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Tax Season is In? Are you Claiming your Start Up Cost?

 
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Nuevolution

posts: 1223

Jan 31, 2007 4:19 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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As all you know Tax season is now in session. Do any of you know what you will be deducting this year? Do any of you know what can be deducted and what can`t?
As I emphesized on another topic. It`s a good idea to purchase a copy of Nolo "Deduct it" book It give you the ins and outs of what can be deducted and what can`t.
Any one claiming Start Up Cost?
Do you know how to Claim Start Up cost as a Corporation?
Lets all pitch in to see what can be deducted.
Here are a few good ones to get you started:
1. Your Rent/Mortgage if you work from home
2. Your Computer if it`s being used more than 75% of the time for business purpose.
3. Mileage and Gasoline
4. Marketing
5. Food

Any one else? Please add more. Lets see how much we all know about our own business.

-------------------------

Edgar Monroy
Web Developer / Owner / Consultant
When starting your own business the need to "know-how" is greater than money!
http://www.nuevolution.net
ElidS

posts: 471

Jan 31, 2007 12:31 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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As I understand it, all business related expenses. Any money I spend to run the business, from stamps to legal advice is tax deductible. Is this not so?
Nuevolution

posts: 1223

Jan 31, 2007 1:35 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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To some extend, Yes everything can be deducted if you can show proof that its being used for your business.
But, dont think that if you spend 20K on start up cost that you can claim everything at once, you have to claim start up cost within a 60 month time frame. so you would have to divide 20 into 5 years.
Even if you buy clothing for yourself, if you can justify that it was for business use you can deduct it.
Example your computer has a life span of 7 years. So you can deduct that for seven years. The book is good, It tells you what to watch out for.

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Edgar Monroy
Web Developer / Owner / Consultant
When starting your own business the need to "know-how" is greater than money!
http://www.nuevolution.net
sreys

posts: 14

Jan 31, 2007 2:03 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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Tax regs have changed, so make sure you buy the NEW book, and don`t rely only on what you hear in a forum.

The first $5k of startup cost is immediately deductible. The balance would generally be amortized over 15 years, not 5 years. 

Street clothing is generally not an allowable deduction. You could deduct it, but you should expect to lose the deduction under audit. And if you itemize it on your return, you might expect a higher possiblity of audit.

That PC is 5-year class life, not 7, and will probably be immediately deducted under IRC section 179 rather than depreciated over 5 years under IRC section 167. 

Scott Reynolds, CPA

 



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R Scott Reynolds, CPA
www.b2bcfo.com
Gags

posts: 91

Jan 31, 2007 6:18 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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I think the message here is....hire a good accountant and attorney, and focus on what you know,,,running your business. Outsource what you don`t know. I`m sure it`ll be cheaper in the long run.
nhgnikole

posts: 2660

Feb 01, 2007 2:46 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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I usually do all my technology/equipment expenses on 179 instead of doing the whole depreciation thing ... I just go through it so fast that depreciation is silly. (I`d imagine depreciation goes well if you have a printing press or a tractor. When you have a new laptop every 1.5 years, not so great.)

I did TurboTax Home & Business ... they ask you EVERYTHING if you go step by step, as well as suggest things for next year. I did read a few tax books as well, before I started, to know which records to keep.

I record ... cell phone, website hosting, 1099s I paid out, home office (I work from home 95% of my time!), milage on my car, office supplies, internet service, programming books, postage, event attendence fees.

I find the best advice I got from a tax pro is that you can never have too many records ... but you can have too few! So I write down all my monthly expenses, short-term and long-term expenses, etc. It came in handy when I was being asked to calculate my yearly utilities on the house as part of my home office deduction!
Nuevolution

posts: 1223

Feb 01, 2007 4:38 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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I think the message here is....hire a good accountant and attorney, and focus on what you know,,,running your business. Outsource what you don`t know. I`m sure it`ll be cheaper in the long run.

You were wrong that is not the message. The message was (Please read the topic and content)
I think that every business owner should be aware of what can be duducted and what can`t. It is good practice for a business owner to know what`s going on in his own business. Yes counting on an attorney and CPA is good idea, but shouldn`t you be aware of them too. So lets say you are expecting a return on something you purchased, what if it can`t be subtracted?
Then what? you were expecting it to be deducted, but now you are yelling at your accountant.
Standard business practice, know some accouting as well as running your business.



-------------------------

Edgar Monroy
Web Developer / Owner / Consultant
When starting your own business the need to "know-how" is greater than money!
http://www.nuevolution.net
Gags

posts: 91

Feb 04, 2007 5:27 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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Of course, to be successful with your business, you should have a basic knowledge of accounting, taxes and management. But, don`t get bogged down and spend all of your time on things that can be outsourced, so you can concentrate on the core activities necessary to successfully grow your business.

 

 

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