Mike Thrift
Marketing Manager
Form 8941: The Small Business Owner's Guide to Health Insurance Tax Credits
Form 8941 lets small businesses claim up to 50% of employee health insurance premiums as a direct tax credit — but only if you have fewer than 25 FTE employees, pay average wages below ~$65,000, and purchase coverage through the SHOP Marketplace. Here's how to calculate and claim it before your two-year eligibility window closes.
Form 8995 and the QBI Deduction: A Complete Guide for Small Business Owners
The QBI deduction lets pass-through business owners deduct up to 20% of qualified business income—Form 8995 is how you claim it. Covers who qualifies, income thresholds, SSTB rules, calculation examples, and 2026 permanent-status changes.
Form 940: The Complete Guide to Employer's Annual Federal Unemployment Tax Return
Form 940 is the IRS return employers use to report annual FUTA tax liability—6% on the first $7,000 of each employee's wages, reducible to 0.6% with timely state unemployment tax payments. Covers who must file, quarterly deposit thresholds, how to claim the state tax credit, Schedule A for multi-state employers, and penalties for late filing.
Form 941: The Complete Guide for Employers
Form 941 is the quarterly payroll tax return every employer must file—reporting withheld income tax, Social Security, and Medicare. Covers who files, 2026 deadlines, how to complete each section, penalty rates (up to 15% for late deposits), and the $100,000 next-day deposit rule.
Hiring a Tax Professional: Pros, Cons, and How to Choose the Right One
A practical breakdown of when hiring a CPA or enrolled agent pays off versus when DIY software is enough—including cost benchmarks, credential differences, and red flags to avoid.
How Far Back Can the IRS Audit You? The Complete Guide to Audit Statutes of Limitations
The IRS has 3 years to audit most returns, 6 years if you omit 25%+ of gross income, and unlimited time for fraud or unfiled returns — here's what each window means for your record-keeping strategy and audit risk.
How the IRS Collects Unpaid Taxes: Liens, Levies, and Your Options
The IRS follows a structured escalation from notices to liens, levies, and asset seizure when taxes go unpaid. Learn how each tool works, your rights as a taxpayer, and the relief options—installment agreements, Offer in Compromise, and Currently Not Collectible status.
How Long Can You Go Without Filing Taxes? The Real Consequences Explained
The IRS has no grace period for unfiled returns—failure-to-file penalties run 5% per month up to 25%, the statute of limitations never starts on an unfiled return, and refunds expire after three years. Here's what the enforcement timeline looks like and how to get back into compliance.
How Much Do You Owe the IRS? 5 Ways to Find Out (and What to Do Next)
Check your IRS balance using 5 methods—online account, phone, notices, transcript, or in-person—then choose the right path: pay in full, set up a payment plan, or apply for penalty abatement. Covers 2026 penalty rates and collection timelines.
How Much Does It Cost to File Taxes? A Complete 2026 Guide
Tax filing costs in 2026 range from $0 with IRS Free File (AGI ≤ $89,000) to $2,500+ for CPAs handling complex returns—covers all four filing options, what drives costs higher, and five ways to reduce your bill.
How to File an Amended Tax Return: A Complete Guide to Form 1040-X
The IRS receives about 3 million Form 1040-X filings annually. Learn when you must file an amended return, how to complete the three-column form correctly, and what to expect during the 8–16 week processing window.
How to File a Federal Tax Extension: A Complete Guide
A step-by-step guide to filing a federal tax extension with Form 4868 or 7004 — including how to estimate what you owe, avoid failure-to-pay penalties, and meet the safe harbor threshold to prevent underpayment charges.