Small Business Guide to Reducing Your Tax Burden Legally — Part 1: Tax Planning
Welcome to Part 1 of our 12-part series on how to reduce your tax burden legally. Here in Part 1, we address the first and most important step — tax planning. As the old saying goes, “Failing to plan is planning to fail,” and this is especially true when you are trying to reduce your tax burden legally.
Consider for a moment the first time you drove a car? If you were doing it right, you spent far more time looking where you were going than where you came from. You don’t drive forward staring in the rearview mirror. Unfortunately, that’s how most tax “specialists” are geared. They spend so much time looking back at last year’s finances that they rarely advise their clients to look forward.
They can tell you all about what you earned and spent last year and how much you owe in taxes as a result, but they rarely think to tell you what you should do today to save on taxes next year. Even the few who do tell their clients what to do rarely tell them when or how to do it.
Taking a proactive, forward-looking approach with tax planning can simplify next year’s taxes and save you a considerable amount of money, especially if you’re a small-business owner. Tax planning provides small-business owners with two valuable benefits:
Benefit No. 1: First, tax planning is a key component in your financial protection. As a small to medium size business owner, you have two ways to increase your net profits: financial offense (earning more) and financial defense (spending less). For most small-business owners, taxes are the biggest expense, so a big part of playing financial defense involves reducing the tax burden. And you do that through savvy tax planning.
Benefit No. 2: Second, participating in tax planning almost always ensures results. You can spend a huge amount of time, effort, and money promoting your business with no guarantee of achieving positive results. In contrast, every tax-savings initiative you implement guarantees a return on your investment. But those guaranteed results start with planning. For example, you can’t deduct medical expenses paid out of a medical expense reimbursement plan if you haven’t set up such a plan ahead of time.
To get this series started, indulge us for a moment as we cover how the tax system works here in the United States of America.
Understanding How the Tax System Works
A general knowledge about how the tax system works lays the foundation for understanding specific tax-savings approaches we present later on in this post. Here’s a graphic demonstrating how the tax system works: Continue reading… Continue reading… Continue reading…
