Six Tax Prep Tips to Help Small Businesses Get Ready for Tax Season

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By Natalia Olson-Urtecho

As you settle down after the busy holiday season, you will soon face another season–tax season. Small business owners need to understand how taxes may affect their businesses.

It is important to file properly, avoid audits and claim the right tax deductions, so here are six tips to help ease the burden of tax preparation and help you get ready for the April 15 deadline.

1. Keep Good Records: Proper record keeping year-round is the first step to ensuring your taxes are filed accurately and that you have the paperwork you need to back up your deduction claims just in case you’re audited.
2. Understand Your Deductions: What small business deductions can you take? Do you have the documentation and original receipts to back them up? Remember, tax credits and deductions change each year.
3. Utilize the Small Business Jobs Act Tax Provisions: The Small Business Jobs Act of 2010 President Obama signed into law has more than 17 tax provisions to decrease the tax burden for small businesses. Several of the law’s provisions may be taken advantage of during this year’s tax season to provide great savings for your business.
4. Remember the Tax Credits in the Affordable Care Act: These tax credits will allow small businesses to cover up to 35 percent of the premiums a small business pays to cover its workers. In 2014, the rate will increase to 50 percent.
5. Avoid Common Audit Traps: It is very important to be aware of potential red flags and act on them before the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) does.

  • Classifying Employees as Independent Contractors – Independent contractors and employees are not the same and it’s important to understand the difference. To the IRS, misclassification can be seen as an attempt to avoid payroll taxes, and noncompliance can bring penalties and back taxes.
  • Home Office Deduction – This deduction is very specific, and not all home-based businesses qualify. Likewise, if you run your business from a commercial location and claim the home office deduction, you might trigger some interest from the IRS. Know how to determine if you are eligible to claim it and what specific expenses you can write off.
  • Large Sum Miscellaneous Deductions – If you claim a large amount of itemized deductions relative to your income, the IRS may get suspicious. Likewise, if you bucket a large amount of miscellaneous expenses, you may raise eyebrows. Be specific and label every deduction.

6. Keep Business and Personal Expenses Separate – The IRS scrutinizes personal expenses that may have been claimed as a business expense, such as the use of a business vehicle for personal use. Be diligent about keeping good records and maintain separate bank and credit card accounts for your business.

For additional information on these tax tips and current year tax deductions, visit the SBA Small Business Tax Guide or contact the IRS at www.irs.gov. Also, follow us on our regional Twitter #sbamidatlantic and Facebook www.facebook.com/SBAMidAtlantic.

About the Author

Natalia Olson-Urtecho is the regional administrator for the U.S. Small Business Administration. She was previously founder, president and CEO of EG, a company dedicated to helping public and private entities become more profitable through environmentally friendly and socially responsible planning and strategies. Before founding EG, Olson-Urtecho was a transportation and land use planner at the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission and was director of global initiatives at H2L2. Olson-Urtecho has more than 15 years of experience working with international, regional and local entities. She was previously appointed to the U.S. Innovation Advisory Board and to the Philadelphia City Planning Commission and Zoning Code Commission. Olson-Urtecho received the Business Journal 2010 Minority Business Leader Award and in 2009 received the Women of Distinction Award for her work toward building a green economy. She has lived in seven countries and speaks Spanish, French and Portuguese. She holds a master’s degree in city and regional planning from the University of Pennsylvania, School of Design, and a bachelor’s degree in political science from Northeastern University. She has been a guest lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania and Temple University.

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