Midyear Tax Planning for Small Businesses: How to Reduce Your 2026 Tax Bill
If you’re like most small-business owners, taxes probably aren’t even a blip on your radar screen right now. After all, you just filed your tax returns on April 15, so why bring up taxes less than two months later?
The reason? Summer is the best time to take a fresh look at your business tax situation. With several months remaining in the year, you have time to make adjustments that could reduce your 2026 tax bill, improve cash flow, reduce tax liabilities, and help you avoid unpleasant surprises next spring. The important thing is to act before year-end. Many of the most effective tax-saving and wealth-building strategies work best when implemented well in advance, not in a last-minute scramble in December.
Last week, we presented forward-looking advice for saving on personal income taxes. This week, we shift our attention to helping small-business owners keep more of their hard-earned profits. The following tax-saving strategies and tactics can help you identify opportunities, evaluate your options, and position your business for a stronger financial finish to 2026.
Maximize Your Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction
One of the most valuable tax breaks available to many business owners is the Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction. It allows many owners of pass-through businesses to deduct up to 20 percent of their business income right off the top. For example, if your business generates $100,000 in qualified business income, you may be able to deduct up to $20,000 and pay federal income tax on the remaining $80,000. Pass-through businesses (income passes through the business to the owners) include:
- Sole proprietorships
- Single-member limited liability companies (LLCs)
- Partnerships
- Multi-member LLCs
- S corporations
Here are a few key details about the QBI deduction: Continue reading… Continue reading… Continue reading…


