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Going it alone in your career?
Planning can keep the taxman at bay
By Pat Curry
Bankrate.com
By all accounts, 1999 was a bang-up year for
Indiana-based free-lance writer Julie Sturgeon. She made a significant
transition, moving from writing articles primarily for local and
regional markets to regional and national assignments that paid
more money for the same amount of work. She also added photography
to her portfolio of services. Business was booming, clients were
happy and her income doubled over the previous year.
Her husband, meanwhile, was sweating bullets,
anticipating that Sturgeon's success would result in a huge tax
bill come April 17, 2000. And it would have, if Sturgeon hadn't
been fanatical about keeping records and receipts. Every trip to
the bank to deposit a check or to the photo lab to drop off film
went in her mileage log; every receipt went in an accordion folder.
"I had (receipts for) $1.32 ice cream cones
to kids who modeled for me," she says.
Toward the end of the year, Sturgeon and her
husband assessed their tax liability again and decided that December
would be a great time to do two things buy equipment for
the business and make maximum contributions to two retirement accounts.
"It was a lot of money, but I was going
to have to spend it anyway," she said. "I'd rather put
in my pocket than give it to the government."
When the tax-time number crunching was done,
Sturgeon's efforts yielded a $1,400 refund -- instead of the $6,000
tax bill her husband had envisioned -- that they rolled over into
her first estimated quarterly taxes for 2000.
Tax experts would applaud her efforts, and encourage
free-lancers to take full advantage of the host of deductions that
are available to them. In fact, the advice from many tax experts
is that if you aren't a free-lancer, you should be.
"Being a free-lancer is one of the great
tax shelters left," says William Raabe, director of accounting
programs at Samford University in Birmingham, Ala., and author of
the nation's most widely used taxation textbooks. "There really
aren't that many deductions individuals can claim other than owning
a home, having a child or giving money to charity. The idea people
can get paid to do work they enjoy anyway and get a good tax break
is pretty attractive."
Unlike employees, who have to meet a minimum
level before they can start deducting their work-related expenses,
free-lancers can deduct any legitimate business-related expense.
That can be anything from courses taken to upgrade their skills
to golf games with clients to dry cleaning bills for clothes worn
on business trips.
Another major difference from employees, though,
is that the checks free-lancers receive for their work don't have
any taxes taken from them, which makes tax planning even more important.
Here are some of the top issues faced by free-lancers,
with suggestions from tax experts:
Define being in business: Eva Rosenbaum,
an accountant in Encino, Calif., who hosts the Web site taxmama.com,
points out the importance of the difference between a business (deductible)
and someone with a really expensive hobby (not deductible).
Businesses have the licenses and certifications
required for the profession, a personal investment in the business,
and a separate business account for the money that comes in and
goes out. It's a good idea for free-lancers to have business cards,
a separate business phone number, and a brochure or flier that describes
their goods or services.
The business's corporate structure also lends
credence to the claim, and there are good arguments for being a
sole proprietor, an S-corporation, a C-corporation, and a limited
liability partnership (but that's another article). An accountant
can explain what makes the most sense for a free-lancer's particular
situation.
Estimated taxes: Rich Hellmold is a
CPA in Natick, Mass., who hosts the tax channel for guru.com, a Net-based
community for independent professionals.
"There's always a bunch of questions on
estimated taxes," Hellmold says. "Do I have to pay them?
When?"
The answers are: yes, and on April 15, June
15, Sept. 15 and Jan. 15. Failure to meet these deadlines will attract
the attention of the IRS very quickly, and can result in penalties
on top of the tax itself.
Home office deductions: You can have
your business pay for such home-related expenses as the mortgage
or rent, lights, water, maid service, etc., and deduct it on your
taxes.
The experts disagree as to whether taking home-office
deductions is a good idea.
In years past, claiming a home office was an
audit flag. That's not true anymore, said Sandy Botkin, an attorney,
and certified public accountant, and the CEO and principal lecturer
of the Tax
Reduction Institute. He says every free-lancer who's eligible
should take them.
"A new law in 1999 said if you render significant
administration or management activities and you don't have another
office, you qualify as long as you use a portion of the office exclusively
for business," Botkin says.
That's the really big catch. If your kids use
your computer for homework assignments, you're running off Little
League fliers on the copier or you work out of a spare bedroom,
it's not used exclusively for business.
Even if you do qualify, Hellmold said he doesn't
think it's worth the hassle because the return doesn't justify the
effort involved.
"It never works out to be much money,"
he says. "The big expenses are the mortgage interest and the
real estate taxes and you get those anyway. I normally discourage
people from taking it."
The other major issue arises when you sell your
house. If the business is paying a portion of the bills and you
take that as a deduction on your taxes, you effectively create two
properties a residence and a business. Up to $250,000 of
the profits on a home sale, $500,000 for a married couple filing
a joint return, isn't taxed. A business doesn't enjoy that benefit.
The profit on the portion of the house used for business will be
taxed that year.
Cash expenses: Rosenbaum notes that
many free-lancers don't track their cash expenses very well -- and
it's serious money out of their pockets and into Uncle Sam's.
"Cash expenses are usually two to three
times what people estimated," she says. "Once you actually
show all the deductions you have, it dawns on you what you've spent.
I have a client who works on cruise ships. He's using cash and different
foreign currencies. We mapped out what he spends on tips, meals
and hotels between cruise ships. He picked up Quicken and a Palm
Pilot. Now that we're tracking it, we're looking at probably $30,000
in cash expenses vs. the $10,000 we estimated."
Receipts help, but aren't required. The IRS
has average per diem rates for various expenses. Good record keeping
will suffice for things like tips, valet parking, cab rides and
tolls.
Rosenberg says she found an easy way to keep
receipts together while traveling.
"In the folder the hotel gives you or the
envelope from the airline. I stick all the receipts in those,"
she says. "When I get back, I pretty much have everything in
hand. If you're getting reimbursed by clients, you can submit it
for reimbursement immediately."
Travel expenses: Botkin has this down
to a science. So does Sturgeon.
"For every day you're on business travel,
you can deduct 50 percent of your food, 100 percent of your lodging
and 100 percent of dry cleaning, shoe shines, and tips, and you
don't need receipts if it's under $75 per item," Botkin said.
As long as a free-lancer intends to do business,
the expenses are deductible. This means that a free-lancer who goes
on vacation can't hand some stranger a business card and write off
the trip. But if he called prospective clients ahead of time and
scheduled short business meetings on a majority of the days, that's
business. Plus, weekend days can be deducted as long as business
is sandwiched on either side.
Sturgeon knows that she doesn't even have to
actually make money to deduct the trip. She sends out proposals
for travel stories before she leaves on a trip. Even if every editor
says "no," she can show her intent to do business.
Technically, free-lancers don't even have to
leave town to take travel deductions. If a new client is in town
and there are evening meetings and breakfast meetings, it's a legitimate
expense to spend the night at the same hotel.
"You are on travel status when you're sleeping
overnight in a strange bed, and you're conducting business,"
Botkin said.
Entertainment: With a little forethought,
free-lancers can have a really good time at the government's expense.
Botkin notes that free-lancers can write off 50 percent of the cost
of things like golf games, theater season tickets, movies and major
sporting events. What's required is to take along a friend and "talk
business preceding or following the fun within the same 24-hour
day as the fun."
The bottom line is good record keeping.
For travel and entertainment, here are the bases
that must be covered, courtesy of taxmama.com:
- Who -- name and company (spouses'
and dates' meals may not necessarily be deductible).
- Business purpose -- was this to sell,
buy, learn?
- Business relationship -- was this
a potential client, a source of information or contacts, a supplier
-- why is this business? Even if you don't sell anything to a
potential client or prospect, you are entitled to the deduction.
No salesperson closes every deal.
- Time -- either during a business meeting
or right before or after a business function is acceptable, as
are expenses accrued during a business event (a week-long trade
show, for example).
- Place -- make sure the receipt shows
the name and address of the entertainment facility or restaurant.
Rosenberg says the IRS is used to people making these up, so annotate
all receipts properly if the address is not preprinted on them.
Done on a daily basis, it only takes a few minutes.
Sturgeon and her husband have computerized the accordion-file approach,
and can see how they're doing at a moment's notice. They check their
status about once a month at the very least every quarter
when the estimated tax payment is due and adjust accordingly.
Botkin says it's the best investment a free-lancer
can make.
"You're looking at $10,000 to $40,000 in
deductions for a minute or two worth of work a day," he said.
"On a per-minute basis, I don't think there's a free-lancer
in the world who earns what that tax will save you. Plus, it's after-tax
money so it's even better than a raise."
Pat Curry is a free-lance writer
based in Georgia
-- Posted July 26, 2000
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