Self Employed
Self Employed.

Miss you all and belated Happy Summer!
Year-End Tax Tips for Independent Contractors and Self-Employed Individuals Who Need Income Tax Relief
Self Employed
With the recession and surging unemployment swelling the ranks of people reinventing themselves, millions of taxpayers are setting up home-based businesses and providing their services as self-employed independent contractors. Whether your new self-employed independent contractor status is a temporary measure or part of your long-planned road map to fortune and glory, there are tax dangers (plus surprisingly lucrative income tax relief) that should grab the attention of every self-employed independent contractor.
We know the IRS is targeting self-employed independent contractors. The government estimates that 85% of the 5 billion tax gap is due to self-employed individuals – freelance professionals and independent contractors who don’t get a 1099 the way large business employees do. Being a self-employed independent contractor means you’re the boss, unfortunately it also means you’re the one on the hook for any problems with back taxes. How you handle your back tax problems will not only determine whether your business will succeed, but it also carries the real threat of jail time if you get it wrong.
To learn more ways to legitimately maximize deductions while avoiding IRS problems, check out Part 2 of this series on
Read on for my best year-end tax help tips to show self-employed independent contractors how to get the biggest income tax relief possible.
If you’ve spent your life working as an employee, you may be delighted that the first money you receive as a self-employed independent contractor is a flat fee without any taxes taken out. But your joy should be short-lived, this is a case of the taxman being delayed but not denied. To get a preliminary idea about self-employment taxes check out http://www.irs.gov/businesses/small/article/0,,id=98846,00.html. Before you start, you should contact a tax attorney to make sure you have structured your business correctly. If you haven’t gotten tax help from a tax attorney yet, there is still time to structure your business to get the maximum income tax relief before the year end. (After that you’re stuck with your mistakes. Well, mostly. A good tax attorney or tax resolution specialist can still get you out of back tax trouble, but the best approach is to avoid owing back taxes in the first place.)
Many businesses (large and small) mislabel their employees as “self-employed independent contractors” to get income tax relief and sidestep a host of state and federal laws. The IRS has a comprehensive page to help determine whether you’re an employee or a true self-employed independent contractor: http://www.irs.gov/businesses/small/. If your boss has you misclassified as a self-employed independent contractor and you file as one, you could be in a heap of trouble when the IRS comes knocking on either your door or your boss’s door to collect back taxes. Suddenly, all those lovely deductions go out the window and your tax bill explodes. If you feel your boss has misclassified you as a self-employed independent contractor, contact a tax attorney or tax resolution specialist immediately for some self-employed independent contractor back tax help before the year ends.
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While you may be a true self-employed independent contractor, you need to establish whether your subcontractors are self-employed independent contractors or employees. According to IRS Summertime Tax Tip 2009-20, “the cost of misclassification to employers in additional taxes, as well as administrative time, or the loss of tax-favored status for employee benefit plans, can be steep.” If you’re not sure, contact a tax attorney or tax resolution specialist to get tax help immediately.
For a host of income tax relief reasons, a self-employed independent contractor might want to defer getting paid until next year. If you did work in 2009 but don’t want to pay 2009 taxes on it, simply wait to invoice your clients until January 1, 2010. This 2009 income tax relief technique is perfectly legal for self-employed independent contractors as long as you pay taxes on that income in your 2010 tax return.
The secret to income tax relief is just like the secret to great comedy…timing. A self-employed independent contractor’s medical expense deduction is limited to 7.5% of the self-employed independent contractor’s adjusted gross income. If you haven’t reached that cap yet, go have those dental procedures or that bit of elective surgery (we’re not just talking about that nose, the swimsuit season will be here again before you know it). As long as you’re under that 7.5% limit, you can get income tax relief from your standard variety medical expense deductions. A little known year-end income tax relief tip – you don’t even have to pay for the medical procedures before January 1, 2010. Just put the medical charges on plastic and pay the minimum balance. As long as you had the procedures in 2009, the deduction is good. If your medical expenses are already over the 7.5% level of your self-employed independent contractor’s adjusted gross income, you should delay breaking your leg until January 1st, 2010.
As a self-employed independent contractor, one of the best income tax relief strategies is to pay your state estimated tax before December 31st. If you pay by December 31, 2009 you get the deduction (on your federal return) in 2009. You can also charge these expenses on your credit card(s) in 2009 and receive the deduction in 2009, even though you won’t be paying for them until 2010. If you are having issues paying your estimated state taxes, a tax attorney can give you tax help to get the maximum income tax relief possible.
If your personal portfolio has taken a nose dive, realize your tax losses before New Year’s Eve. Long term capital losses can be used to offset long term capital gains, and up to ,000 of ordinary income, with any remainder carried forward for use in future years. This is about getting income tax relief not whether you made the right investment choices. If you still believe those stocks will go up again, buy them back on January 1st. Keep in mind that some mutual funds can have high capital gains distributions even as they lose money. The best income tax relief advice is to ditch these first because they are hitting you with a double whammy. As a self-employed independent contractor you have access to some of the best retirement accounts out there like a SEP-IRA. To understand which investing should be done as part of a retirement account, and which should be in your personal portfolio and when to take losses for maximum income tax relief, get tax help from an experience CPA or tax attorney.
As a self-employed independent contractor, you can give a friend or family member up to K annually before the year end without having to pay gift taxes. (Your spouse can give that same amount to the same individual.) You can also give that same amount to your child’s or grandchild’s tax-free 529 education plan. If you haven’t funded such a plan yet, you can make a single contribution covering five years of gifting. That’s ,000 you can give per donor per recipient tax-free. (Your spouse can match that contribution as well.)
Gifts to clients are limited to per recipient per year, BUT if the gift has your embossed logo on it and tells about your services, it isn’t a gift, it is an advertising or promotional expense. There is a fine line here, a quick call to a CPA or tax attorney for year-end tax help will help you stay on the right side of the law.
Self-employed independent contractors have the best income tax relief vehicle the federal government has ever offered. While individual worker contributions to a simple IRA max out at ,500, if you’re under 50 in 2010 (,000 if you’re over 50), how is this for serious income tax relief, as a self-employed independent contractor you can use SEP-IRAs to contribute 25% of your wages (or up to 20% of your Schedule C income) up to a maximum of ,000. The income tax relief to a self-employed independent contractor are massive. A tax lawyer or CPA an give you the tax help to set up the right retirement vehicle for you.
I know that this is a long list but the income tax relief you can get from just paying attention to the calendar is huge. These 20 self-employed independent contractor tax help tips can make the difference between being a Grinch and having a Happy New Year. Your call.
The Money Book for Freelancers, Part-Timers, and the Self-Employed: The Only Personal Finance System for People with Not-So-Regular Jobs
Self Employed – click on the image below for more information.
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Self Employed
This is a book for people like us, and we all know who we are.
We make our own hours, keep our own profits, chart our own way. We have things like gigs, contracts, clients, and assignments. All of us are working toward our dreams: doing our own work, on our own time, on our own terms. We have no real boss, no corporate nameplate, no cubicle of our very own. Unfortunately, we also have no 401(k)s and no one matching them, no benefits package, and no one collecting our taxes until Apri
The Money Book for Freelancers, Part-Timers, and the Self-Employed: The Only Personal Finance System for People with Not-So-Regular Jobs
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Money Management: Retirement planning options for the self-employed
Self Employed
More than nine million self-employed people are not covered by a retirement plan, according to the US Small Business Administration. Many of these people are business owners who may be hoping to retire on the profit they will make from selling their …
Self Employed question by CaptainGuineaPig: Self-employed?
I would like to know if anyone has ever been self-employed, ie, washed cars, cared for pets, mowed grass, etc.
I’ve been looking for part-time work and it ocurred to me that this would be a really good idea, but I dont know how to go about doing it. How lucrative is it? How do you manage to make income that way? I would be so grateful for some ideas.
Self Employed best answer:
Answer by Snowdog
You can do all of those things. It all depends on the equipment that you have and your approach to making the sale.
If you have everything you need for any of the above mentioned jobs then go for it. If you don’t have transportation then just simply start by passing out flyers in your neighborhood.
Next, do the best job that you can. At the beginning, give people a little extra for their dollar. Eventually, word will spread and you will have many loyal clients. The key is giving value for their dollar. As long as people see that they are getting value for their dollar, then they will keep paying.
Believe me, if I knew that there was someone in my neighborhood that I could call to wash my car, or mow my grass, I would be calling you once a week.


Ha! Craziness!
Nice one, hoss.
Ha! Great find!
Hey, I could do with that desk!
This is now my wallpaper as I am thinking of going self employed, which as scary as that is, sounds so freeing at the same time. So when I came across this I didn’t make the connection right away but now that’s all I see in it in terms of metaphor.
This is crazy but (and) excellent. Love it!
Perfect metaphor for self-employment, or at least a good kick-off for Summer…
wicked compo this … >:-)
Fabulous! Oh how wonderful self employment could be…
Re-location of office. Plenty of opportunity to take shots of the landscape. Not so good on electricity & uploading shots onto PC.
Welcome back Sir
If you are not already doing this, you are doing it wrong.,
I am a CPA who works principally with the self-employed. I just finished reading “The Money Book for Freelancers, Part-Timers, and the Self-Employed: the only personal finance system for people with not-so-regular jobs.” I recommend it for anyone who feels their finances are mysterious or out of control or who suffers from a variable cash flow.
It’s a nice little book, compactly throwing in nearly every lesson I would want my clients to have as a foundation. It talks about fixed monthly expenditures and how to get more aware of the monthly discretionary expenditures. It talks about the need to address savings AND debt repayment at the same time while keeping in mind that quarterlies are a fact of life. It talks about basic tried and true budgeting methods like using the envelope method but updates it to the 21st century with references to Get Rich Slowly, mvelopes.com, mint.com, irs.gov and online banks.
The strength of this book is that there is no hook. It’s just the plain unvarnished truth laid out in a well-written readable fashion. You have to set up your finances as a self-employed person in essentially this way, with very little variation possible. Essentially, if you are not already doing this then you’re doing it wrong. This book could serve as mandatory financial literacy for anyone who has a variable cash flow. As such, it could be enormously important to someone who hasn’t figured this all out yet… like, say, anyone in business who doesn’t happen to already be a financial advisor themselves.
I could find a few things to add to this, but nothing to take away. And the things I could add are things that a reasonable editor might cut for brevity or to keep me from sounding too insane a Doomster. But that’s okay, this means that I can still add value to my clients even AFTER they’ve read the core of my teachings that this book neatly lays out.
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|So glad I found this book!,
Whether you’re living off an unemployment check, disability or found household items auctioned off on E-bay this book is for anyone trying survive in the hard times of today’s economy. The authors point out the little known fact that everyone on the planet is working for ourselves, our families and our futures. How we spend and how we save IS within our control.
Even if you are drowning in debt or simply trying to eat less in order to afford health insurance this book, written from the perspective of two freelance writers and authors who for years have practiced what they preach, offers hope. Hope that we can make ends meet even when clients are late paying us, we can survive on part time or permalancing(contract-based) income. I like that the authors let our checking account be referred to as our Spending account and all we need to commit to saving is a mere 10 % (divided three ways to an emergency account, retirement and a cushion for when the tax man comes calling.)The authors also help us to draw the line between our wants vs. needs and encourage us to put our goals and dreams into action even while we are still paying off our credit card debts.
With useful tips sprinkled throughout and detailed charts and lists this book is resourceful and encouraging to anyone wondering if they can do what they love, make a comfortable living and still plan for their future. I highly recommend this book!
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