• Find out which form to use to report income and expenses.
  • Learn about the pass-through deduction.
  • Find out if you can deduct home office expenses.
  • Learn about self-employment taxes.
  • Find out if you can deduct health insurance costs as a business expense.
  • Learn about quarterly estimated tax payments.
  • Find out what kinds of records you should keep of income and expenses.
  • Learn about taxpayer-identification numbers and employment taxes for sole proprietors.

Are you in business for yourself as a sole proprietor, or are you planning to start a business? Then you need to know about the tax aspects of your venture. Fiducial has eight important issues to consider:

1. Sole proprietors report income and expenses on Schedule C of Form 1040.

The net income is taxable to you regardless of whether you withdraw cash from the business. Your business expenses are deductible against gross income and not as itemized deductions. If you have any losses, they’re generally deductible against your other income, subject to special rules relating to hobby losses, passive activity losses, and losses in activities in which you weren’t “at risk.”

2. As a sole proprietor, you may be eligible for a qualified business income deduction.

To the extent your business generates qualified business income, you’re eligible to take a deduction available to domestic S corporations, partnerships, and sole proprietorships. This deduction is subject to various limitations. The deduction is taken “below the line,” so it reduces taxable income, rather than being taken “above the line” against gross income. You can take the deduction even if you don’t itemize and instead take the standard deduction.

3. You might be able to deduct home office expenses.

If you work from home, perform management or administrative tasks from a home office, or store product samples or inventory at home, you may be entitled to deduct an allocable portion of certain costs. And if you have a home office, you may be able to deduct expenses of traveling to another work location.

4. You must pay self-employment taxes.

For 2022, you pay self-employment tax (Social Security and Medicare) at a 15.3% rate on your self-employment net earnings of up to $147,000 and Medicare tax only at a 2.9% rate on the excess. An additional 0.9% Medicare tax is imposed on self-employment income in excess of $250,000 for joint returns, $125,000 for married taxpayers filing separately, and $200,000 in all other cases. Self-employment tax is imposed in addition to income tax, but you can deduct half of your self-employment tax as an adjustment to income.

5. You can deduct 100% of your health insurance costs as a business expense as a sole proprietor.

This means your deduction for medical care insurance won’t be subject to the rule that limits your medical expense deduction to amounts in excess of 7.5% of your adjusted gross income.

6. As a sole proprietor, you must make quarterly estimated tax payments.

For 2022, these are due April 18, June 15, September 15, and January 17, 2023.

7. You should keep complete records of your income and expenses.

Carefully record expenses in order to claim all of the deductions for which you qualify. Certain expenses, such as automobile, travel, meals, and home office expenses, require special attention because they’re subject to special recordkeeping requirements or limits on deductibility.

8. If you hire employees, you need a taxpayer identification number and you must withhold and pay over employment taxes.

Want more information or assistance with the tax or recordkeeping aspects of your business? Call Fiducial at 1-866-FIDUCIAL or make an appointment at one of our office locations to discuss your situation.

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For more small business COVID-19 resources, visit Fiducial’s Coronavirus Update Center to find information on SBA loans, tax updates, the Paycheck Protection Program, paid sick and family leave.