• Stretch your college student’s spending money with the dependent tax credit

    If you’re the parent of a child who is age 17 to 23, and you pay all (or most) of his or her expenses, you may be surprised to learn you’re not eligible for the child tax credit. But there’s a dependent tax credit that may be available to you. It’s not as valuable as the child tax credit, but when you’re saving for college [...]

    Published On: March 21, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • The 2018 gift tax return deadline is almost here

    Did you make large gifts to your children, grandchildren or other heirs last year? If so, it’s important to determine whether you’re required to file a 2018 gift tax return — or whether filing one would be beneficial even if it isn’t required. Filing requirementsGenerally, you must file a gift tax return for 2018 if, during the tax year, you made gifts: That exceeded the [...]

    Published On: March 20, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Divide and conquer: How joint cost allocating works

    In recent years watchdog groups, the media and others have increased their scrutiny of how much not-for-profits spend on programs vs. administration and fundraising. Your organization likely feels pressure to prove that it dedicates most of its resources to programming. However, accounting rules require that you record the full cost of any activity with a fundraising component as a fundraising expense.How then can you maintain [...]

    Published On: March 12, 2019Categories: Featured, Not for Profit
  • Vehicle-expense deduction ins and outs for individual taxpayers

    It’s not just businesses that can deduct vehicle-related expenses. Individuals also can deduct them in certain circumstances. Unfortunately, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) might reduce your deduction compared to what you claimed on your 2017 return. For 2017, miles driven for business, moving, medical and charitable purposes were potentially deductible. For 2018 through 2025, business and moving miles are deductible only in much [...]

    Published On: March 11, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Will leasing equipment or buying it be more tax efficient for your business?

    Recent changes to federal tax law and accounting rules could affect whether you decide to lease or buy equipment or other fixed assets. Although there’s no universal “right” choice, many businesses that formerly leased assets are now deciding to buy them.Pros and cons of leasingFrom a cash flow perspective, leasing can be more attractive than buying. And leasing does provide some tax benefits: Lease payments [...]

    Published On: March 11, 2019Categories: Featured, Small Business Tax
  • Will leasing equipment or buying it be more tax efficient for your business?

    Recent changes to federal tax law and accounting rules could affect whether you decide to lease or buy equipment or other fixed assets. Although there’s no universal “right” choice, many businesses that formerly leased assets are now deciding to buy them.Pros and cons of leasingFrom a cash flow perspective, leasing can be more attractive than buying. And leasing does provide some tax benefits: Lease payments [...]

    Published On: March 4, 2019Categories: Featured, Small Business Tax
  • The home office deduction: Actual expenses vs. the simplified method

    If you run your business from your home or perform certain functions at home that are related to your business, you might be able to claim a home office deduction against your business income on your 2018 income tax return. Thanks to a tax law change back in 2013, there are now two methods for claiming this deduction: the actual expenses method and the simplified [...]

    Published On: February 27, 2019Categories: Featured, Small Business Tax
  • Careful tax planning required for incentive stock options

    Incentive stock options (ISOs) are a popular form of compensation for executives and other employees of corporations. They allow you to buy company stock in the future at a fixed price equal to or greater than the stock’s fair market value on the ISO grant date. If the stock appreciates, you can buy shares at a price below what they’re then trading for. But careful [...]

    Published On: February 26, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Beware the Ides of March — if you own a pass-through entity

    Shakespeare’s words don’t apply just to Julius Caesar; they also apply to calendar-year partnerships, S corporations and limited liability companies (LLCs) treated as partnerships or S corporations for tax purposes. Why? The Ides of March, more commonly known as March 15, is the federal income tax filing deadline for these “pass-through” entities. Not-so-ancient historyUntil the 2016 tax year, the filing deadline for partnerships was the [...]

    Published On: February 25, 2019Categories: Featured, Small Business Tax
  • Some of your deductions may be smaller (or nonexistent) when you file your 2018 tax return

    While the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) reduces most income tax rates and expands some tax breaks, it limits or eliminates several itemized deductions that have been valuable to many individual taxpayers. Here are five deductions you may see shrink or disappear when you file your 2018 income tax return:1. State and local tax deduction. For 2018 through 2025, your total itemized deduction for [...]

    Published On: February 22, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • IRS provides QBI deduction guidance in the nick of time

    When President Trump signed into law the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) in December 2017, much was made of the dramatic cut in corporate tax rates. But the TCJA also includes a generous deduction for smaller businesses that operate as pass-through entities, with income that is “passed through” to owners and taxed as individual income. The IRS issued proposed regulations for the qualified business [...]

    Published On: February 18, 2019Categories: Business, Featured
  • Financial statements tell your business’s story, inside and out

    Ask many entrepreneurs and small business owners to show you their financial statements and they’ll likely open a laptop and show you their bookkeeping software. Although tracking financial transactions is critical, spreadsheets aren’t financial statements.In short, financial statements are detailed and carefully organized reports about the financial activities and overall position of a business. As any company evolves, it will likely encounter an increasing need [...]

    Published On: February 18, 2019Categories: Business, Featured
  • Why you shouldn’t wait to file your 2018 income tax return

    The IRS opened the 2018 income tax return filing season on January 28. Even if you typically don’t file until much closer to the April 15 deadline, this year consider filing as soon as you can. Why? You can potentially protect yourself from tax identity theft — and reap other benefits, too. What is tax identity theft?In a tax identity theft scheme, a thief uses [...]

    Published On: February 15, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • How to convince donors to remove “restricted” from their gifts

    Restricted gifts — or donations with conditions attached — can be difficult for not-for-profits to manage. Unlike unrestricted gifts, these donations can’t be poured into your general operating fund and be used where they’re most needed. Instead, restricted gifts generally are designated to fund a specific program or initiative, such as a building or scholarship fund. It’s not only unethical, but dangerous, not to comply [...]

    Published On: February 14, 2019Categories: Featured, Not for Profit