IRS. If you contribute $27,000 to your pre-tax 401k and you are in the 32% marginal tax bracket, you just put $8,640 in your pocket ($27,000 x 32%). Sure, at some point the IRS wants it back when you withdraw it during retirement, and will tax the original contribution plus whatever you earned on it. But this falls into the let’s worry about next time, next time category.

As such, the second argument is about using the IRS’s money to build additional wealth. You take your $8,640 and do something good with it. Yeah, this sort of works. $8,640 annually might not move the needles much on your wealth building strategies. You would need $8,640 x 15 years at 6% rate of return just to afford a down payment on an average rental property.

Rather, most wealth is built with after-tax dollars. The leveraging of the IRS free loan concept sounds great on paper until you gain perspective on the size of the lever.

Another side argument is completely avoiding state income taxes by reducing your state income and therefore income tax with 401k contributions during your wage-earning years, and then establish residency in a tax-free or a tax-friendly state during retirement. We talk about this in our tax reduction strategies blog post.

Other Considerations

The theories above make sense; however, we ask a basic question- is it easier to pay taxes during your wage-earning years or during retirement? Sure, it depends how much you withdraw during retirement. Please consider that to spend $150,000 during retirement, you might have to withdraw upwards of $180,000 to account for the income taxes.

During your wage-earning years you might have the ability work a little harder to pay for taxes now. Pick up an extra shift. Close an extra deal. Get a few more tax returns out of the door if you are a tax accountant. Whatever it takes, right? During your retirement years, especially mid-70s or older, you pay taxes with retirement savings (or at least it feels like you do depending on your cash sources).

Also, keep in mind that your primary objective in life is to build wealth. Your second objective is to save taxes, and what a lot of people forget about is saving taxes is not done in a vacuum or just one year; it is done over your entire lifetime.

Here’s another angle to consider- you can delay required minimum distributions (RMDs) with a 401k plan. At the age of 72, you must start withdrawing money from IRAs and “remnant” 401k plans. However, there is a special rule for 401k plans-

  1. If you are still working, and
  2. Own 5% or less of the company you work for, and
  3. The 401k plan is with the company you work for

You can delay RMDs. So, you could roll all your retirement accounts into a 401k plan at Wal-Mart, hand out carts and avoid having to take required minimum distributions. This gets tricky when you are self-employed since you would need to substantially work for another company and have your retirement money in their 401k plan (and now have a boss).

Then again, if you have mostly Roth 401k contributions, you don’t really care about avoiding RMDs since this is generally tax-free withdrawals. Keep reading!

Recommendation

Our first recommendation is to always defer to your financial advisor. He or she might have strong opinions one way or another, and are also in charge of your financial plan

But if you want our opinion, then here it is-

If you are working for a company with decent matching, then split your 401k contributions 50%-50% between Roth and pre-tax.

If you are self-employed, then put 100% of your contributions into the Roth component of your 401k plan, and then another 25% of your salary into the pre-tax component as a discretionary company contribution (sometimes loosely referred to as a profit-sharing contribution).

For example, if you are a business owner paying yourself $60,000 in salary, you could contribute $20,500 into your Roth 401k and another $15,000 ($60,000 x 25%) into the pre-tax 401k for a total of $35,500.

This is a nice way to get the best of both worlds. Pay taxes now, and enjoy tax-free growth on one hand. And on the other hand, get some tax deferrals. Win win!

Sidebar- a lot of financial advisors do not like 401k plans because they cannot earn a fee from managing those assets. If they are worth their salt, they will find a way to charge a flat fee or an hourly fee, and you’ll be happy to pay it for sound advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a Roth 401k?

A post-tax 401k contribution allowing tax-free growth and withdrawals in retirement.

How is a Roth 401k different from a Roth IRA?

Roth 401ks have no income limits and higher contribution limits; Roth IRAs are restricted by income and lower limits.

How much can I contribute to a Roth 401k?

$20,500 for 2022, plus $6,500 catch-up if 50 or older. Limits may change annually.

Should I choose Roth or traditional 401k contributions?

Roth is generally preferred for long-term wealth-building, but a mix can balance tax-free growth and current tax deferral.

Can Roth 401k contributions avoid RMDs?

Roth 401k withdrawals are tax-free, and RMDs can be delayed under certain employment conditions.

What is the “free loan” concept?

Using pre-tax contributions reduces current taxes, letting you invest the saved taxes now, but taxes are due upon withdrawal.

How does being self-employed affect 401k contributions?

Self-employed individuals can maximize Roth contributions and also make discretionary pre-tax contributions.

Why split contributions between Roth and pre-tax?

It balances tax-free growth with tax deferral, providing flexibility in retirement.

Should I consult a financial advisor?

Yes, always align contributions with your overall financial plan and long-term wealth goals.

Do Roth 401k contributions have income limits?

No, unlike Roth IRAs, anyone can contribute regardless of income level.

The post Roth 401k Versus Traditional 401k appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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C Corp vs S Corp https://wcginc.com/blog/c-corps-remain-bad-idea-business-owners/ Wed, 08 Jul 2020 16:03:53 +0000 https://wcginc.com/?p=1091 The post C Corp vs S Corp appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Key Takeaways

  • S Corp vs C Corp: Switching from S Corp to C Corp mainly for the 21% corporate tax rate is generally a bad idea due to double taxation and accumulated earnings tax.
  • Effective tax rates: S Corp owners often pay lower effective taxes than C Corp shareholders after considering payroll, income, and dividend taxes.
  • Section 199A deduction: S Corps benefit from the 20% deduction, which C Corps do not receive, increasing the S Corp’s tax efficiency.
  • Accumulated Earnings Tax (AET): C Corps retaining earnings can trigger a 20% tax if funds are not justified for business purposes.
  • Spending vs saving: Keeping profits in a C Corp to avoid taxes ties up money that could be used personally or for wealth building.
  • Entity selection guidance: LLCs are simple and tax-efficient; corporations (C or S) may be needed for investors, professional licensing, or other specific reasons.
  • C Corp benefits: Keeping income off your 1040, facilitating venture capital or employee ownership, and state-specific advantages (like California SDI opt-out).
  • Professional considerations: Professionals in some states may be required to form a Professional Corporation (PC) or PLLC, often taxed as S Corps for efficiency.

The hot question since the passage of the Tax Cuts & Jobs Act of 2017 and Section 199A is, “Should I revoke S Corp status and go to C Corp?” The answer is No. What is interesting is that Wharton School at University of Pennsylvania in a June article estimated that approximately 235,000 business owners will convert from a pass-thru entity to a C corporation in 2018. Yuck! The C Corp vs S Corp conundrum if viewed purely from an income tax perspective is not a conundrum at all; it is quite simple.

The primary motivation is the seemingly attractive 21% tax rate for C corporations and while this might be lower than some taxpayer’s marginal rate, this is a sucker hole for business owners for two painfully obvious reasons. First, your marginal rate might be 24% or 26%, but your effective tax rate (or blended tax rate) is much lower. We’ll show you… not to worry.

Second, there is a little thing called double taxation where the C corporation pays a tax and then the shareholders pay a dividend tax on the money that is distributed. And… if you think you’re a smarty pants and say, “Yeah, but, I’ll just keep all my money in the C corporation for a rainy day and lower tax rates,” there is another little thing called accumulated earnings tax (AET).

Let’s illustrate this with some good old fashioned devils buried deep into the details. Assumptions include-

  • Section 199A deduction for the S corporation’s shareholder
  • $24,000 in standard deduction (yeah, 2018 numbers, but whatever)
  • 3.8% surtax on top of the 15% capital gains tax rate for the $300,000 column

Buckle up buttercup ’cause here we go-

S Corp Income 100,000 200,000 300,000
Salary 40,000 80,000 120,000
Payroll Tax 6,120 12,240 18,360
Income Tax 6,980 24,150 44,266
Total Tax S Corp 13,100 36,390 62,626
C Corp Income 100,000 200,000 300,000
C Corp Tax 21,000 42,000 63,000
Dividends 79,000 158,000 237,000
Dividend Tax 0 23,700 44,556
Total C Corp Tax 21,000 65,700 107,556
Effective S Tax Rate 13.1% 18.2% 20.9%
Effective C Tax Rate 21.0% 32.9% 35.9%
Delta (extra tax because of C Corp) 7.9% 14.7% 15.0%

As you can see, a C Corp does not make sense after you add in capital gains tax on the dividends and the C Corp vs S Corp argument is put to rest. This in turn makes sense- the lawmakers didn’t set out to kill S corporations. They set out to give every business owner a tax break. Geez… half of Congress (535 doesn’t divide evenly, we get it) probably run S corporations on the side for their consulting and speaking gigs.

Also note the effective tax rate (or labeled as tax “pain”) for the S corporation owner. At $100,000 in net business income, the total tax pain including payroll taxes is 13.1%, and at $200,000 it is only 18.2%. This is still well below the C corporation tax rate of 21%.

And! There’s more! C corporations do not enjoy the 20% Section 199A deduction either. Pile that onto the numbers above for even more reasons.

So, please pump the brakes on the “I wanna dump my S Corp for the magical tax arbitrage offered by a C Corp” nonsense. Wow, that was harsh. We did tell you to buckle up but then we offended you by calling you buttercup. Safety with an insult.

S Corp vs C Corp

Click here Learn why about the important differences of S and C Corps for business owners!

S Corp Election

Understand differences between sole proprietorships, SMLLCs, and S Corporations for taxation.

S Corp Questionnaire

Check out our S Corp questionnaire if you need help figuring them out for your business!

C Corp Accumulated Earnings Tax

If you think you are clever and attempt to accumulate your C corporation’s earnings and not pay out dividends, you could trigger the accumulate earnings tax (AET). This tax is specifically aimed to prevent tax avoidance by not paying out dividends.

Businesses can accumulate earnings, no biggie, just ask Apple. But Apple has to justify why it is holding back so much of its earnings… and they do that by saying, “Well, we need it for this and we’re accustomed to that, and we have this thing coming up, baby needs new shoes, and blah blah blah.” Here is a list the IRS utilizes in addition to shoes-

  1. Providing for bona fide business expansion or plant replacement.
  2. Acquiring a business enterprise through purchasing stock or assets.
  3. Facilitating the retirement of company debt created in connection with its trade or business.
  4. Providing necessary working capital for the business.
  5. Providing for investments in or loans to customers or suppliers if necessary to maintain the business of the corporation.
  6. Providing for contingencies such as the payment of reasonably anticipated product liability losses, actual or potential lawsuit, loss of a major customer, or self-insurance.

But if you don’t have a good argument, then IRS could whack you with the AET. Here is a quick list of activities that do not bode well for accumulating earnings in your C corporation-

  1. Loans to shareholders or related parties.
  2. Payments by the corporation that personally benefit the shareholders.
  3. Investments in assets having no reasonable relationship to the corporation’s business.
  4. A weak dividend history.
  5. Retention of earnings to provide against unrealistic hazards.
  6. Working capital levels that appear high in relation to need.
  7. Salaries paid to shareholder/employees that are either extremely high (avoiding corporate tax) or extremely low (avoiding shareholder tax).

We bet that before you read this list, you already had some of these ideas incubating in your brain. Again, you’re not the first wizard to run a business. The funny thing about this list is that there was a wizard or two, way back when, who did this… and got caught… and ruined it for all of us. Remember that pigs get fed, hogs get slaughtered.

The accumulated earnings tax is 20%, which shockingly matches the highest dividend tax rate for individuals.

Spending Your Money

Who wants to keep all their money in their business? Don’t you want to spend your money? If you say to yourself that you’ll keep your taxes lower by not paying out dividends and you also say to yourself that you can avoid the accumulated earnings tax because you have a good excuse for your piles of money, you are now tying up your money and you can’t spend it.

So if you listen to some people talk about keeping money in the C corporation to enjoy the 21% corporate tax rate… and paying out dividends at a later date when you might have a lower capital gains and dividends tax rate, your money is not your money. In other words, why the heck do you want to work your butt off and not be able to enjoy the fruits of your labor?

Lastly, your objective in life is to build wealth… and if you can save some taxes along the way, then great. But don’t stunt your wealth building for the sake of saving some taxes. By needing to leverage your money into wealth building and to save overall taxes, the C corporation is a bad idea.

We leave room for the person who does not need the money and if they do, they are okay with a higher tax rate. But if we look at practically… and in the eyes of most business owners the C Corp vs S Corp discussion is moot.

C Corp vs S Corp Intangibles

At WCG, we tend to keep things simple. Yes, we’ll complicate the heck out of stuff if it makes sense to do so and if it will meet certain objectives. As such, in the interest of simplicity, here we go-

  1. LLC is your first choice. Simple. Easy. Tax efficient.
  2. Corporation is your next choice. Unpopular and tax inefficient, but there might be reasons why you need one (keep income off 1040, California, venture capitalist).
  3. Professional LLC (PLLC) or Professional Corporation (PC) if you are an accountant, attorney, medical doctor or engineer.

See! Simple. Let’s look at a fun table of intangibles, shall we?

LLC Corporation S Corporation
Formation Articles of Formation Articles of Incorporation NA
Internal Governance Operating Agreement Bylaws, Shareholder Agreement Depends
Owners Called Members Shareholders Depends (Shareholders)
Owners Own Interest Shares Depends
Owners Take Owner Draws Dividends Shareholder Distributions
Federal Tax Rate 15.3% + Individual Tax Rate 21% + Dividend Tax Rate Payroll Tax + Individual Tax Rate

Some notables-

Under S corporation, the “depends” is double-talk that we accountants love to use for everything. However, in this case it is quite simple. Since an S corporation is only a tax election, nothing changes from an internal governance and ownership perspective. If you have an LLC taxed as an S Corp, then you will have an Operating Agreement and you will own an interest. If you have a corporation taxed as an S Corp, then you will have Bylaws (and perhaps a Shareholder Agreement) and you will own shares. However, in accounting parlance, we will commonly refer to owners of an LLC taxed as an S corporation as shareholders from a tax return perspective but they are truly members.

The 15.3% under LLC represents self-employment taxes which are the same as Social Security and Medicare taxes.

C corporations remain tax inefficient and S corporations remain a good tool for overall tax efficiency. This table does not necessarily shoot down C Corps in the C Corp vs S Corp UFC match-up, but sheds some light on the overall conversation.

C Corporation Benefits

As business entity types go, C corporations are not all bad. It is easy for S Corps to throw rocks at C Corps given everything we’ve said so far. Here are some benefits in the C Corp vs S Corp cocktail party fodder-

Keep Income Off 1040

One of the benefits is you keep income off your individual tax return (Form 1040). For example, if you had an LLC whose business transactions were typically reported on Schedule C of Form 1040, if you converted this LLC to a corporation, the income is contained in the corporate tax return (Form 1120). If you pay a salary or pay out dividends, that changes things. Why would you want to keep income off your individual tax return? Perhaps you have Social Security or disability benefits that might disappear or become taxable. Perhaps you are running away from some bad guys who are collecting on a debt. Perhaps you use the C Corp to pay for your mistress of her expensive tastes. All kinds of reasons!

Venture Capital

As mentioned elsewhere, the golden rule is: the person with the gold makes the rules. So, if you are looking for an investor to kickstart your heart like Nikki Sixx, and the only way it happens is if you create a C corporation, then that is what you do. All kidding aside, venture capitalists, angel investors, and all the other silly things people call themselves, like corporations as opposed to LLCs.

Employee Ownership

Having your employees own member interest in an LLC can be tricky since each one would get a K-1 regardless if their interest was economic only (profits) or equity (ownership). You could get around this by having your employees own the right to a portion of the business which triggers into equity upon a certain event such as transfer of ownership or control. In other words, Employee A has the right to 2% ownership upon sale, partial or wholesale. This works! But… it can also be messy and hard to explain. WCG converted to a C corporation for this reason; we are selling bits and pieces of our business to partners and employees, and shares in a corporation makes more sense. Each partner is paid a fee for service directly from the corporation.

This is akin to a barrel of oil… you can either own the right to the barrel of oil, or the barrel of oil itself.

California (and others)

If you are a professional such as attorney, accountant, medical doctor or engineer, you typically have to register as a professional entity, either a Professional LLC (PLLC) or a Professional Corporation (PC). However, some states, such as California, does not recognize PLLC and as such you must create a corporate that is deemed to be a PC. And in those cases, we typically recommend an immediate S corporation election to have your PC taxed as an S Corp (see crummy C Corp tax rates above).

Colorado and Texas, among several other states, allow for a PLLC or a PC… up to you. WCG is a PC.

Who wants to pick on California some more? We do.

State Disability Insurance

California allows corporate officers to opt-out of State Disability Insurance (SDI). SDI is California’s version of FMLA, and some business owners want to go on leave for new babies, etc. However, if your baby-making days are clearly in the rearview mirror, then perhaps you want to opt-out of SDI. This is easily done, but only for corporate officers… and No, members of an LLC are not considered corporate officers since LLCs are companies not corporations. All in all, WCG creates far more corporations in California for this reason and for the PC designation reason.

Attorney Stuff

If your estate plan attorney or another attorney recommends a corporation, ask the hard questions so you understand why. There might be good reasons to do so… and we leave room for attorneys to be right some of the time.

In summary, like a nauseating college paper that you know for darn well your professor will only skim in between martini sips, unless you fit the buckets above, then you should be an LLC, or an entity taxed as an S corporation.

Text WCG Offices

Check out our S Corp questionnaire if you need help figuring them out for your business!

Call Our Amazing Team

If you need to speak to someone, we’re good listeners!  Give us a call and we’ll help you out!

Chat With A Tax Pro

Taxes are complicated.  We make them simple.  Get in touch with a pro here at WCG!

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I switch from an S Corp to a C Corp for lower taxes?

No, the double taxation and accumulated earnings tax usually make C Corps less tax-efficient.

What is double taxation?

C Corps pay corporate tax on profits, and shareholders pay taxes again on dividends.

How does the Section 199A deduction help S Corps?

It allows up to a 20% deduction on qualified business income, reducing overall taxable income.

What triggers the accumulated earnings tax (AET) in a C Corp?

Retaining profits without a valid business purpose, making excessive shareholder loans, or holding unrealistic working capital.

Can I keep money in a C Corp to avoid paying taxes personally?

Yes, but it can trigger AET and limits your ability to use the money personally.

When might a C Corp make sense?

For venture capital funding, employee ownership plans, or to keep income off your personal tax return.

What is the best entity type for most small business owners?

LLCs or entities taxed as S Corps are generally simpler, flexible, and tax-efficient.

Are there state-specific considerations?

Yes, some states like California require professional entities (PC) or offer options like SDI opt-out for corporate officers.

How do S Corps differ in governance?

S Corp status is a tax election; governance depends on whether your entity is an LLC or a corporation.

Can professional advice affect entity choice?

Yes, attorneys or advisors may recommend forming a corporation for legal or operational reasons, even if taxes favor an S Corp.

The post C Corp vs S Corp appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Online Tax Accountant https://wcginc.com/blog/online-tax-accountant/ Sun, 15 Mar 2020 14:22:24 +0000 https://wcginc.com/?p=1399 The post Online Tax Accountant appeared first on WCG CPAs & Advisors.

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Key Takeaways

  • Online tax accounting makes filing simple, secure, and contactless.
  • WCG has been offering remote tax preparation since 2007 using portals, video calls, and secure messaging.
  • The firm was built for nomadic clients like airline employees, making virtual tax prep efficient and flexible.
  • No need to print documents, schedule appointments, or travel—everything can be done from home.
  • Social distancing and COVID-19 make online tax services safer and more practical than ever.
  • Virtual tax preparation uses modern tools to replace traditional face-to-face meetings.

With everyone freakin’ out about the Coronavirus (and me recovering from Deschutes Virus from their amazing IPA), perhaps it is time to revisit some of the personal services that people need such as an online accountant. Haircuts pose a problem for an online interaction. Dentistry, nope. But an online tax accountant is a snap! Yeah, it might be a shift in the paradigm… but long before we had this panic, tax preparation was shifting to a virtual tax preparation engagement.

Online Tax Filing

WCG has been remotely preparing tax returns since 2007 using secure online client portals, text messaging, videoconferencing, and other technologies. While many CPA firms now offer client portals, we needed to leverage the online world much earlier in our firm’s history. Why? I was an airline pilot for 17 years… and prior to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, pilots and flight attendants had a unique tax situation with per diem and travel expenses. So being a tax-minded person in the tax accountant business allowed me to help this type of taxpayer as their online accountant.

However, an airline employee is historically very nomadic. Moving from airline to airline, and moving from domicile to domicile required WCG to create process and procedures to prepare tax returns remotely as an online tax accountant. As time marched on, other clients found this way of doing business to be wonderful.

Why spend time out of your workweek to meet with your tax accountant? Wouldn’t you rather sit in the comfort of your PJs or Snuggie collection sippin’ on a nice latte while you upload tax documents to your CPA? Of course you would! Heck, prior to moving into our own office, I had a client one floor down from us who would rather send us his stuff remotely than walk up a flight of stairs to see us. I saw him more in the bathroom than I did in the office.

Also, since most tax documents come to you as a PDF, printing this information out, scheduling an appointment and driving to your CPA seems outdated. Correction… it is outdated. Fast forward… it is March 15, 2020, and the world is losing its mind with the Coronavirus. Social distancing. 6 and 250 become household numbers. Grocery stores with empty shelves. Quarantines. Yuck!

Online Tax Preparation

So… how about leveraging an online accountant to prepare your tax returns. Contactless. No touching. No hugs and handshakes (bummer). A traditional industry of face to face meetings and discussions about your tax returns is now shifting to virtual tax filings with phone calls, emails, and portals. Join the growing crowd of online tax filing and skip the hand sanitizer.

To get started with one of our amazing online accountants, visit some of the buttons below.

Getting Started

Learn about important tax deadlines, document due dates, and other business tax return info.

Transparent Fee Structure

Read about our philosophy on fees, how they change, and what influences your tax prep costs.

Tax Center

Access comprehensive tax services, including refunds, audits, and consultations, all in one place!

Frequently Asked Questions

What is online tax accounting?

Preparing and filing taxes remotely using secure portals, emails, and video calls.

Who can use online tax preparation services?

Anyone, including remote workers, busy professionals, or those practicing social distancing.

How long has WCG offered remote tax services?

Since 2007.

Are online tax services secure?

Yes, they use encrypted portals and secure communication methods.

Do I need to print and mail documents?

No, PDFs and digital uploads make physical copies unnecessary.

Can I still ask questions about my taxes?

Yes, via video calls, phone calls, and emails.

Is online tax preparation suitable during COVID-19?

Absolutely—it’s contactless and safe.

Do I need special software to file online?

No, WCG provides secure portals for easy document upload.

Can frequent travelers use online tax services?

Yes, it’s ideal for nomadic clients who move often.

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