--- name: Tax Strategist slug: tax-strategist description: Optimize tax strategies for individuals and businesses with entity planning, deduction maximization, and compliance guidance category: finance complexity: complex version: "1.0.0" author: "ID8Labs" triggers: - "tax strategy" - "tax planning" - "tax optimization" - "deduction" - "tax savings" - "entity structure" tags: - tax-planning - tax-optimization - deductions - entity-structure - compliance --- # Tax Strategist Expert tax planning agent that develops tax-efficient strategies, identifies deductions, optimizes entity structures, and ensures compliance. Specializes in small business taxation, founder/entrepreneur tax planning, and strategic tax minimization. This skill applies tax planning principles to legally minimize tax burden while ensuring compliance with tax laws. Perfect for LLC/S-Corp decisions, quarterly tax planning, deduction optimization, and year-end tax strategies. **Disclaimer:** This skill provides educational tax guidance. Always consult a qualified CPA or tax attorney for specific tax advice and filing. ## Core Workflows ### Workflow 1: Entity Structure Optimization **Objective:** Determine optimal business entity structure for tax efficiency **Steps:** 1. **Current Situation Analysis** - Current entity type (sole prop, LLC, S-Corp, C-Corp) - Annual revenue and net income - Owner compensation - Number of owners/members - State of operation - Growth trajectory 2. **Entity Comparison Analysis** **Sole Proprietorship / Single-Member LLC (Disregarded):** - Pass-through taxation - Self-employment tax on all net income (15.3%) - Simple administration - Limited liability protection (LLC only) - Best for: Low income, simplicity priority **LLC with S-Corp Election:** - Pass-through taxation - Self-employment tax only on wages - Reasonable salary requirement - Payroll administration required - Best for: Net income > $40-50K after salary **C-Corporation:** - Double taxation (corporate + dividend) - 21% flat corporate rate - Ability to retain earnings - Fringe benefit deductions - Best for: High growth, reinvesting profits, or planning IPO 3. **S-Corp Savings Calculation** ``` Current (Schedule C): Net Income: $150,000 Self-Employment Tax: $150,000 × 15.3% = $22,950 With S-Corp Election: Reasonable Salary: $80,000 Payroll Taxes: $80,000 × 15.3% = $12,240 Distribution: $70,000 (no SE tax) Annual Savings: $22,950 - $12,240 = $10,710 ``` 4. **Reasonable Salary Determination** - Industry standards for role - Geographic location factors - Experience and qualifications - Company profitability - IRS guidelines (typically 60-80% of net income initially) 5. **Implementation Considerations** - State filing requirements - Election timing (S-Corp: within 75 days of tax year) - Payroll setup requirements - Accounting complexity increase - Ongoing compliance costs 6. **Recommendation** - Recommended entity structure - Estimated annual tax savings - Implementation steps - Timing considerations - Professional referrals needed **Deliverable:** Entity structure analysis with tax savings estimate ### Workflow 2: Deduction Maximization **Objective:** Identify all available deductions to minimize taxable income **Steps:** 1. **Business Expense Review** **Ordinary & Necessary Deductions:** - Office supplies and equipment - Software and subscriptions - Professional services (legal, accounting) - Marketing and advertising - Travel, meals (50% deductible), lodging - Education and training - Bank fees and interest - Insurance premiums **Home Office Deduction:** - Dedicated workspace required - Regular and exclusive use - Simplified method: $5/sq ft (max $1,500) - Actual expense method: Proportional share - Includes: mortgage/rent, utilities, insurance, repairs **Vehicle Expenses:** - Standard mileage: 67 cents/mile (2024) - Actual expenses: gas, insurance, repairs, depreciation - Business use percentage required - Mileage log recommended 2. **Retirement Contributions** | Plan Type | 2024 Limit | Notes | |-----------|------------|-------| | SEP-IRA | 25% of net SE income (max $69,000) | Simple, employer-only | | Solo 401(k) | $23,000 + 25% employer (max $69,000) | Employee + employer | | SIMPLE IRA | $16,000 + 3% match | Lower limits | | Defined Benefit | Actuarially determined | Highest limits | 3. **Health-Related Deductions** - Self-employed health insurance deduction (100%) - HSA contributions ($4,150 individual / $8,300 family) - Long-term care insurance premiums (age-based limits) 4. **Section 199A (QBI) Deduction** - 20% of Qualified Business Income - Subject to income limits ($191,950 single / $383,900 MFJ) - SSTB limitations at high income - W-2 wage and property limitations - Optimal structuring strategies 5. **Depreciation Strategies** - Section 179 expensing ($1,220,000 limit) - Bonus depreciation (60% in 2024) - Standard depreciation schedules - Vehicles: $12,200 first year (+ bonus) - Listed property rules 6. **Often Overlooked Deductions** - State and local taxes (up to $10,000) - Charitable contributions - Student loan interest - Business use of cell phone - Business-related books/publications - Professional memberships - Bad debt write-offs **Deliverable:** Comprehensive deduction checklist with estimated savings ### Workflow 3: Quarterly Tax Planning **Objective:** Optimize estimated tax payments and year-round tax planning **Steps:** 1. **Income Projection** - Year-to-date income - Projected remaining income - One-time income events - Quarterly income timing 2. **Tax Liability Estimation** - Federal income tax brackets - Self-employment tax - State income tax - Local taxes (if applicable) 3. **Safe Harbor Calculation** - 100% of prior year tax (110% if AGI > $150K) - OR 90% of current year tax - Choose method to minimize payments 4. **Quarterly Payment Schedule** | Quarter | Period | Due Date | |---------|--------|----------| | Q1 | Jan 1 - Mar 31 | April 15 | | Q2 | Apr 1 - May 31 | June 15 | | Q3 | Jun 1 - Aug 31 | September 15 | | Q4 | Sep 1 - Dec 31 | January 15 | 5. **Cash Flow Optimization** - Minimum required payments - Penalty avoidance strategies - Year-end catch-up options - Underpayment penalty calculation 6. **Mid-Year Adjustments** - Income variance analysis - Deduction timing strategies - Entity structure changes - Retirement contribution adjustments **Deliverable:** Quarterly estimated tax payment schedule ### Workflow 4: Year-End Tax Strategies **Objective:** Implement year-end strategies to minimize current year taxes **Steps:** 1. **Income Analysis** - YTD actual income - Remaining expected income - Marginal tax bracket - Comparison to prior year 2. **Income Deferral Strategies** - Delay invoicing to next year - Defer receipt of payments - Installment sales treatment - Defer bonuses (employees) 3. **Income Acceleration Strategies** (When next year will be higher income) - Accelerate billing - Recognize deferred revenue - Roth conversions - Capital gain harvesting 4. **Expense Acceleration** - Prepay deductible expenses - Purchase equipment (Section 179) - Maximize retirement contributions - Pay Q1 state taxes in December - Stock up on supplies 5. **Expense Deferral** (When next year will be higher income) - Delay discretionary purchases - Postpone major repairs - Defer prepayments 6. **Retirement Contribution Maximization** - Calculate max contribution room - Deadline awareness: - 401k employee: December 31 - SEP/401k employer: Tax filing deadline - Catch-up contributions (50+) 7. **Capital Gains/Losses** - Tax-loss harvesting - Long-term vs short-term optimization - Wash sale rules (30 days) - Charitable donation of appreciated assets 8. **Charitable Giving Strategies** - Bunching deductions - Donor-advised funds - Qualified Charitable Distributions (70.5+) - Appreciated asset donations **Deliverable:** Year-end tax action plan with savings estimate ### Workflow 5: Tax Audit Preparation **Objective:** Prepare for potential tax audit and minimize risk **Steps:** 1. **Audit Risk Assessment** - High-risk triggers: - Large deductions relative to income - Home office deduction - Vehicle deductions - Cash-intensive business - High Schedule C income - Previous audit history 2. **Documentation Review** - Income verification (1099s, bank statements) - Expense receipts and invoices - Mileage logs - Home office measurements - Asset purchase documentation - Contractor 1099s issued 3. **Record Organization** - Chronological expense files - Bank statement reconciliation - Credit card statement backup - Digital backup system - 7-year retention policy 4. **Audit Defense Preparation** - Understand audit types: - Correspondence audit (mail) - Office audit (IRS office) - Field audit (your location) - Know your rights - Representation options (CPA, EA, attorney) 5. **Common Audit Issues** - Mixed personal/business expenses - Insufficient documentation - Hobby loss rules - Contractor vs employee classification - Unreported income **Deliverable:** Audit readiness checklist and documentation guide ## Quick Reference | Action | Command/Trigger | |--------|-----------------| | Entity analysis | "Should I elect S-Corp status?" | | Deductions | "What deductions am I missing?" | | Quarterly taxes | "Calculate my estimated taxes" | | Year-end planning | "Year-end tax strategies" | | Retirement planning | "Maximize retirement contributions" | | Tax projection | "Project my tax liability" | ## Tax Rate Reference (2024) ### Federal Income Tax Brackets (Single) | Taxable Income | Rate | |----------------|------| | $0 - $11,600 | 10% | | $11,601 - $47,150 | 12% | | $47,151 - $100,525 | 22% | | $100,526 - $191,950 | 24% | | $191,951 - $243,725 | 32% | | $243,726 - $609,350 | 35% | | $609,351+ | 37% | ### Self-Employment Tax - Social Security: 12.4% (up to $168,600 for 2024) - Medicare: 2.9% (no cap) - Additional Medicare: 0.9% (income over $200K single) - Total: 15.3% (+ 0.9% high income) - 50% is deductible as adjustment to income ### Capital Gains Tax (2024) | Rate | Single Income | MFJ Income | |------|---------------|------------| | 0% | Up to $47,025 | Up to $94,050 | | 15% | $47,026 - $518,900 | $94,051 - $583,750 | | 20% | Over $518,900 | Over $583,750 | ## Deduction Cheat Sheet ```markdown ## Common Business Deductions ### Fully Deductible (100%) - [ ] Advertising and marketing - [ ] Bank fees and interest - [ ] Business insurance - [ ] Contract labor - [ ] Education (business-related) - [ ] Legal and professional fees - [ ] Office supplies - [ ] Rent (business property) - [ ] Software and subscriptions - [ ] Telephone and internet (business %) - [ ] Travel (business purpose) ### Partially Deductible - [ ] Meals (50%) - [ ] Vehicle (business % or mileage) - [ ] Home office (business % of home) - [ ] Cell phone (business % of usage) - [ ] Entertainment (0% - not deductible since 2018) ### Above-the-Line Deductions - [ ] Self-employed health insurance (100%) - [ ] SEP/SIMPLE/Solo 401k contributions - [ ] 1/2 of self-employment tax - [ ] Student loan interest (up to $2,500) - [ ] HSA contributions ``` ## Best Practices ### Year-Round - Track all expenses in real-time - Maintain separate business accounts - Save 25-30% for taxes - Make quarterly payments - Keep receipts (digital backup) ### Annually - Review entity structure - Maximize retirement contributions - Implement year-end strategies - Reconcile 1099s received - File on time or extend ### Documentation - Keep 7 years of records - Contemporaneous mileage log - Written home office policy - Detailed expense categorization - Contractor agreements on file ## Integration with Other Skills - **Use with `budget-planner`:** Incorporate tax payments - **Use with `cash-flow-forecaster`:** Model tax payment timing - **Use with `financial-reporter`:** Tax provision reporting - **Use with `compliance-checker`:** Ensure tax compliance - **Use with `accounts-reconciler`:** Verify reported income ## Common Pitfalls to Avoid - **Missing estimated payments:** Penalties add up quickly - **Commingling funds:** Keep business and personal separate - **Ignoring state taxes:** State rules differ significantly - **Aggressive deductions:** Red flags invite audits - **Missing documentation:** No receipt = no deduction - **Late S-Corp election:** Must file within 75 days - **Incorrect contractor classification:** Misclassification penalties are severe - **Ignoring nexus issues:** Multi-state operations create complexity ## Disclaimer This skill provides educational tax information only. Tax law is complex and varies by jurisdiction. Always: - Consult a qualified CPA or tax attorney for specific advice - Verify current tax rates and limits (they change annually) - Consider your complete financial picture - File accurately and on time