The CCPA: Estimated Quarterly Tax Payments

 
 

As a friendly all-client reminder, this month's CCPA is a rehash of last quarter's primer on estimated taxes. We figure it never hurts to review the topic - estimated taxes can be confusing! This quarter's deadline for your estimated tax payments, both personal and business, is September 15th. If you need a copy of your estimated tax vouchers, they are readily available in your client portal. If you encounter any challenges accessing the portal, our administrative team is here to assist you; please contact them at admin@harmonycpa.com. Looking forward, as we enter the back portion of the year, if you anticipate that your income for 2023 will be materially different from 2022 and would like to adjust your Q4 2023 estimates, please reach out to our admin team and they will gladly schedule a November meeting to review YTD income and make any necessary adjustments. We're here to support you every step of the way.

Estimated Quarterly Tax Payments

For people who receive primarily wages, called W-2 income, income taxes are withheld from each paycheck along with the employee’s half of the required contribution for Social Security and Medicare Taxes (for W-2 wages, the employer is responsible for the other half of FICA taxes). The net effect of this arrangement is that most taxpayers don’t have to deal with estimated tax payments.

If you run your own business, freelance, or control your own hours as an independent contractor, however, you become liable for managing the ongoing tax payment process by paying estimated taxes. Estimated taxes are required to be paid as you earn income throughout the year.  Since non-wage income earnings can be unpredictable and not subject to withholding, estimated tax payments are calculated estimates of your tax bill.  Anyone who is earning income resulting in a tax liability in excess of $1,000 is responsible to pay estimated taxes quarterly to the IRS and, usually, to their state, as well.

As complicated as this seems, it is easy to handle your estimated tax payment obligations efficiently and (relatively) painlessly as long as you are communicating regularly with your Harmony tax accounting team and staying on top of your estimated tax payments.

The IRS requires estimated taxes to be paid approximately quarterly, according to the schedule below:

* Due dates that fall on a weekend or a legal holiday are shifted to the next business day.
** Note two-month period


To pay your Federal estimated taxes you need to submit your payment with a quarterly estimated tax payment form (Form 1040-ES), which you will obtain from your Harmony Tax preparer. Your baseline estimated tax vouchers amounts for the current year are set annually, during the preparation of your prior year tax return, and these are generally emailed to you at the same time as your completed return. If you have misplaced the forms or need a copy, you can get a copy from your Harmony Client Portal or simply email our admin team at admin@harmonycpa.com and we’ll coordinate them for you.

Your tax advisor prepares these vouchers for you based on our professional knowledge of your ongoing income; there are minimum amounts that need to be paid, based on prior year results, but we will sometimes advise you to pay in an amount that varies from the statutory minimum based on what we expect to happen in a given tax year.

Once we’ve calculated your potential liability you will make payments according to the schedule (although you can prepay your liability if you desire) and payments can be made by mailing in the payment stubs on the Form 1040-ES, online or through the IRS2GO app.

If you miss a deadline or make an underpayment the IRS will assess penalties and interest on any amount that wasn’t filed or underpaid. These assessments can add up quickly. Failure-to-pay penalties are assessed at 5% a month, up to 25% on any delinquent amount and if you don’t file, failure-to-file penalties can be added as well. You will also be subject to interest on any late payments so it’s vital to make up any shortfalls or delinquencies and not wait for filing deadlines. Additionally, the IRS may be more receptive to waiving penalties when taxpayers are proactive in remedying any issues.

If you are making estimated tax payments, as long as you pay 90% of the total tax obligation for the year in a timely manner you will be exempted from any penalties. Often the total tax obligation is difficult to pin down, as your business income and expenses are in flux for 365 days per year, so an easy way to avoid any underpayment penalty is to pay paying 100% of your previous year’s tax obligation (110% if your gross income is over $150,000) as estimated tax payments. This safe harbor strategy protects you from underpayment penalties and ensures you pay in the minimum required amount, but it doesn’t match your estimates to your income: if your business has declined vs the prior year, you may end up with a large refund, or if your business has grown, the balance due with your return could be quite substantial. To that end, we recommend reaching out to our team at the beginning of November if you get close to the end of the year and expect that your final taxable income will vary substantially from the prior year’s; we can schedule an estimated tax review together and update your Q4 vouchers to reflect expected final balances.

Estimated taxes are a bit scary for many taxpayers, but they’re not nearly as complex as they sound. Handling them successfully follows the same rules for success as every other aspect of small business – planning, relying on expert advice and adhering to schedules. By working together with your Harmony Tax team we can make the process smooth and easy.

Journal Entries

September 2023

We're Still Writing About Inflation...

In August, U.S. inflation accelerated due to rising energy prices, marking challenges in stabilizing the economy into the mythical soft landing. The consumer-price index climbed 0.6% from July, its most rapid ascent in over a year, propelled mainly by escalating gasoline costs. On the positive side, core prices devoid of fluctuating food and energy rates, grew only 0.3% due to increased costs in sectors like air travel and vehicle insurance.  These figures indicate that the Federal Reserve is likely to pause interest rate hikes in the upcoming meeting, with the core inflation rate dipping slightly to 4.3% from 4.7%. Global events, such as Saudi Arabia's decision to curtail crude oil production and potential industrial strikes, mean that any interest rate movement could be temporary.  

 

Mammas Let Your Babies Grow Up to be Doctors/Nurses/PAs

A Treasury official once said that the United States is a health insurance company with an army.  If we’re judged by what we spend our money on that…that isn’t wrong. The United States spends 18.3% of our Gross Domestic Product on healthcare, multiples more than the next country. Military spending accounts for half of discretionary spending. There are a myriad of complex reasons why the United States has untethered from other developed countries when it comes to healthcare/military expenditures that aren’t for this newsletter. What is relevant to our audience is the demographic trends and rise in private employment opportunities. As America’s population ages (it reached a record high this year) there are tremendous growth opportunities in healthcare: 3 of the 5 highest growing six figure jobs are in healthcare.

 

Where Are the Happy Hours of Yesteryear

The pandemic shift to work-from-home and ensuing tug of war pulling workers back to the office has profoundly changed American work culture. “Forced Corporate Fun” is getting pushback as employees are drawing the line at after-work schmoozing. Newtonian physics proved that an object at rest stays at rest while an object in motion stays in motion unless acted upon by external forces. It seems that workers at home prefer to stay at home and relationships that are defined by the black box of Zoom have less gravitational pull than those formed in person. It’s a tricky needle for executives to thread to foster an inclusive, healthy corporate environment that facilitates collaboration and even friendship – the latter of which is proven to increase productivity, satisfaction and retention.

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