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Mike Thrift

Mike Thrift

Marketing Manager

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PTET in 2026: The SALT Cap Workaround for S-Corps and Partnerships
·mike

PTET in 2026: The SALT Cap Workaround for S-Corps and Partnerships

A 2026 guide to the Pass-Through Entity Tax — how 36+ jurisdictions let S-corps and partnerships convert capped state income taxes into a fully deductible federal business expense, even after OBBBA raised the SALT cap to $40,400.

tax-planning
s-corp
partnerships
llc
+4
Reverse 1031 Exchange: How to Buy Your Replacement Property Before Selling the Old One
·mike

Reverse 1031 Exchange: How to Buy Your Replacement Property Before Selling the Old One

A reverse 1031 exchange lets a real estate investor close on a replacement property before selling the relinquished one by parking title with an Exchange Accommodation Titleholder under Revenue Procedure 2000-37's safe harbor. The taxpayer must identify the relinquished property within 45 days and complete the swap within 180 days, with no extensions. EAT fees typically run $5,000 to $15,000 above a forward exchange, so the deferred gain needs to be large enough to justify the cost.

real-estate
1031-exchange
tax-planning
capital-gains
+3
ROBS Rollover for Business Startups: How to Use Retirement Funds to Finance a Small Business Without Tax or Penalty
·mike

ROBS Rollover for Business Startups: How to Use Retirement Funds to Finance a Small Business Without Tax or Penalty

A working guide to Rollover as Business Startup (ROBS) arrangements — the five required steps, why only a C corporation qualifies, the Form 5500 and prohibited-transaction rules, IRS-documented failure rates, and when alternatives like SBA loans or 401(k) participant loans make more sense.

retirement-plans
c-corporation
financing
small-business
+4
Roth Conversion Ladder: How FIRE Investors Tap Retirement Accounts Penalty-Free Before Age 59½
·mike

Roth Conversion Ladder: How FIRE Investors Tap Retirement Accounts Penalty-Free Before Age 59½

A Roth conversion ladder converts traditional IRA dollars to Roth in annual tranches, each unlocking penalty-free five tax years later — the core mechanism FIRE retirees use to tap pre-tax accounts before age 59½ while filling low tax brackets.

retirement-savings
tax-planning
ira
personal-finance
+3
Rule 72(t) SEPP: How to Tap Your IRA Before 59½ Without the 10% Penalty
·mike

Rule 72(t) SEPP: How to Tap Your IRA Before 59½ Without the 10% Penalty

How Rule 72(t) Series of Substantially Equal Periodic Payments (SEPP) lets retirees tap an IRA or 401(k) before 59½ without the 10% early-withdrawal penalty — covering the three IRS calculation methods, the 5% interest-rate floor from Notice 2022-6, and the recapture-tax mistakes that bust early retirement plans.

retirement-plans
ira
retirement-savings
tax-planning
+3
Schedule M-1 and M-3: Reconciling GAAP Book Income to Taxable Income
·mike

Schedule M-1 and M-3: Reconciling GAAP Book Income to Taxable Income

Schedule M-1 and M-3 reconcile a corporation's GAAP book income to taxable income. This guide explains the $10M and $50M asset thresholds, permanent versus temporary differences, and the recurring reconciling items — depreciation, meals, federal tax expense, bad debt reserves, and stock-based compensation — that draw IRS scrutiny.

tax-compliance
reconciliation
tax-preparation
financial-reporting
+4
Section 121 Home Sale Exclusion: How Homeowners Can Skip Up to $500,000 in Capital Gains Taxes
·mike

Section 121 Home Sale Exclusion: How Homeowners Can Skip Up to $500,000 in Capital Gains Taxes

How Section 121 lets U.S. homeowners exclude up to $250,000 ($500,000 for joint filers) of capital gains on a primary home sale — covering the 24-month ownership and use tests, the two-year frequency rule, partial exclusions, depreciation recapture, and the nonqualified-use allocation.

tax
tax-planning
real-estate
home-ownership
+4
Section 163(j) Business Interest Limitation: The 30% ATI Cap and OBBBA's EBITDA Restoration
·mike

Section 163(j) Business Interest Limitation: The 30% ATI Cap and OBBBA's EBITDA Restoration

OBBBA permanently restored the EBITDA-based ATI calculation for Section 163(j) starting in 2025, expanding deductible business interest for capital-intensive companies. A guide to the 30% cap, the ~$31M small business exemption, the 35% syndicate trap, EBIE allocations from partnerships, S-corp differences, and Form 8990 reporting.

tax
tax-planning
tax-deductions
small-business
+4
Section 199A REIT Dividend Deduction: The 20% Tax Break Most REIT Investors Don't Fully Use
·mike

Section 199A REIT Dividend Deduction: The 20% Tax Break Most REIT Investors Don't Fully Use

Section 199A lets investors deduct 20% of qualified REIT dividends from taxable income, dropping the top federal rate from 37% to about 29.6%. This guide covers Box 5 of Form 1099-DIV, the 45-day holding-period rule, Form 8995, and how OBBBA made the deduction permanent.

tax-deductions
tax-planning
real-estate
personal-finance
+3
Section 25D Residential Clean Energy Credit: Final-Year Claim, Carryforward, and TPO Alternatives
·mike

Section 25D Residential Clean Energy Credit: Final-Year Claim, Carryforward, and TPO Alternatives

Section 25D's 30% residential clean energy credit ends December 31, 2025 under the OBBBA. How to file the final-year claim on Form 5695, carry unused credit forward indefinitely, and use TPO leases or Section 48E to capture value in 2026.

tax-credits
tax
home-ownership
tax-planning
+4
Section 280E: How Cannabis Businesses Survive a 70% Effective Tax Rate
·mike

Section 280E: How Cannabis Businesses Survive a 70% Effective Tax Rate

Section 280E bars cannabis businesses from deducting ordinary expenses, pushing federal effective tax rates past 70%. A walkthrough of the math, the COGS lever under Section 471, key Tax Court rulings (CHAMP, Olive, Harborside), and what 2026 rescheduling could change.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-planning
cost-of-goods-sold
+4
Section 280F Luxury Auto Depreciation Limits: The SUV Loophole and How to Maximize Your Business Vehicle Write-Off
·mike

Section 280F Luxury Auto Depreciation Limits: The SUV Loophole and How to Maximize Your Business Vehicle Write-Off

Section 280F caps first-year depreciation on passenger autos at $20,300 in 2026, but SUVs and trucks rated above 6,000 lbs GVWR escape those limits and can combine a $32,000 Section 179 deduction with 100% bonus depreciation. A practical guide to the 2026 numbers, the heavy-vehicle and pickup carve-outs, the 50% business-use cliff, and the mileage-log standards an IRS auditor expects.

tax
tax-deductions
tax-planning
depreciation
+5
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