C corporations face a 5% monthly failure-to-file penalty and a $525 minimum for returns over 60 days late — this guide maps every 2025 federal tax deadline, explains penalty mechanics for C corps, S corps, and partnerships, and outlines a year-round compliance system.
A practical breakdown of CPAs, enrolled agents, and non-credentialed tax preparers—covering credentials, IRS representation rights, 2026 pricing, and when each option makes financial sense for your business.
A practical guide to business asset depreciation covering MACRS, Section 179 (2026 limit $2,560,000), bonus depreciation restored to 100%, five depreciation methods, recapture rules, and the most common mistakes that cause small business owners to overpay taxes.
Self-employed workers and freelancers who skip quarterly estimated tax payments face IRS underpayment penalties even when they file on time — here's how the pay-as-you-go system works, how to calculate what you owe each quarter, and how the safe harbor rule protects you from guessing wrong.
FICA taxes fund Social Security and Medicare at a combined 15.3% rate — 7.65% each from employer and employee. Covers 2026 rates, the $184,500 Social Security wage base, self-employment tax rules, exemptions, and the compliance mistakes that most commonly trigger IRS penalties.
The 2025 $20,000/200-transaction threshold for Form 1099-K is reinstated—here's what freelancers, gig workers, and online sellers need to know about reconciling gross receipts and reporting taxable income correctly.
A practical guide to sales tax for small business owners — understand physical and economic nexus, apply the correct rate across 10,000+ U.S. jurisdictions, and avoid the penalties that catch most growing businesses off guard.
Step-by-step guide to calculating federal tax liability for small business owners and self-employed individuals—covering gross income, 2025 tax brackets, self-employment tax at 15.3%, quarterly estimated payments, and legal strategies to reduce what you owe.
A practical guide to hiring an accountant for your small business — covering when you actually need one, the difference between a CPA, general accountant, and enrolled agent, what to ask in an interview, and what you'll pay ($200–$5,000+ depending on scope).
Neglecting bookkeeping for a year costs $3,500–$8,000 in catch-up fees, plus a 30–50% CPA premium at tax time. Here's a practical system for staying current — daily, weekly, or monthly — and why real-time financial records are a business asset, not a chore.