How a tax plan works. There are countless tax planning strategies available to a small business owner. Some are aimed at the owner's individual tax situation, some at the business itself. But regardless of how simple or how complex a tax strategy is, it will be based on structuring the transaction to accomplish one or more of these often overlapping goals:
- reducing the amount of taxable income
- reducing your tax rate
- controlling the time when the tax must be paid
- claiming any available tax credits
- controlling the effects of the Alternative Minimum Tax
- avoiding the most common tax planning mistakes
As an individual taxpayer, and as a business owner, you will often have the option of completing a taxable transaction by more than one method. The courts strongly back your right to choose the course of action that will result in the lowest legal tax liability. In other words, tax avoidance is entirely proper.
Tax Avoidance Is Legal
Although tax avoidance planning is legal, tax evasion - the reduction of tax through deceit, subterfuge, or concealment - is not. Frequently, what sets tax evasion apart from tax avoidance is the IRS's finding that there was some fraudulent intent on the part of the business owner. The following are areas that IRS examiners most commonly focus on when looking for possible fraud:
- Failing to report substantial amounts of income, such as a shareholder's failure to report dividends, or a store owner's failure to report a portion of the daily business receipts.
- Claiming fictitious or improper deductions on a return, such as a sales representative's substantial overstatement of travel expenses, or a taxpayer's claim of a large deduction for charitable contributions when no verification exists.
- Engaging in accounting irregularities, such as a business's failure to keep adequate records, or a discrepancy between amounts reported on a corporation's return and amounts reported on its financial statements.
- Improperly allocating income to a related taxpayer who is in a lower tax bracket, such as where a corporation makes distributions to the controlling shareholder's children.
- Engaging in a "sham transaction," such as paying your children for work they did not perform.
Last Updated May 2, 2015
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