Mike Thrift
Marketing Manager
Sole Proprietorship Taxes: A Complete Guide to Schedule C, Self-Employment Tax, and Deductions
A practical 2026 walkthrough of how the IRS taxes sole proprietors — covering Schedule C, the 15.3% self-employment tax on 92.35% of net earnings, quarterly estimated payments, the QBI deduction, and the threshold where an S-Corp election starts paying off.
Switching from QuickBooks: A Complete Migration Guide for Small Businesses
An eight-step guide to migrating off QuickBooks without losing your audit trail, covering cutover timing, data export limits, parallel running, opening-balance imports, and how to evaluate replacements like Xero, FreshBooks, and plain-text tools such as Beancount.
Tax Credits Explained: The Complete 2026 Guide for Individuals and Businesses
A 2026 reference for U.S. tax credits — how they differ from deductions, which credits are refundable, and the major individual and business credits with current dollar limits, including the $8,231 EITC max, $2,200 Child Tax Credit, and up to $9,600 WOTC per qualifying hire.
Are Tax Preparation Fees Deductible? A 2026 Guide for Business Owners and Self-Employed Filers
Personal tax prep fees are no longer federally deductible after the 2026 One Big Beautiful Bill Act, but business owners and self-employed filers can still deduct the business portion on Schedule C, E, F, 1065, 1120-S, or 1120—if they allocate and document it correctly.
The Tax Professional's FAQ: Working with Bookkeepers Without the Friction
A practical FAQ for CPAs and tax preparers who inherit a client's books from a third-party bookkeeper—covering opening balance verification, year-end document checklists, 1099 ownership, cash-to-accrual conversions, and the handoff habits that prevent March surprises.
Tax Relief Companies: How to Tell Legitimate Help From Scams in 2026
How to distinguish legitimate tax resolution firms from Offer in Compromise mills—what services should cost in 2026, the IRS-flagged red flags that should end a sales call, and the free alternatives most callers never hear about.
Taxable Income Explained: What Counts, What Doesn't, and How to Pay Less in 2026
A precise 2026 guide to taxable income — which dollars the IRS counts (wages, tips, capital gains, cancelled debt), which are excluded (gifts, inheritances, Roth distributions, muni bond interest), the step-by-step AGI-to-taxable-income calculation, and seven legal strategies to reduce the final number, including new One Big Beautiful Bill Act deductions for tipped, overtime, and senior taxpayers.
The US Tax Code Explained: A Practical Guide for Small Business Owners
A structural breakdown of Title 26—the Internal Revenue Code—covering how the tax code is organized, the 2026 changes most relevant to small businesses (permanent 100% bonus depreciation, a $2.5M Section 179 cap, expanded QBI), and the records you need to defend every deduction you claim.
W-2 vs W-4: The Two Tax Forms Every Employee and Employer Must Know
A practical comparison of Form W-4 (the withholding certificate employees give employers) and Form W-2 (the year-end wage statement employers send the IRS), with 2026 OBBBA updates—$2,200 Child Tax Credit, qualified tips and overtime deductions—and the filing mistakes that quietly cost workers refunds.
How to Deduct Website Development Costs: A Tax Guide for Small Business Owners
A category-by-category breakdown of how small businesses deduct website costs in 2026 under Section 174A, including the OBBBA retroactive election deadline of July 6, 2026, and where each expense lands on Schedule C.
What Happens at the IRS After You File: A Realistic Processing Timeline
A walkthrough of what the IRS actually does with a return after you file. 24-48 hour acceptance checks, automated math-error and information-return matching, the three Where's My Refund statuses, the 21-day refund target, common rejection reasons, and what each CP notice code means.
When Can You File Taxes? The Complete 2026 Filing Season Timeline
The IRS opens the 2026 filing season on January 26, with W-2s and most 1099s due by January 31. Filing early protects against refund fraud, speeds direct-deposit refunds within 21 days, and beats the April rush — but waiting can be smarter when K-1s or corrected brokerage 1099s are still in transit.