6 Reasons for Mid-Year Tax Planning

Mid-Year Tax PlanningRight smack dab in the middle of summer might seem like the worst time to think about your taxes, but it’s actually the perfect time. Here’s what taking a pause in July allows you to do.

Get Organized

Do you have all your receipts? Are your records up to date? Did you move, get married, or change your name? If so, you’ll need to notify the IRS. In fact, you can create an individual IRS online account to look at your tax records, manage communication preferences, make payments, and more.

Take a Financial Snapshot

When was the last time you looked at your checking, savings or investments to see if you’re where you want to be? If you take the time now, you can start with January and analyze the big picture. You can see if you’re happy with the growth of your investments and discover where you can make adjustments. Taking time to do this now will pay off in the long run.

Examine Your Paycheck

Are your earnings correct? Are you withholding enough taxes? As mentioned at the top, any big life event (divorce, having a child, buying a home) can affect your taxes. If you need help, the IRS has a Tax Withholding Estimator that can help you figure out your income tax, credits, adjustments, and more. If you need to change anything, the Estimator will show you how to update your withholding with your employer or direct you to where you can submit a new W-4. Taking time to review could help you avoid an unwanted large tax bill and/or penalty come tax season.

Double-Check Deductions and Credits

Are you maximizing these? Early planning allows you to identify and leverage available deductions and credits, reducing your taxable income and potentially increasing your tax refund. 

Increase Your 401K Contribution

Are you happy with your contribution? Can you increase it and still make ends meet? When you contribute more from each paycheck, you’ll decrease your taxable income for the year. Since employers usually have matching programs, it’s a great way to get free money and build your nest egg. Make sure you’re in it if your company offers this.

Convert a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA

If you think you’ll be in a higher tax bracket when you’re in retirement, converting a traditional IRA into a Roth IRA is one way to reduce your tax payments in the long run. Here’s how it works. The money you contribute to a Roth IRA is taxed the moment you contribute, unlike a traditional IRA, which is taxed at the moment of withdrawal. When you convert to a Roth IRA, you’ll be paying taxes at your current rate instead of the (probably) higher tax rate in the future. Translated: You’ll pay taxes up front, which might be a big savings. Finally, Roth IRAs are not subject to the same Required Minimum Distributions as traditional IRAs are. That means more freedom when you want it most – when you retire.

Getting a handle on your finances by being proactive now gives you a great opportunity to take a breath, assess, and change direction if you need to. If anything, it will help prevent stress and scrambling in tax season. It’s safe to say that nobody wants that.

Sources

https://fsa1.com/why-its-smart-to-start-tax-planning-in-july/

Mid-Year Tax Checkup

Navigating Worker Classification: The Critical Difference Between Employees and Independent Contractors

Difference Between Employees and Independent ContractorsRunning a small business often means working with a mix of people: some full-time staff, part-time helpers, seasonal workers or project-based contractors. While this flexibility helps manage costs and workload, it creates a crucial decision point that many business owners underestimate: properly classifying each worker.

The stakes couldn’t be higher. Companies like FedEx have paid nearly half a billion dollars for getting this wrong, and even tech giants like Microsoft and Lyft have faced costly legal battles over worker misclassification.

Why Classification Matters More Than You Think

The difference between an employee and an independent contractor goes far beyond semantics; it fundamentally changes your legal and financial obligations.

When someone is your employee, you must:

  • Withhold income taxes, Social Security, and Medicare taxes
  • Pay the employer portion of Social Security and Medicare taxes
  • Potentially provide benefits like health insurance and retirement plans
  • Consider offering stock options or other incentive programs
  • Pay severance or unemployment compensation when appropriate
  • Comply with wage and overtime requirements

When someone is an independent contractor, you:

  • Simply pay them for their work
  • Issue a 1099-NEC form at year-end
  • Have no tax withholding obligations
  • Owe no employment benefits
  • Face no severance obligations

The Control Test: Your North Star for Classification

The Internal Revenue Service uses one primary principle: control. The more control you exercise over how, when, and where work gets done, the more likely that person is your employee.

Think of it this way: if you’re micromanaging the work process, you’re probably dealing with an employee. If you’re only concerned with the end result, you’re likely working with a contractor. The 20 factors identified by the IRS in Revenue Ruling 87-41 can be found in full here.

The IRS Three-Factor Framework

Rather than getting lost in complicated checklists, focus on these three core areas:

1. Behavioral Control – Do you dictate not just what work gets done, but how it’s performed? Employees typically receive training, follow company procedures, and work within established systems. Contractors bring their own methods and expertise.

2. Financial Control – Who controls the business aspects of the work? Independent contractors typically:

  • Invest in their own tools and equipment
  • Handle their own business expenses
  • Have multiple clients or income sources
  • Set their own rates and payment terms

3. Relationship Type – What does your working relationship look like? Employee relationships typically feature:

  • Written employment contracts
  • Ongoing work arrangements
  • Benefits packages
  • Work that’s central to your business operations

Beyond Taxes: The Broader Impact

Worker classification affects more than your tax bill. The Department of Labor’s 2024 updates to the Fair Labor Standards Act mean misclassification can trigger wage and overtime violations. State labor departments are also cracking down, with some states presuming workers are employees unless proven otherwise.

When Things Go Wrong: Your Options

If you realize you’ve made a mistake, don’t panic. You have several paths forward:

  • Get an Official Determination: File Form SS-8 with the IRS for an official ruling on a worker’s status. While it takes at least six months, you’ll have certainty going forward.
  • Claim Safe Harbor Protection: If you had a reasonable basis for your classification and treated similar workers consistently, you may qualify for tax relief under Section 530.
  • Use the Voluntary Settlement Program: The IRS Voluntary Classification Settlement Program lets you reclassify workers prospectively while receiving some tax relief.

The Bottom Line

Your worker classification isn’t just an administrative detail – it’s a fundamental business decision with major financial implications. When in doubt, err on the side of caution or consult with employment law and tax professionals.

The cost of getting expert advice upfront is minimal compared to the potential cost of getting it wrong.

Understanding the Goodwill to Assets Ratio

Understanding the Goodwill to Assets RatioThe goodwill to assets ratio measures how much of a company’s total assets come from goodwill – an intangible asset like brand value or customer loyalty – and it plays a role in assessing the company’s overall value. It provides a ratio or percentage of the amount of intangible versus tangible assets. Understanding what the ratio represents, how it is calculated, and how to interpret it is essential for effectively applying it to business operations and investment decisions.

Goodwill Defined

Goodwill can be defined as an intangible asset that comes about when the acquiring firm obtains such assets from the acquired firm at a higher value. When it comes to accounting standards, both International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), intangible assets must be evaluated for impairment, but don’t need to be amortized. Based upon IFRS 38, goodwill is generated solely during an acquisition and is defined as the amount of the acquisition price for the acquired company over its book value. IFRS 38 does not recognize goodwill generated by the company internally.

Calculating Goodwill

Goodwill = Liabilities – Assets + Purchase Price

If a company looks at acquiring another company for $750,000, and the company being acquired has assets of $900,000 and liabilities of $450,000, the net assets would be $450,000. Based on the goodwill formula:

Goodwill = $450,000 – $900,000 + $750,000 = $300,000

Once the goodwill has been established, the Goodwill to Assets Ratio Formula is used as follows:

Goodwill to Assets Ratio = Unamortized Goodwill / Total Assets

If one company is putting itself up for sale with a selling price of $75 million, it would have to establish its book value, based on recent financial statements, along with its goodwill value. Factors that go into calculating a company’s goodwill include if the company has prime real estate, a well-known brand, a rich list of clients, or intellectual property that sets itself apart from competitors in the industry that won’t expire for years. For example, if its intangible assets are $15 million, subtracted from its selling price of $75 million, its tangible assets or book value would be $60 million.

Based on the ratio, it’s calculated as follows:

$15 million / $75 million = 20 percent

Therefore, the ratio is 20 percent for the company’s goodwill as part of the company’s valuation. Otherwise, if the purchase goes through, whoever buys the company spends 20 percent on the company’s goodwill.

Analyzing the Goodwill to Assets Ratio

This ratio gives an overview of a business’s financial health. The lower the ratio, the more tangible or physical assets that can be sold. Conversely, the higher the ratio, the fewer intangibles a company has. Much like assets that can be written down, so can a company’s goodwill.

This ratio is not one-in-all and should be measured against businesses within the same industry. Based on this analysis, if a company has a large amount of goodwill on its financial statements, if it’s written down, it could still result in a lower valuation despite the company having a large amount of assets.

Looking over time, it shows the importance of ongoing evaluations. In 1975, according to the University of California, Los Angeles, companies on the Standard and Poor’s 500 (S&P 500) had $122 billion of intangible assets and $594 billion of tangible assets, or about a 21 percent intangible to tangible assets ratio. These companies included most industrial and energy sector names like GE, Procter & Gamble, 3M, Exxon Mobil, along with IBM, based on market capitalization. However, in 2018, the ratio increased to 84 percent of intangible to tangible assets. Intangible assets accounted for $21.03 trillion and $4 trillion when looking at most of the companies on the S&P 500, which included Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, and Facebook, based on market capitalization.

While the growth of technology and communication services has risen and skewed the tangible to intangible ratio, it shows the importance of evaluating companies and sectors individually, not just with a broad brush.

Sources

Boom of Intangible Assets Felt Across Industries and Economy