Mike Thrift
Marketing Manager
The Wash Sale Rule: How Active Investors and Crypto Traders Walk Into a Tax Trap
A plain-English guide to IRS Section 1091 — the 61-day window, what counts as "substantially identical," the IRA trap that destroys losses permanently, the current crypto exemption, and how to report a wash sale on Form 8949.
Cap Table Management for Startups: A Practical Guide from Seed to Exit
A practical guide to managing a startup cap table from incorporation to exit — covering SAFEs, priced rounds, option pool sizing, 409A valuations, vesting mechanics, dilution math, and the diligence-ready habits that prevent costly equity surprises.
Cost Segregation Studies: How Real Estate Investors Turn a Building Into Five-Figure Tax Savings
A cost segregation study reclassifies a building's components into shorter MACRS lives, unlocking the 100% bonus depreciation permanently restored by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of July 2025. On a $1M residential rental, that swings first-year tax savings from roughly $10,700 to roughly $90,600—provided the investor clears IRC §469 passive activity loss limits.
FBAR and FATCA Decoded: The Foreign Account Reporting Rules That Cost Americans Billions
A plain-English guide to FBAR and FATCA for U.S. taxpayers — who must file, the $10,000 aggregate threshold, Form 8938 tiers, post-Bittner penalties capped at $16,536 per form, and how the Streamlined Procedures fix years of missed filings without penalty.
The QBI Deduction Decoded: How Section 199A Can Cut Your Tax Bill by 20%
Section 199A lets pass-through owners deduct up to 20% of qualified business income. This guide covers the 2026 thresholds, W-2 wage and UBIA limits, the SSTB trap, rental real estate safe harbor, the aggregation election, and the new $400 minimum deduction.
The R&D Tax Credit for Startups and Small Businesses: How to Claim Up to $500,000 Against Payroll Taxes
Section 41 lets qualified small businesses offset up to $500,000 of annual payroll taxes with the federal R&D credit. This guide covers the four-part qualification test, qualifying wages and cloud spend, the QSB election on Form 6765, and what OBBBA changed for 2025 and 2026 filings.
Restaurant Accounting Demystified: Prime Cost, Tip Pooling, and COGS
A working guide to the three numbers that decide whether a restaurant makes money — prime cost, food and beverage COGS, and tip pooling — with 2026 benchmarks, FLSA rules, and a weekly accounting cadence.
Solo 401(k) vs SEP IRA: The Self-Employed Retirement Plan Decision That Could Save You Thousands
In 2026, a self-employed person earning $100,000 can contribute about $18,587 to a SEP IRA versus $43,087 to a Solo 401(k). This guide compares 2026 contribution limits, Roth options, December 31 deadlines, and Form 5500-EZ filing thresholds so freelancers and consultants can choose the right plan.
State Residency Tax Planning: How to Legally Lower Your Tax Bill by Changing Domicile
A practical guide to changing state domicile for tax savings—covering the difference between residency and domicile, the nine no-income-tax states, the 183-day statutory residency trap, and how high-tax states reconstruct your year from cell tower pings, EZ-Pass records, and credit card data.
Tax Solutions for Small Businesses: How to Pick the Right One Without Overpaying
A category-by-category comparison of the five real tax solutions small businesses use in 2026 — DIY software, professional-grade platforms, hybrid bookkeeping subscriptions, local CPAs, and in-person chains — with price ranges, fit criteria, and signs you've outgrown your current setup.
How to File Your Business Taxes: A Practical Guide for Sole Props, LLCs, S-Corps, and C-Corps
A step-by-step walkthrough of business tax filing by entity type — Schedule C for sole props, Form 1065 for partnerships, 1120-S for S-corps, and 1120 for C-corps — with 2026 deadlines, document checklists, audit triggers, and when DIY software stops being enough.
Cat Food, Body Oil, and Stage Costumes: Weird Tax Stories Every Business Owner Should Know
A walk through five tax-court rulings — Seacat's cat food, Wheir's body oil, ABBA's costumes, the Hess implants case, and Capone-style evasion — and the documentation, commingling, and "ordinary and necessary" rules they expose for small business owners.