|
http://turbotax.intuit.com/tax_help/business_tax_preparation_turbotax/article
Having the necessary information at hand will make doing your business taxes easier
Preparing your own
business tax return, especially for the first time, can be a frustrating
experience if you don't have all the necessary information at your fingertips.
Gathering certain documents before you begin will help you fend off the
frustration.
Here's a list of items
you may find helpful when preparing your business tax return:
Last Year's Business Tax
Return
Your previous year's tax
return provides valuable information and can serve as a good roadmap for making
your way through this year's return. For example, if you are preparing your own
return for the first time, your prior-year return can verify the following:
- The method you use for tracking your
business finances (cash vs. accrual)
- Your federal tax ID number
- The date you incorporated or started
your business
- The date you elected to become an S
corporation
- Your business code number and
business activity descriptions
- The method you use for tracking your
inventory (if applicable)
- Your beginning balance sheet amounts
(these will be the prior year's ending balance sheet amounts on Schedule L)
- Shareholder or partner information if
there are no changes
Your previous year's
return also is a great comparison tool once you complete your current-year tax
return. It can raise red flags about possible missed deductions or items that
seem unusually large or small in comparison to the prior year.
Articles of Incorporation
If you don't have your
prior-year tax return, or are filing a tax return for a newly incorporated
business, your articles of incorporation provide certain necessary information.
- List of officers
- List of shareholders and possibly
ownership percentages (if an S corporation)
- The state in which you incorporated
your business
Without a prior-year tax
return, your partnership agreement is the best source of the following:
- Date the partnership started
- List of partners
- The amount of money each partner
initially put into the partnership, and current ownership percentages
- Details about any specific income or
expense items that are NOT allocated based on profit, loss or ownership percentages
- The method you use for tracking your
business finances
Income and expense
records are the basis of your tax return. Depending on your level of gross
receipts and assets, you may need balance
sheet information as well. If you use accounting software, such
as QuickBooks or Quicken, to record your financial information, print out a Profit and Loss Statement and a Balance
Sheet for quick reference as you begin your tax return. If not,
you may wish to compile this information in an Excel spreadsheet. Regardless of
which software you use, organizing your accounting records makes tax
preparation much easier.
Your bank statements or
checking account records are a window into your income and expense activity for
the year, particularly if you don't already have organized accounting records.
Analyzing deposits and expenditures will enable you to categorize income and
deductions to prepare your tax return. It's a good idea to reconcile your
ending cash balance to the checking account balance on your last bank statement
of the year to ensure you've captured all cash transactions in your accounting
records.
Small business owners
often don't have time to keep track of day-to-day expenditures such as gas,
parking, meals, supplies, equipment and other items. But knowing how much
you've spent on them can be important at tax time when it comes to calculating
your write-offs. Your credit card statements can be a big help in sorting out
these expenses, so keep those statements handy. Particularly valuable will be a
year-end summary statement which breaks down expenditures by category, if your
card issuer provides one.
Your payroll tax filings,
both federal and state, will help ensure that you have the correct payroll and
payroll tax expenses in your accounting records. Remember that the payroll
taxes you withhold from your employees' wages are not an expense to the
business.
Detail of Asset Purchases
Major assets you buy for
the business often aren't fully deductible in the year
they are purchased but must be written off, or depreciated, over a number of
years. Have the following information available for these assets:
- Cost of the asset, including any
sales tax paid
- Description of the asset
- Date put into service
- Amount of time the asset is used for
the business (versus for personal use), stated as a percentage of total use
If you're preparing your
own tax return for the first time, you'll need to enter the details of the
business's existing depreciable assets up to this tax year into the software.
The software will calculate the depreciation on these assets going forward.
You'll need the following:
- Description of the asset
- Date put into service
- Original cost of the asset
- Accumulated depreciation up to this
tax year
- Business use percentage (if
applicable)
- Recovery period of the asset (3
years, 5 years, 7 years, etc.)
- Any Section 179 Expense (or
first-year expense) taken in the first year of service
Detail of Asset
Dispositions
If your business sold any
depreciable assets during the year, you'll need the following information to
calculate any gain or loss on the sales for tax reporting purposes.
- Description of the asset
- Date of sale
- Sales price of the asset
- Any expenses of the sale
- Accumulated depreciation (if not
calculated by the software)
If the business owns any
vehicles that are used by employees or shareholders/partners for personal and
business use, you'll need the following mileage data:
- Miles driven for business
- Personal miles
- Commuting miles
Taking a little time to
gather your tax-related documents will pay off, in time saved and frustration
eliminated.
|