Business survival and success requires complying with all applicable laws and regulations, including (or maybe especially) tax. Leveraging efficient tax planning strategies can reduce tax liability, maximize cash flow and business value, and help you achieve financial goals.
When searching for the best ways to optimize your tax strategy, you’re likely to hear many misconceptions. Some might say that major corporations and wealthy people don’t pay taxes, that only business owners pay business taxes, expensing is a loophole, or that you don’t need to pay tax for goods and services paid through cryptocurrency.
We want to help you remain tax-compliant and maximize your profits by examining the value of actionable and proactive tax planning strategies.
Tax planning analyzes your business’s financial health to reduce tax liability, remain compliant, and achieve financial goals. It often requires tweaking your business to take advantage of deductions and credits to reduce the tax you must pay.
Taxes directly impact your business’s cash flow and overall profitability:
Higher tax rates force firms to earmark more funds for tax payments, reducing their profit margins. Conversely, lower tax rates help you retain more earnings, thus increasing profit margins.
Tax laws and regulations are constantly changing. Any changes to existing statutes affect a business’s tax planning strategies and typically impact profits.
Taxes bring more cost than just quarterly payments. Compliance often forces businesses to allocate resources to tax planning and legal advice.
Governments offer deductions and exemptions to encourage certain types of investment by allowing specific expenses and investments to reduce taxable income.
Incentives and credits are similar to deductions in that governments offer them to promote particular niches or activities. Leveraging such tax credits and incentives reduces tax liability and increases profitability.
Remember that tax planning and maximizing incentives are not the same as tax avoidance or evasion.
The difference should be clear: tax planning improves your business’s financial position by reducing the taxes you have to pay. Tax avoidance is a legal means that allows you to take advantage of all possible tax benefits to reduce your tax liability.
On the other hand, tax evasion is an illegal act that involves false declarations to avoid paying taxes. Tax evasion often occurs through inflating expenses and deductions and understating profits, revenues, or capital gains.
Early tax planning can afford many benefits.
Early tax planning helps businesses realize and fully utilize all available tax deductions and credits, significantly reducing tax liability.
The legal structure of your business can also affect your taxes. S-corps are often taxed differently than C-corps, LLCs, and sole proprietorships. Your accountant can help you decide the best situation for your firm.
Tax planning helps identify and utilize available incentives and credits to increase business value and profit margin and reduce tax liability.
The last thing you want to hear is that your business is non-compliant. Early tax planning helps you comply with all tax laws and regulations, eliminating the chances of tax penalties and interest charges.
Follow the strategies below to reduce tax liability and maximize profitability significantly.
To reduce tax liability for the current financial year, you may be able to delay income, prepay costs, buy assets, or use a credit card to make end-year payments (saving cash).
Depreciation and amortization are accounting methods used to distribute the value of tangible and intangible capital assets over their useful life. Both make it possible to reduce taxable income and help you manage cash flows by spreading expenses over several years.
Investing in your employees may reduce your taxable business income. Education, office accessibility upgrades, and health insurance and retirement plans, among other benefits, are often deductible expenses.
This strategy allows business owners to save for retirement while receiving tax benefits like tax deferral with zero charges on the interest accrued. Many plans come with massive tax advantages.
Businesses can invest in tangible and intangible capital assets and use depreciation and amortization to reduce the amount of tax payable.
Taxes often come to mind in January, but tax planning is a year-round event. Set up a tax planning calendar to easily monitor and manage tax-related tasks throughout the year.
Involving key stakeholders and employees in tax planning helps businesses make inclusive and informed tax decisions. This way, you can monitor and adjust tax activities to remain compliant with tax laws, mitigate risk and uncertainty, increase the value of the business, and reduce tax liability.
To be sure, taxes are an essential part of a functioning society. But why pay more tax than you need to?
Although navigating complex tax landscapes can feel challenging, now is the perfect time to start. You can get your business on the right track by implementing tax planning strategies to maximize tax benefits you didn’t know existed and achieve your long-term financial goals.
How to get started? Contact Founder’s CPA today, and we’ll help you navigate the complex tax landscape and optimize your financial health through effective tax planning.