When you start a business, a key to your success is to know your tax
obligations. You may not only need to know about income tax rules, but also
about payroll tax rules. Here are five IRS tax tips that can help you get your
business off to a good start.
1. Business Structure. An early
choice you need to make is to decide on the type of structure
for your business. The most common types are sole proprietor, partnership
and corporation. The type of business you choose will determine which tax forms
you will file.
2. Business Taxes. There are
four general types
of business taxes. They are income tax, self-employment tax, employment tax
and excise tax. In most cases, the types of tax your business pays depends on
the type of business structure you set up. You may need to make estimated
tax payments. If you do, use IRS
Direct Pay to pay them. It’s the fast, easy and secure way to pay from your
checking or savings account.
3. Employer Identification
Number. You may
need to get an EIN for federal tax purposes. Search “do you need an EIN” on
IRS.gov to find out if you need this number. If you do need one, you can apply
for it online.
4. Accounting Method. An accounting
method is a set of rules that you use to determine when to report income and
expenses. You must use a consistent method. The two that are most common are the
cash and accrual methods. Under the cash method, you normally report income and
deduct expenses in the year that you receive or pay them. Under the accrual
method, you generally report income and deduct expenses in the year that you
earn or incur them. This is true even if you get the income or pay the expense
in a later year.
5. Employee Health Care. The Small
Business Health Care Tax Credit helps small businesses and tax-exempt
organizations pay for health care coverage they offer their employees. A small
employer is eligible for the credit if it has fewer than 25 employees who work
full-time, or a combination of full-time and part-time. The maximum credit is 50
percent of premiums paid for small business employers and 35 percent of premiums
paid for small tax-exempt employers, such as charities.
The employer
shared responsibility provisions of the Affordable Care Act affect employers
employing at least a certain number of employees (generally 50 full-time
employees or a combination of full-time and part-time employees). These
employers’ are called applicable large employers. ALEs must either offer minimum
essential coverage that is “affordable” and that provides “minimum value” to
their full-time employees (and their dependents), or potentially make an
employer shared responsibility payment to the IRS. The vast majority of
employers will fall below the ALE threshold number of employees and, therefore,
will not be subject to the employer shared responsibility provisions.
Employers also have
information reporting responsibilities regarding minimum essential coverage
they offer or provide to their fulltime employees. Employers must send reports
to employees and to the IRS on new forms the IRS created for this purpose.
Get all the tax basics of starting a business on IRS.gov at the Small Business and Self-Employed Tax Center.
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