Top 10 Tax Tips for the Self-Employed

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Innovative technology and the convenience that the Internet and teleconferencing brings have led more coaches, contractors, professional consultants, and freelance workers to go into business for themselves. Being self employed isn’t a means of simply generating additional income to supplement a job - it has become a full-time endeavor. A lot of full-time workers are setting their own hours while making great incomes. However, self-employed people do have distinct tax concerns. Read on for 10 helpful tax tips to reduce the bite Uncle Sam takes out of your income:

Tax Tips for the Self Employed

 

 

1. Maintain detailed records: This is one of the most important tax tips because, without the big company resources to hire someone to track income and expense records, it is your responsibility to maintain thorough records and keep each receipt to support all of your tax deductions.

2. Deduct your professional space: If you use a separate office space or designate a portion of a spare room in your home or your basement, you are allowed to deduct the percentage of the part of your home you use exclusively for professional purposes. Claim a tax deduction for this percentage from your rent or mortgage payments, utilities, etc. If you keep a cell phone or land line exclusively for business purposes, deduct the amount from any bills.

3. Be sure not to overlook business expenses: Maintain thorough records and keep all receipts for professional travel and other business expenses, which may include supplies for the office, postal and shipping fees, dues for professional memberships, magazine or newspaper subscriptions, and other business items, including software for your computer or technical upgrades.

4. Subtract Daycare costs: The IRS allows deductions for all types of childcare that may be provided during your business hours. These kinds of tax tips are often overlooked but they can save you a lot of money, so be sure to take advantage of the allowed deductions.

5. Create a retirement plan: Consider creating a self-employed retirement plan (that is, a SEP IRA) for tax purposes, as well as for the sake of building money to fund your retirement. You can start with as little as $100, but should you have $2,000 or more, consider a Keogh plan option, which will allow you to keep more money for your retirement in savings that are tax-deferred.

6. Hire your family members: You may subtract medical expenses for the whole family if you hire them legitimately.

7. If needed, defer income: As your own boss, you are allowed to slightly alter your billing so that you can defer income should you find you are in an elevated tax bracket.

8. Get tax refunds from your FICA: Because you are your own employer, you have to pay both the employee and the employer Social Security portions when it comes to your taxes. However, you may deduct 50% of your payments on the 1040 form.

9. If needed, increase expenses: Just like you may choose to defer your income, should you find that you have a high income that pushes you to the next tax bracket, you may conduct more business purchases at the end of the year to augment some of your tax deductions before the 31st of December.

10. Get the correct tax help: Seek tax help from a person who is very well-versed on self- employment issues because your needs differ from a company’s needs.

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