Tag Archives: income tax

First-Quarter “Safe-Harbor” Quarterly IRS Estimated Tax Payments: Why and How to Make Them

For years, we have stressed the importance to our clients of making quarterly estimated tax payments. And unlike many tax preparers, we also do bookkeeping, accounting, and consulting for our small business owners — so we’ve also encouraged them to have us do a quarter-by-quarter calculation of how much to pay.

There were many reasons for this:
· Making sure the client had their books up-to-date and reconciled for the quarter, so they can be used for real-time managerial decisions;
· Matching the cash flow of a given quarter (or the actual sales and vendor invoices, for accrual-basis clients) to the related tax liability;
· Preventing the common situation of getting to tax-time and having a huge refund or balance due.

However, times have changed. We still want folks to make quarterly payments (see my related IRS & Illinois posts for how to do it online), but for the first quarter, at least, we’re asking everyone to use “safe-harbor” calculations.

Why Use 1Q Safe-Harbor Calculations Instead of Annualizing?

For one, the immense number of changes to our tax code since the Tax Cuts & Jobs Act (TCJA) took effect in 2018 has made tax planning substantially more complex than it used to be. The amount of time it takes to do a “back of the envelope” or “paper napkin” calculation has tripled. (And in case you’re curious — we use tax software and Excel, not used envelopes and paper napkins in our firm. That’s how you know you’re working with a real professional.) Both the effort involved and the cost to the client have increased accordingly.

Relatedly, first-quarter estimated tax payments are due on the same day as personal 1040 and C-Corp 1120 taxes are due. And since our tax-time work is a deeper dive than it used to be, and the estimated tax calculations are more complex as well, there simply isn’t enough time to do a full-on calculation for each and every client that requests it — at least, not if we also want to be well-rested and in good health, so we can do our very best on the remaining annual tax returns.

There’s good news, too, however — the state of Illinois — and many other states, used legislation to create a loophole for getting around a pesky TCJA limitation on the State And Local Tax (SALT) deduction. I won’t explain it all here, but the result is that all of our S-Corp and Partnership (aka “Pass-Through Entity”, or PTE) clients are paying their personal state taxes through the company. This is a very easy and predictable calculation, as Illinois charges a flat tax (not socially progressive, but it certainly is simple) and requires the annual liability to be divided by four and paid evenly across the quarterly deadlines.

(Side note: the deadlines are not actually quarterly. Due to the timing of the federal government’s fiscal year-end and individuals’ calendar year-end, they are skewed such that they’re not even the same number of months per quarter. You would think that of all the government departments that could count properly, it’d be the IRS, but apparently not. The due dates are 4/15, 6/15, 9/15 and 1/15 — though many are better off making the final state tax payment by 12/31.)

As a result, quarterly calculations for the state simply aren’t necessary for the first quarter (possibly even the first three quarters, depending). Given that the states seem to live for assessing penalties and interest for underpayment of estimated taxes (they are wildly aggressive about it), this is the best approach to take.

But it’s not just the states that issue penalties and interest for underpayment of taxes — the IRS does, as well. Much less aggressively, however, and they do still have the notion (that the new Illinois PTE tax law does not) of “annualizing” your quarterly taxes. This means that you presume the amount you made year-to-date is representative of the whole year, and paying quarterly tax based on that projection. It works great for small business owners who have lower income in the first three-quarters of the year and then make most of their profit in the final quarter.

Just to be clear: we still do this for our clients… but we wait until the second or third quarter, and in some unusual cases, we wait until November and then do a thorough analysis of the year thus far. It’s just that there’s little point in running these calculations for the first quarter anymore — it’s almost never representative of the rest of the year, and it places them into a precarious situation where they may end up underpaying by too much and then owing penalties and interest. Or, at the very least, having to pay us at tax-time to fill out the complicated annualization schedule on the tax return. If you want to be more accurate with your calculation, because you expect your income to be substantially higher or lower than last year, then ask to book a May tax-planning session to get squared-up for the 2Q payment, due June 15.

Last, but not least — we’ve decided to have all our clients commit to a monthly bookkeeping and accounting contract with us. Doing annual clean-ups during tax season simply is no longer sustainable (to be honest I’m not sure it ever was, which is one of many reasons so many CPAs are burned out), and isn’t cost-effective. It’s also not fair to our other clients — who are on a monthly schedule — to have to wait in line while we work on those who swing through just once-a-year. And most importantly, we truly believe that all small business owners should be looking at their financial statements regularly to help them make impactful decisions throughout the year — ones that can sometimes be the difference between turning a profit or enduring a loss. And since everyone will be on a monthly schedule, the motivation no longer exists to do quarterly reviews for estimated tax purposes, purely as a way to get clients motivated to catch up on their books.

Where To Find Your Safe-Harbor Amounts and How To Pay Them

If you’re a client of ours, or of pretty much any tax professional out there, calculating safe-harbor quarterly estimates can and should be a part of preparing your annual tax return.

After reviewing and signing your return, your CPA (or EA, JD or non-credentialed preparer) will e-file it, and once it’s accepted by the IRS and state agencies, they will either send over vouchers (which I wouldn’t bother using, because we want to pay taxes online almost every time that’s an option), or a list of required payments — whether that’s in a letter or a little chart form where you can check ’em off. However you get them — put them in your calendar now. Do not rely on your tax preparer to remind you. This is not their job. You are a grown person running your own business, surrounded by technology that is designed for precisely this kind of thing.

While you’re at it, save these links for instructions on how to pay online:
– IRS: How To Pay IRS Quarterly Estimated Taxes Online — Don’t Let Your Checks Get Buried Or Lost In The Mail (msn.com)
– Illinois: How To Make Quarterly Estimated Taxes Online — Illinois IDOR | The Dancing Accountant

And if you’re in a panic and can’t find the amounts, the general rule is that you want to pay 1/4th-ish of your total tax liability for the prior year (a bit higher for some states, such as Illinois). Again, if we do your taxes, you should have already received these totals for 2024, or will be receiving them as soon as your return is finalized.

Frequently Asked Questions

1) What if I have an extension?
Two options here: a) provide your tax preparer all the docs you already have and ask them to do their best to give you an estimate; they can even add that to the amount you’ll need to pay with an extension — which means if your extension payment estimate is short, the 1Q estimate will make up the difference, and either way, you’ll just apply the balance to the current tax year; or, b) go ahead and keep paying the same amount you paid for last year’s quarterly taxes; some payment is better than none.

2) What if I don’t have a tax preparer?
All the DIY tax programs out there can do this, too — they’re not very helpful for the tax planning that we do with our clients for 2Q & 3Q, and certainly not for 4Q — but they do a perfectly fine job with safe-harbor estimates. Alternatively, check out my colleague Hannah Smolinski‘s great YouTube primer on how to calculate estimated taxes.

And since you asked, here’s a fabulous photo of Hannah and me at QuickBooks ConnectFest.


3) What if I can’t afford to pay my quarterly estimates?
Pro tip: Did you know you can break your quarterly payment into smaller chunks? Let’s say you owe $2400 per quarter and you’re worried that you won’t have enough set aside by the time the due date arrives, because it’s so hard not to raid your own savings account when opportunities call. Just go online and pay $800 per month instead. Or $200 per week. It gets tricky with the weird quarterly tax due dates, but you are a smart cookie and can figure out the math. The point is that you don’t have to save it all up and then make the payment. If you have cash on hand, you can go in there now and do it while it’s on your mind, even if it’s a partial payment. Something is better than nothing.

4) What if I forgot to pay for a quarter?
Go in there and make a payment now. The penalties are per day, so the sooner you make up the difference the better.

5) What if I have additional questions about the process?
Throw whatever you can at the quarterly estimates and contact a CPA to help you… after Tax Day. Please be respectful of the plight of tax preparers right now. It will not serve you long-term to try to wedge yourself onto someone’s calendar last-minute: almost all the good ones had a deadline for submitting tax materials weeks ago; we’re all exhausted and likely to make mistakes this time of year if we’re taking on too much and not taking care of ourselves; and you want to start off on a good foot when building a relationship with a trusted advisor. The amount of penalties and interest that will be due if you underpay slightly is not that significant if you’re going to be making up the difference in a month, so just pay what you can and get on-track later.

Now, get yourself online and go make those first-quarter safe-harbor quarterly tax payments, already!


If this or any other posts on the website were useful to you, and your financial situation permits it, please consider contributing to my tip jar. Ths allows me to continue to provide free accounting resources to small businesses who do not have the funds available to hire a CPA.

Tax Preparers Rejoice! Here’s How To Prepare SECURE 2.0 Form 8881 Retirement Tax Credit If You Use Gusto & Guideline

Photo by coco tafoya on Unsplash

As my readers and colleagues know, I’m a huge proponent of leveraging technology to remove the drudgery from our jobs and those of our small business clients. We all have enough on our plates already!

As a CPA whose company works with loads of small businesses that need to process payroll, I’ve used quite a few payroll systems through the years… and Gusto has become our favorite. It’s not without its quirks and issues, but overall it does a great job for a great price, and — key for the work we do — it syncs nicely with QuickBooks Online, as well as with Guideline Retirement, saving us oodles of time that we used to spend on benefit reconciliations. (In my recent MSN article about choosing the best state-mandated small business employee retirement plan solution, I cite this as one of the main reasons to go with Guideline.)

This week, I discovered a gift that Gusto created for tax preparers with clients that use the Gusto+Guideline combo — a reporting tool that will literally prepare the Form 8881 “Credit for Small Employer Pension Plan Startup Costs” for you. No joke. And it works!

I want to shout it from the rooftops, because it’s a massive timesaver. The previous SECURE Act credit was super-easy to claim, but this year, the Form 8881 was updated for SECURE 2.0 to include loads of information that most CPA firms are simply not going to have access to — not only current tax-year payroll information, but prior-year data on a per-employee basis; as well as information on how many employees qualified to participate (whether or not they actually participated), again both in 2022 and in 2023.

It was such a balm on my tired tax-preparing soul to know that they were looking out for us and trying to make our lives better through technology. The only thing I can’t figure out is why no one told me about it sooner. (Honestly, I randomly stumbled on it when I went into my own Gusto account to run weekly payroll.)

Not only did we end up using these reports for our own tax clients, but we also sent them over to our colleagues who prepare the tax returns for certain bookkeeping clients of ours, to help them out. And now we’re superstars to them. In fact, here’s a great idea for all the bookkeepers reading: run this report for all your clients, prepare a zip file for each of the tax preparation firms you work with, and send them this beautiful present all tied up with a pretty virtual bow. I’m always talking about collaboration and co-firming between bookkeepers and CPAs (come see me this June at Scaling New Heights for “The Tax-Ready Bookkeeper”) and this is a great example of it! Who do you think they’re going to recommend when a tax client needs accounting and bookkeeping assistance? You!

Keep in mind that these reports are only accurate if a) the client was on Gusto and Guideline, and b) were on them both for all of 2023.

These are the steps I walked through and the screens I clicked on to make this magic happen.

  1. Sign into Gusto and go into a client that used Gusto+Guideline for all of 2023. (No other payroll, no other retirement company.)
  2. On the left side bar, click on “Tax credits”.

3. Under “Available credits”, find the one that says “401(k) tax credit” and click the “Learn more” button.

4. Check out the overview and the FAQ, and then click the “Get started” button.

5. Fill out the short questionnaire. The information below was correct for my own company, but may not be the same answers for yours or for your clients, so make sure to answer accurately. Then click the “Continue” button.

6. At this point, Gusto will provide you with the amount of the credit, as well as all the information you need to prepare the Form 8881. Review it carefully. This is particularly important if you have employees who are not represented in Gusto because you are using another payroll provider simultaneously. And as I mentioned above, if the client switched retirement companies from another provider to Guideline part-way through the year, this information will not be accurate. Once you’ve reviewed the data, then click the “Generate credit form” button at the bottom of the page.

7. On the next screen, you will have two options:

If you click the “Download” button it gives you an incredible PDF with not only all the information you need to know to prepare the 8881, but a copy of the IRS form itself, filled-out exactly as it should be, according to their records + Guideline’s records.

If you click “Review Details” (to the right of the amount of your credit) you’ll get a screen pop-up from the right that you can scroll through to review the same information they noted above. From here, you can click “Reset credit form” if some of the information looks incorrect and you need to edit the questionnaire, or simply click “Close” if you’re done.

That’s it. It was simply that easy. The process of figuring out all this information prior to discovering Gusto’s beautiful gift took about two hours — which doesn’t count the digging through reports in Gusto and Guideline to figure out which ones told us what we needed to know, reaching out to Guideline support and asking for a custom report to be generated for each client that would show which employees qualified (turns out they are completely unaware that Gusto has this great resource, too — someone should definitely let them know)… and it definitely doesn’t count the ridiculous amount of time we spent figuring it out for our last remaining ADP client hold-outs — their reports can’t even be exported into Excel! PDF-only, you heard me. I’ve been warning those two clients for years that one day I’m going to issue an ultimatum. That day might be coming soon.

One small glitch: for some clients, it shows an extra month of Guideline service fee payments compared to what is in QuickBooks Online, which I think is simply a timing issue. It’s also a small-enough amount that if it gets claimed in 2023 instead of 2024, that’s not a huge deal. However, we manually edited ours accordingly, and hope that this gets cleaned up for next tax year.

And while we’re here — did you know that our Gusto referral link will get you a $100 prepaid Visa card when you sign up and run your first paid payroll? Or — $200 if you have over 10 employees! And for accountant partners, signing up through this link will earn you $500 once you’ve added and run payroll for three clients. Next year, you too can be reveling in the glory of pre-prepared small business retirement credits!


If this or any other posts on the website were useful to you, and your financial situation permits it, please consider contributing to my tip jar. Ths allows me to continue to provide free accounting resources to small businesses who do not have the funds available to hire a CPA.

Struggling With Taxes? Here’s Where To Get Help in 2024.

The past four years have been challenging in so many ways, to so many people — but as a tax preparer, I can confidently say that the inability for the IRS to provide its usual level of customer service has been among the most impactful. Luckily, recent Congressional funding to make up for years of inadequate budgets, combined with Treasury Secretary Yellen’s direction that IRS priorities should include clearing the backlog of unprocessed tax returns and improving customer service, seem to be making a difference.

Pre-pandemic, the IRS offered all sorts of taxpayer assistance options, but the inability to offer in-person services, as well as the intense strain that government financial relief programs placed on the already-stretched agency, made it impossible to offer even the most basic of support programs. The good news is that now Taxpayer Assistance Centers are open to the public one Saturday each month for walk-in help without an appointment.

On February 24, March 16, April 13, and May 18, from 9 am to 4 pm, certain IRS Taxpayer Assistance Centers will offer in-person service and assistance to meet taxpayers’ needs. The IRS recommends that you come prepared and bring documents such as photo ID, Social Security cards, IRS notices received, proof of bank account information, and so on. Professional foreign language interpretation will be available through an over-the-phone translation service. For a list of addresses, visit the IRS’s website announcement and then click the plus-sign to the left of your date of choice. Scroll down to your state, and all the addresses of the participating offices will be listed.

The IRS also notes various options for obtaining free tax preparation services locally:

The IRS has also published a series of Tax Time Guide” news releases designed as a resource to help taxpayers file an accurate tax return. And NerdWallet recently published a list of free and tax preparation resources. It’s not a magic wand, but after some rough years, you’re no longer alone when it comes to navigating tax season.


If this or any other posts on the website were useful to you, and your financial situation permits it, please consider contributing to my tip jar. Ths allows me to continue to provide free accounting resources to small businesses who do not have the funds available to hire a CPA.

Tax Season 2023 Is Officially Open! Maybe. Okay, Not So Fast.

(Many thanks to the AICPA Town Hall for allowing members to leverage their resources, such as the slides included in this article. The opinions shared here are the author’s and not those of AICPA or CPA.com.)

Tax preparers everywhere spent the past two months gearing up for yesterday’s “opening day” of tax season, January 29th. It was an exciting time for us, as it was finally going to be a return to normal. What does that even mean anymore, you might ask? Well, most of the pandemic financial relief programs have wrapped up (save a straggler ERC claim here or there); amendments resulting from that era have almost all been filed; the odd rebates and credits that no one remembered the amounts for were a thing of the past; there were no last-minute tax extenders; and the season end-date actually lands on April 15th for the first time in ages. It felt like we finally had a handle on things and were back to the “normal” amount of seasonal overwork — rather than a Herculean lift, as was the case for the past four years.

Enter Congress. Despite the fact that The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA), National Association of Tax Professionals (NATP) and small business advocacy groups have been lobbying for over a year to get an extension of certain popular tax benefits that expired in 2023, our leaders somehow managed to wait until after year-end to introduce legislation to that effect — Tax Relief for American Families and Workers Act — in a spectacular show of bipartisan ignorance. Never mind that the IRS e-file has been offline since November 18th, because it takes over two months to reprogram the systems for new tax laws, updates, and edits to tax forms.

As for January 30th, the legislation has yet to come up for a vote. And yet the IRS is telling taxpayers to go ahead and file when ready, and makes no reference to the pending legislation in today’s Outreach Connection email.

Some of the anticipated changes if the legislation passes as-written include popular business expensing programs that are designed to be leveraged throughout the year. Making them retroactive does nothing to spur the economy, as the decisions to buy equipment, invest in R&D, or take out loans were already made, last year.

To be clear: I’m not saying these aren’t potentially good changes for tax law, business, and the economy. Just that doing it at this late date is misguided in far too many ways.

And the part I really don’t understand is this: IRS Commissioner Werfel told reporters last Friday, “If there’s a change that impacts your return, we will make the change, and we will send you the update — whether it’s an additional refund or otherwise — without you having to take additional steps.” This is simply impossible for most of the business expensing features of the law, which are voluntary elections on the part of the taxpayer. Presumably this is a reference to the child tax credit provisions in the legislation — which have gotten the most press, but have little effect on small business owners, and are a small portion of the actual bill.

The House Ways and Means Committee released a statement recently indicating that the IRS “confirmed its intention to make necessary systems updates by around six weeks after the date of enactment”. Six weeks. Most refunds are issued within three. Six weeks takes us past the S-Corp and Partnership filing deadline. Six weeks?

Speaking of that deadline, many states announced e-filing would begin on the same date as the IRS opened federal tax season, but it turns out that our state (and I’m guessing others) did not release their S-Corp or Partnership forms with enough advance notice for our third-party tax software to program them into their system, so we are unable to e-file any Illinois business tax returns until February 7th. And we were freaking out about that delay. I can’t imagine what six weeks will look like.

To say nothing of the fact that the next government shutdown deadline is scheduled for one week before business tax returns are due. This should make for an even more laid-back season.

And to add to all of this, that the bill is being funded by an early end to the Employee Retention Credit program, as of January 31, 2024. We spent all of last week scrambling to get the remaining claims in, and won’t know whether that sprint was worth the anxiety or not until this bill passes (or doesn’t) — I feel terrible for those who find out in February that their claim’s due date is suddenly in the past.

Again, some of the provisions in this bill are great ideas — well thought-through, balanced, as well as good for business, families, and potentially the economy. Bad players in the world of ERC mills will finally have to deal with some consequences, and the 1099 burden for small vendors and freelancers will be eased as the threshold is finally indexed for inflation. Some good stuff.

So let’s pass this as 2024 legislation, just in time for the new year, as it should be… and get out of the way of tax season, already!


If this or any other posts on the website were useful to you, and your financial situation permits it, please consider contributing to my tip jar. Ths allows me to continue to provide free accounting resources to small businesses who do not have the funds available to hire a CPA.

Top Five Tax Benefits Your Preparer Might Be Forgetting

(c) Nataliya Vaitkevich via Pexels

I used to find it annoying when a client would forward me an article about a tax deduction or credit, to make sure I would take it on their tax return. But even though I take approximately 70 credit hours of continuing education each year (almost twice the requirement for Illinois CPAs), every once-in-a-while a new tax law falls between the cracks, or I might not realize a given client is suddenly eligible for an old one. So, while 99% of these shares are “old news”, it’s worth avoiding the eye roll and taking a look just in case. Out with the ego, in with the knowledge.

To that end, when you do share something with your tax preparer, I beg you to phrase it in respectful language that recognizes they are experts in their field. Examples: “I’m sure you already know about this but just wanted to play it safe,” or “I read about this new tax law and am constantly amazed at how much y’all have to keep up with; any chance this applies to my situation?”

There are five tax benefits I’ve noticed — in my interactions with colleagues at conferences, in webinar chat, or in our online communities — that seem to keep flying under the radar. Most likely the tax preparer is expecting the bookkeeper or taxpayer to bring it up if one of these situations exists, but they may not know it’s significant, and may forget to note it in the books or tax organizer. So, to make sure we’re all on the same page, here are a few choice tax benefits that are often overlooked.

  • Credit for Small Employer Retirement Plan Startup Costs
  • Employer Credit for Paid Family and Medical Leave
  • Restaurant Meals Enhanced Deduction (2021 & 2022 only)
  • Self-Employed Health Insurance
  • Health Insurance Premium Tax Credit

Credit for Small Employer Retirement Plan Startup Costs —
SECURE 2.0 gets most of the airtime these days, but back in late 2019, the original version of this law passed, making it easier for small business owners to set up “safe harbor” retirement plans that are less expensive and easier to administer, and made them accessible to a wider range of employees. Although many of these benefits were modified and expanded upon with SECURE 2.0, the new rules didn’t take effect until 2023. But that shouldn’t stop you (or your preparer) from taking a look at the benefits in place in 2022. For starters, Form 8881, Credit for Small Employer Pension Plan Startup Costs provides for a maximum tax credit of up to $500 per year for startup costs, and another $500 per year to employers who create a 401(k) or SIMPLE IRA plan with automatic enrollment. This benefit is a win-win for employers and employees, especially when the employee additionally qualifies for the retirement savers’ credit.

Employer Credit for Paid Family and Medical Leave —
Effective starting 2018, the Section 45S Employer Credit for Paid Family and Medical Leave is designed to cover up to 25% of the cost to employers of providing paid family and medical leave to their staff. The FMLA credit is claimed on Form 8994, Employer Credit for Paid Family and Medical Leave. To qualify, employers must have a written policy providing all eligible employees access to at least two weeks of paid family and medical leave annually, paid at 50% or more of normal wages (yes, short-term disability policies often count).

Policies must also include leave that covers one or more of the following:
– Birth of a child
– Adoption or fostering of a child
– Care for a spouse or family member with a serious health condition
– Employee’s own serious health condition
– Spouses and family member of certain active military members

Employers can claim the credit for up to 12 weeks of paid leave benefits. It’s available through 2025 and the IRS has an FAQ on it that’s chock-full of details.

Restaurant Meal 100% Deduction —
For 2021 and 2022 only, businesses can deduct the full cost of business-related food and beverages purchased from a restaurant; the limit is usually 50% of the meal, so this can be quite a savings. For our own clients, we’re simply exporting the entire “Meals” category from their financial software and reviewing all payees, sorting out the ones that are not restaurants… yet another benefit for small business owners who heed our cry to “please add payees to all transactions”.

Per the IRS, to qualify for the enhanced deduction:
– The business owner or an employee of the business must be present when food or beverages are provided.
– Meals must be from restaurants, which includes businesses that prepare and sell food or beverages to retail customers for immediate on-premises or off-premises consumption.
– Payment or billing for the food and beverages occurs after December 31, 2020, and before January 1, 2023.
– The expense cannot be lavish or extravagant.
– Grocery stores, convenience stores and other businesses that mostly sell pre-packaged goods not for immediate consumption, do not qualify as restaurants. ­

Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction —
Now, this may sound obvious, since almost everyone knows that self-employed people are generally allowed to deduct their health insurance premiums for themselves, their spouses, and their dependents (and in some cases, non-dependent children). Yet we often see this benefit overlooked on tax returns, especially when S-Corp shareholders pay for their insurance through work. There are special and complex rules regarding how this health insurance deduction is claimed, which I suspect is why it is often missed (or sometimes duplicated). It’s important to understand that this is not a business deduction; neither do you have to itemize to take it. The deduction is claimed as a reduction of taxable income, and applies only to income taxes, not to self-employment taxes. It also needs to be subtracted from Section 199A Qualified Business Income before calculating the QBI Deduction, and there are complex issues when it interacts with the Premium Tax Credit (see below), so keep an eye out for these potential issues when claiming this important tax benefit.

Premium Tax Credit —
This one is often overlooked on tax returns in more than one direction… often the client forgets to provide Form 1095-A (Marketplace Health Insurance) to their preparer, which shows the advance premium tax credit, and therefore any increase or decrease in the credit based on the current year’s income is missed. How does this happen? Well, the credit is based on the prior tax year’s income, but “reconciled” on the tax return against the current tax year’s income — therefore, if the taxpayer had a good year, they may lose most or all of their credit. By contrast, in more difficult times, they may find out on the return that they’re entitled to more of a credit than they received. Not everyone enrolled on the Marketplace is eligible for a credit, so it’s easy to miss in the long list of tax organizer questions if the client doesn’t know to ask or to submit the form.

Per the IRS: If you benefit from advance payments of the premium tax credit, it is important to report life changes to the Marketplace as they happen throughout the year. Certain changes to your household, income or family size may affect the amount of your premium tax credit. These changes can alter your tax refund, or cause you to owe tax. Reporting these changes promptly will help you get the proper type and amount of financial assistance. For more information, see Claiming the Credit and Reconciling Advance Credit Payments.


To be fair to tax preparers everywhere, there is far more in the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) than any one person could ever know, which is part of why CPAs are required in most states to obtain more continuing education credits than almost any other professional designation. (Though keep in mind — there is no requirement that a tax preparer be a CPA, or even an EA. See here for my guide to finding a qualified tax preparer in your area.) The past five years have seen unprecedented increases in tax law complexity, and quite frankly — it’s hard to keep it all straight. So if you’re concerned your tax preparer is missing something, please approach the matter with respect and deference, and do not judge too harshly if they happen to have missed something. Just be glad you read this article and caught it in time! (And if you didn’t catch it in time, ask them about filing an amendment.)


If this or any other posts on the website were useful to you, and your financial situation permits it, please consider contributing to my tip jar. Ths allows me to continue to provide free accounting resources to small businesses who do not have the funds available to hire a CPA.

What Does A Tax Extension Mean For You?

It’s that time again… Tax Day is upon us and millions of taxpayers will need to have their returns extended for various reasons. What does this mean? The AICPA has released a “Tax Extension FAQ” for CPA members to share with their clients.

What does filing an “extension” do?

• An extension is a form filed with the IRS to request additional time to file your federal tax return. This extends the due date for submitting your individual return to October 15.
• In some states, filing an extension with the IRS will automatically extend the time to complete a state income tax return. My note: In others, you must file a state extension. In still others, you must make a payment as your extension.
• Filing an extension grants you additional time to submit your complete and accurate return, but you still need to estimate whether you will owe any taxes and pay that estimated balance by the original due date.
• Extending your return allows you and your CPA more time to prepare your tax return to ensure the filing of an accurate tax return. In many cases, you may still be waiting for additional information (e.g., Schedules K-1, corrected Forms 1099, etc.) to complete your return.

Why does my CPA suggest we extend my tax return?

• If your CPA has recommended that you file an extension, it may be due to many reasons, such as:
– The volume of data or complexity of certain transactions (e.g., sale of a rental property) on your return requires additional time.
– The amount of time remaining in filing season is limited for the CPA to complete client returns by the due date* due to late-arriving information.
– My note: Your small business accounting file needs to be tied out to source documents and all adjustments booked before we will finalize a return, and there may be delays in this process due to a variety of issues.
• Many CPAs have a “cutoff” or deadline for clients submitting their tax information so they can plan their workload to ensure all client returns and extensions are completed by the due date.
• Your CPA may suggest filing an extension if there are aspects of your return affected by pending guidance or legislation.

Am I more likely to be audited if I extend?

• Extending will NOT increase your likelihood of being audited by the IRS.
• It is better to file an extension than to file a return that is incomplete or that you have not had time to carefully review before signing.

What are the primary benefits of extending my tax return?

• It provides for additional time to file returns without penalty when you are waiting for missing information or tax documents (such as corrected Forms 1099). Just remember that an extension provides additional time to file, but not additional time to pay. Penalties may be assessed if sufficient payment is not remitted with the extension.
• You may qualify for additional retirement planning opportunities or additional time to fund certain types of retirement plans (e.g., SEP IRA).
• It is often less expensive (and easier) to file an extension rather than rushing and possibly needing to amend your return later.

Should I do anything differently if I am filing an extension or “going on extension?”

• No, you still should give your CPA whatever information you have as early as possible or as soon as it becomes available.
• Expect to pay any anticipated taxes owed by the due date.* You still need to submit all available tax information to your CPA promptly so they can determine if you will have a balance due or if you can expect a refund.
• If you are required to make quarterly estimated tax payments, individual first quarter estimated tax payments are due on the same day as annual taxes. Your CPA may recommend that you pay the balance due for last year and your first quarter estimated tax payment for this year with your extension.
• If you are anticipating a large refund, your CPA will likely try to get your extended return completed as soon as possible once all tax information is available. Your CPA may also want to discuss tax planning opportunities with you so that, in future years, you don’t give the IRS an interest-free loan.

My note: I’d like to add that we take filing extensions for our clients very seriously. We collect as much information as we possibly can about the year’s taxable income and deductions, extrapolate based on information from the prior year, and build a complete tax return — filling in estimates where needed. This way, we get as accurate a picture as we can so as to project how much might be owed to the tax agencies. We do our best, although it’s not perfect, and as a result, much more work is involved in putting together an extension than most folks might think.

More from the IRS on filing extensions here, including a link to file your own for free.

More from the Illinois Department of Revenue here, on making an individual tax extension payment online.

Our blog post step-by-step on how to make quarterly estimated tax payments online.


If this or any other posts on the website were useful to you, and your financial situation permits it, please consider contributing to my tip jar. Ths allows me to continue to provide free accounting resources to small businesses who do not have the funds available to hire a CPA.

How To Make Quarterly Estimated Taxes Online — Illinois IDOR

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Reminder: Due to a new law, Illinois S-Corp and Partnership owners should generally pay quarterly IL state (not federal) taxes through the business. The post below is about how to pay IL taxes personallyclick here for how to make IL business tax payments.


There are multiple options for paying personal quarterly estimated taxes. You can: have your tax preparer create vouchers that you then print and mail with a check; prepare your own vouchers for the IRS and IL DoR; or pay online.

Since March 2020, agencies have had so many challenges with paper-mailed checks and vouchers that we are encouraging everyone to make all tax payments online.

The due dates for estimated quarterly taxes are approximately:
1Q: April 15
2Q: June 15
3Q: September 15
4Q: January 15 — however for state taxes, especially for cash-basis filers and those in states with PTE tax, we recommend making the final payment by December 31st.

If you want to know how to make IRS estimated tax payments, see my recent blog post with step-by-step instructions.

For the Illinois Department of Revenue (IDOR), go to the MyTax Illinois site. If you already have an account for sales taxes or another reason — do not log in, unless you are making business tax payments. Then click the “> Make an IL-1040, IL-1040-ES, or IL-505-I payment” link (see screenshot above).

Next, follow the instructions for making a quarterly estimated tax payment; it will make you enter your personal information (SSN, etc.) and ask you what kind of tax payment you wish to make.

It may require you to enter your driver’s license information or your AGI from a past tax return to confirm identity and get your IL-PIN.

Then it will take you to a Payment Information page.

You’ll want to select “IL-1040 Estimated Payment” and enter your tax year. Make sure it’s for the correct year and quarter — this is very important. The example below is for the fourth quarter of 2021.

Then, enter your payment information and click the Submit button.

It will require you to enter and confirm your email address before clicking OK.

Make sure to print the confirmation screen, even though they will send you an email receipt — every once-in-a-while IDOR fails to push the request through, and the amount is not debited or recorded. If you have the print-screen, you can prove you attempted to pay it on-time and that the mistake was theirs.

It will also include a confirmation code, the date/time of the request, the reporting period and amount, and bank withdrawal information. You can click “Printable Confirmation” or just print the webpage to pdf.

Please make sure to note how much you paid to each agency and on which dates — and let your tax preparer know this information as well. Securely uploading copies of the final confirmation screen to your tax preparer or bookkeeper is a great practice, so they can easily store the info in your file.

And if you use QuickBooks or another bookkeeping program, please make sure to enter the quarter, year, and “estimated tax” so that you or your bookkeeper or accountant or tax preparer can make sure it’s applied to the correct year, and for the right type of tax.

For how to make IRS quarterly tax payments online, see my recent blog post on the topic, for step-by-step instructions.


If this or any other posts on the website were useful to you, and your financial situation permits it, please consider contributing to my tip jar. Ths allows me to continue to provide free accounting resources to small businesses who do not have the funds available to hire a CPA.

How To Pay IRS Quarterly Estimated Taxes Online — Don’t Let Your Checks Get Buried or Lost In The Mail

The IRS “Direct Pay” landing page.

There are multiple options for paying personal quarterly estimated taxes. You can: have your tax preparer create vouchers that you then print and mail with a check; prepare your own vouchers and do the same; or pay online.

Since March 2020, the IRS, USPS, and state revenue agencies have had so many challenges with mailed paper checks and vouchers that we strongly encourage everyone to make all tax payments online.

If you want to pay your federal estimated taxes online, the easiest way is to use IRS Direct Pay. Paying online offers confirmation that the payment made it to the agency, reducing the chance of issues down the road, especially if the check is lost in the mail or routed incorrectly in the processing department. It also allows taxpayers to be very clear about what type of tax and tax period are being submitted, again eliminating confusion on the part of the agency and preventing future problems.

Pro Tip: if you have questions about estimated taxes — what they are, whether or not you need to pay them, and how to calculate them — I recommend this great YouTube primer by my colleague, Hannah Smolinski of Clara CFO. It can easily be as much as 20-30% of each freelance check you take home, so get on top of this now… don’t wait until the money’s already been spent.

The due dates for estimated quarterly taxes are approximately:
1Q: April 15
2Q: June 15
3Q: September 15
4Q: January 15 — however for state taxes, especially for cash-basis filers and those in states with PTE tax, we recommend making the final payment by December 31st.

If you are paying online, I recommend making payments one day before the due dates, as sometimes it takes a day for the agencies’ systems to process payments due to overnight automated workflows. The funds are usually pulled from your bank account the same day or one day later, so there is very little wiggle room. This organization will actually send you reminder emails for each payment!

The great news is that you do not need to have an account with the IRS in order to make payments using Direct Pay.

Internal Revenue Service (IRS)

For the IRS, once you get to the Direct Pay site, select the following options (noted in the screen shot below): 1) the reason for the payment; 2) the form you would be mailing in if you weren’t doing this online; and 3) the year to which the payment should apply. For example, for 1st-quarter 2023 personal estimated taxes, you’d select the following:

IRS “Direct Pay” Step 1 of 5.

Pro Tip: you don’t have to wait until the due date for each quarter to make quarterly estimated tax payments! You can pay as early as you like. And if cash flow is a challenge, a great hack is to take the total tax payments required for the year and make monthly or bi-weekly — or even weekly — payments online. (Another trick is to increase tax withholding from your other sources of income, but not everyone has a W-2 job, and not all retirement companies will do that.)

There are many possible reasons for payment — such as extensions, balances due on a filed return, installment payments, amended returns, and so on. The IRS offers a list in their dropdown. For the purposes of this article, we’re focusing on quarterly estimated tax payments.

IRS “Direct Pay” List of Payment Reasons.

It’s extremely important that you select the correct year for payment. The IRS will levy late penalties and interest if you pick the wrong year, and the amount of time and effort that goes into contacting them and getting payments reapplied to the correct year will often cost more for your tax preparer’s time than filing your return in the first place. So keep in mind that the current year is usually the one you want for estimated tax payments, and a prior year is generally for extensions, balances due, installment payments, amended returns, and most other options. Selecting the correct year and type will ensure that these payments show up properly on your transcript.

Once you click the Continue button, you’ll be prompted to confirm the type of form and the period.

IRS Direct Pay Estimated Tax Payment and year confirmation.

At that point the system will ask you to enter a bunch of info to confirm your identity. The basic idea is to provide them name and address data from a prior-year tax return so that… well, so they know it’s really you. Since IRS Direct Pay works without a login, you will need to verify your identity each time you revisit it. Make sure you enter your name and address exactly as they appear on the tax return you are using for verification. If your name or address have changed, try selecting an earlier year for verification and enter the information from that year. This information does not need to be for the same tax year on which you are making your payment. It can be from as far back as 5 to 6 years ago depending on the time of year.

IRS “Direct Pay” Step 2 of 5, part one.
IRS “Direct Pay” Step 2 of 5, part two.

Once you enter all this information and hit the “Continue” button, it will take you to a screen to enter the payment information — amount, bank account, and email address for confirmation. If you are having issues with the system accepting your information, double-check that you’re entering your name, SSN, date of birth and address exactly as it was on the tax return for the year you selected. The IRS has a Direct Pay troubleshooting page if you have more questions.

IRS “Direct Pay” Step 3 of 5, part one.
IRS “Direct Pay” Step 3 of 5, part two.

Next, you’ll need to agree to the disclosure pop-up.

IRS “Direct Pay” disclosure pop-up.

In the final step, you will need to review all the information you have entered, provide an electronic signature including social security number or ITIN, and check the box to authorize the debit. Click Submit and you are done!

Well… except that you may also have to pay state estimated taxes. See here for my post on how to make personal Illinois estimated tax payments. (But if you have an S-Corp or Partnership, see here instead.)

Please make sure to note how much you paid to each agency and on which dates — and let your tax preparer know this information as well. Securely uploading copies of the final confirmation screen to your tax preparer or bookkeeper is a great practice, so they can easily store the info in your file.

And if you use QuickBooks or another bookkeeping program, please make sure to enter the quarter, year, and “estimated tax” so that you or your bookkeeper or accountant or tax preparer can make sure it’s applied to the correct year, and for the right type of tax.

Many self-employed folks get surprised at tax-time with huge balances due, penalties and interest. Don’t let yourself fall into that trap — make regular payments online and taxes will be a breeze next year.


If this or any other posts on the website were useful to you, and your financial situation permits it, please consider contributing to my tip jar. Ths allows me to continue to provide free accounting resources to small businesses who do not have the funds available to hire a CPA.