497 с тегом "Tax Compliance"
Stay compliant with tax regulations and filing requirements
Personal Tax Deductions and Credits: The 2026 Guide for Individuals
A line-by-line walkthrough of the 2026 deductions and credits that move the needle for individuals—the $16,100 standard deduction, the new $40,400 SALT cap, the $2,200 Child Tax Credit, the up-to-$8,231 EITC, and the new Schedule 1-A deductions for tips, overtime, and vehicle loan interest.
Small Business Tax Deductions 2026: The Complete Master List
A category-by-category guide to every major small business tax deduction for 2026, including the $2,560,000 Section 179 cap, 60% bonus depreciation, the 68.5-cent mileage rate, the 50% meals rule, and the documentation needed to defend each one on audit.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Business Travel Tax Deductions in 2026: What You Can (and Can't) Write Off
A 2026 guide to deducting business travel on Schedule C — covering the IRS tax home rule, the $178 CONUS per diem, 50% meal limits, 75% international business-day threshold, and the documentation habits that survive an audit.
Corporate Transparency Act in 2026: What Small Business Owners Actually Need to Know
In March 2025, FinCEN's interim final rule removed roughly 99.8% of U.S. entities from Corporate Transparency Act reporting. Domestic LLCs and corporations no longer file BOI reports, but foreign-registered companies, state-level disclosure laws, and bank due diligence still demand clean beneficial ownership records.
Doing Business in Wyoming: The 2026 Tax and Compliance Guide
A 2026 operating guide to Wyoming business taxes and compliance—4% sales tax with a $100,000 economic nexus threshold, the anniversary-month annual report, registered agent rules, and the federal layer that catches foreign-owned LLCs.
Form 1120: The Complete C Corporation Tax Return Guide for 2026
Form 1120 is the annual U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return every domestic C corporation must file, even in zero-income years. A 2026 walkthrough of deadlines, schedules C through M-2, estimated tax rules, and the eight most common filing mistakes.
Hiring an Out-of-State Employee: The Payroll Tax Setup Playbook
A step-by-step checklist for setting up payroll taxes when you hire a remote employee in a new state — SUTA, income tax withholding, workers' comp, local taxes, reciprocity forms, and the convenience-of-the-employer rule.