8 Year-End Tax-Savings Steps for Business Owners

If you own, operate, or participate in the managements of a business, taxes are always on your mind, especially at the end of every quarter, when estimated payments are due, and the end of the year, when you file your return. As tax year 2025 comes to a close, we at SWC are committed to helping you avoid any surprises while taking full advantage of all the tax breaks your business qualifies for.

Our recent post, “10 Year-End Tax-Savings Tips for 2025 for Individual Filers” revealed ways that any individual taxpayer can trim their tax bill. In this post, we focus our attention on tax-savings strategies specifically for business owners, starting with the often overlooked review of your businesses estimated tax payments.

1. Review Your Estimated Tax Payments

Finding out your business owes thousands, or tens of thousands of dollars, in taxes because it didn’t pay sufficient estimated taxes over the course of the year, and then having to pay a penalty on top of that, is one of the nasty surprises we want to help you avoid. You have one last chance to correct any shortfall. Here are a couple easy ways to calculate the amount of estimated tax you’re likely to owe:

  • Use last year’s percentage: If the business earned about the same amount of money this year as you did last year, look at the percentage of its income paid in taxes last year (federal, state, and local), and multiply that percentage by the company’s projected income for this year. For example, if the business earned about $200,000 last year and this year and paid 35 percent in combined income tax and self-employment tax last year, expect to pay about 35 percent this year. For a more accurate estimate, subtract business expenses from gross income before multiplying the percentage.
  • Use an online tax estimator: You can find plenty of federal income tax estimators online. However, most are helpful only for estimating the amount of federal income tax you’re likely to owe. The estimate is not likely to include your self-employment tax or state and local taxes. Many calculators are designed only for estimating taxes on employment income, not business income.

After estimating the total income and self-employment tax the business is likely to owe, subtract the amount of estimated tax you have already paid to determine the balances owed to the US Treasury and state and local tax agencies, and then pay those balances by Jan. 15, 2026.

2. Reduce Business Income with Business Expenses

Business expenses are one of the most effective tools for reducing taxable business income because they directly lower net profit (the amount the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) uses to calculate your company’s tax bill). Deductible expenses include the following:

  • Office supplies, software, and subscriptions
  • Equipment purchases
  • Vehicle expenses/mileage
  • Utilities, rent, phone, and internet
  • Contractor payments

Be sure to take advantage of Section 179 expensing, which enables businesses to immediately deduct the full cost of qualifying equipment and certain improvements in the year they’re placed in service instead of having to depreciate them over the course of several years.

For tax years beginning in 2025, your business can immediately deduct up to $2.5m of qualifying business property placed in service. This covers most equipment, off-the-shelf software, and certain improvements to commercial buildings (known as Qualified Improvement Property, or QIP).

Be aware of the following limitations:

  • For purchases made between Jan. 1 and Jan. 19, 2025, the business is only allowed to deduct 40 percent of the cost right away using bonus depreciation. But for anything purchased after Jan. 19, 2025, you can usually deduct 100 percent of the cost in the first year, as long as the asset is placed in service during 2025.
  • Section 179 cannot create a business loss.
  • The deduction phases out once total qualifying purchases exceed $4 million, disappearing completely at $6.5 million.
  • Rules get more complex for partnerships, S corporations, and LLCs taxed as either, so professional guidance from a the pros here at SWC may be needed.

Contact us for details on how the limits work and whether they will affect you or your business entity.

3. Set Up a Retirement Plan for Your Business (If You Haven’t Already)

If you don’t have a retirement plan for your business, you could be missing out on one of the most powerful tax-savings and wealth-building tools available. These plans allow you to make sizable tax-deductible contributions.

Most small businesses use defined contribution plans, such as the following, which are easier to manage than traditional pension plans: Continue reading… Continue reading… Continue reading…

What the Passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Mean for You and Your Business

On July 3, 2025, Congress passed H.R. 1, a sweeping piece of tax legislation known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBB). The OBBB is a nearly 1,000-page tax package aimed at preserving and expanding key provisions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) and so much more.

This pro-growth bill prevents the expiration of certain tax breaks while adding a host of new tax relief measures, including “no tax on tips,” “no tax on overtime pay,” “no tax on car loan interest,” and “no tax on Social Security.” It also provides tax incentives to businesses that manufacture in the U.S. and hire more U.S. workers, and it rolls back many of the green energy credits that we’ve written about in previous blog posts.

Graphic for One Big Beautiful Bill Legislation

This post summarizes the most important changes found in the new law, which was signed by the President on July 4, 2025, focusing on provisions that directly affect individual taxpayers (as compared to corporations). Understanding these updates is important, whether you’re a high net-worth individual or family member, an employee, a small-business owner or entrepreneur, a parent, or a retiree. Or maybe you just want to know how these tax code changes are likely to affect you and how you can maximize your tax savings legally.

Here’s what you need to know.

Individual Tax Rates and the Standard Deduction

The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) reduced most individual income tax rates. The 15 percent bracket dropped to 12 percent, the 25 percent bracket to 22 percent, the 28 percent bracket to 24 percent, the 33 percent bracket to 32 percent, and the top 39.6 percent bracket to 37 percent. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBB) locks in these rate structures permanently.

Tax Relief at a Cost? While tax relief is always welcome, according to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), doing so will add $2.2 trillion to the federal deficit over the next decade.

The standard deduction, which was nearly doubled in 2017, is also made permanent by the OBBB and temporarily increased further for tax years 2025–2028:

  • $15,750 for single filers
  • $23,625 for heads of household
  • $31,500 for joint filers

This expansion reduces the number of itemizers and simplifies filing for most taxpayers. It is estimated to cost $1.4 trillion over 10 years, according to the CBO.

The Child Tax Credit

The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) doubled the Child Tax Credit from $1,000 to $2,000 per child. The OBBB makes this adjustment permanent, increasing it temporarily to $2,500 through 2028. Inflation adjustments begin in 2026. The $500 credit for non-child dependents also becomes permanent. These changes will cost an estimated $817 billion over 10 years, according to the CBO.

The Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction

To maintain parity between pass-through businesses and C corporations, the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act created a 20 percent deduction for qualified business income. The new law keeps this deduction and increases it to 23 percent starting in 2026. It also expands eligibility and adjusts phaseout thresholds to avoid income cliffs. Continue reading… Continue reading… Continue reading…

For Business Owners and Investors: California AB 150 — Pay More Taxes Now in Order to Pay Less in Taxes Later

By |2021-09-10T15:52:30-07:00September 10, 2021|Categories: Legislation|Tags: , |1 Comment

In December 2017, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) became law, representing the most significant federal tax code overhaul in the United States in more than three decades. In part, the TCJA limited the state and local tax (SALT) deduction on federal tax returns to $10,000. In response, several states have enacted an elective pass-through entity tax as a workaround.

On July 16, 2021, California joined the group when its governor signed into law California Assembly Bill 150 (AB 150).

How California Assembly Bill 150 Works

A pass-through entity (PTE), which is also known as a flow-through entity or fiscally transparent entity, is a legal business structure wherein income flows through to the business entity’s owners and investors, rendering the income of the entity as the income of the owners or investors.

California AB 150 — Pay More Taxes Now in Order to Pay Less in Taxes Later

Here’s how California’s elective pass-through entity (PTE) tax works:

  1. A qualifying elective PTE pays 9.3 percent of qualified net income — the taxpayer’s share of income (including interest, dividends, and capital gains) from the PTE — to the California Franchise Tax Board (FTB).
  2. At year’s end, the PTE issues a federal K1 showing the taxpayer’s income from the PTE as 9.3 percent less than what the taxpayer received. This lowers the taxpayer’s federally reported income from the PTE by 9.3 percent.
  3. The taxpayer claims a credit on his or her state tax return equal to the PTE tax paid to the FTB.

Note: The pass-through entity tax reduces only the federally reported income, not state reported income. The PTE files a separate state K1 reporting 100 percent of what it paid the owner.

Here’s an example: Continue reading… Continue reading… Continue reading…

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