Copyright 2010 TheStreet.com, Inc.All Rights Reserved
TheStreet.com
February 8, 2010 Monday 15:47 PM EST
SECTION: NEWS & ANALYSIS; Local Energy Update
LENGTH: 625 words
HEADLINE: Keep Your Business and Personal Finances Separate
BYLINE: Entrepreneur.com.
Karin Price Mueller is an award-winning personal finance and consumer writer. She’s a columnist for The Star-Ledger and regular Entrepreneur.com contributor. Mueller lives in New Jersey with her husband, three children, two guinea pigs and one Beta fish. Whatever they don’t eat goes into her retirement savings accounts. You can read her work atwww.KarinPriceMueller.com. For bios of and stories by Entrepreneur.com columnists, please click here. For more information about Entrepreneur.com click here.By Karin Price Mueller of Entrepreneur.com Business owners intertwine business and personal finances all too often. After all, you are your business, but muddling up the two will mean a mess at tax time.Even if you’re just starting out, it’s essential to split up these two parts of your money life. Treat your business, big or small, like a viable entity.“That starts with tracking your business expenses separately from your personal, even though initially it may feel like they are one in the same if you are a one-man shop,” says Cynthia Heil, a certified financial planner with Cascade Financial Management in Tampa, Fla. Here’s how you can peel your business away from your personal finances.* Maintain separate checking accounts Start with your bank. Open a business checking account. “If there’s ever a question as to whether it’s a hobby or a business, the IRS looks to see if you have a separate checking account,” says Richard Salmen, a certified financial planner withGTRUST Financial Partnersin Overland Park, Kan. If you use Quicken, Quickbooks or Microsoft Money, Salmen advises making sure you have two separate systems: one for personal and one for business. Not only is having two accounts tax-smart, it will also improve your organization. At the end of the year, all your income and expenses will be in one place, making record keeping and tax filing easier. If you try to separate all your records in March or April, you won’t be able to accurately remember all the money moves from the prior tax year. Keeping good records year-long will give you proof of your business expenses if you do get audited.* Use a business credit card Lending requirements are quite strict for small businesses. Still, try to get a business credit card. Like the separate checking account, a credit card will help your record keeping and give you something to show the IRS if you’re audited. The business credit card could give you an extra tax deduction too. “If you need to carry a balance on a business credit card, that’s the only credit card interest that’s deductible as a business expense,” Salmen says.* Make it official Consider establishing a limited liability company (LLC) or an S Corp for your business. Sit down with your team of advisors — attorneys, CPAs, financial planners and insurance agents — and determine what entity makes the most sense, how this business will impact your taxes and financial plan and what insurance coverage you should consider, Heil says. These business entities will also give your personal finances a new level of liability protection, which could come in very handy of your business is ever sued.* When it’s time to file Having a checking account, credit card and record keeping software earmarked exclusively for business use will give you most of what you need to file your taxes and to prove to the IRS that your business really is a business. But there are other considerations, too. If you use a home office, you’re eligible for a deduction, but only if you do it right. Even then, you could be in for an audit. Salmen shared the story of one of his clients. The wife was a salaried employee and the husband ran money-losing photography business out of a home office. He was eligible for the home office deduction, but because his business lost money, Salmen warned it might be a red flag for an audit. It was. They took photos of the office, which was used solely for business, and after the audit, they were able to keep the home office deductions. “People are way too afraid to take the home office deduction because they don’t want to be audited, but take it if it’s legitimate,” Salmen says. “The key is that it has to be used exclusively for business. You can’t have a daybed in it for visitors.”
LOAD-DATE: February 9, 2010
Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy
Advertisement
More Articles