Every year, millions of business owners pay more in taxes than they are legally required to. Not because they are doing anything wrong. Because they are only doing tax preparation -- filing what happened -- instead of tax planning, which is structuring what happens throughout the year to minimize the bill before it is due. Preparation is backward-looking. Planning is forward-looking. The difference between those two approaches, compounded over a career, is substantial.
This guide covers the full picture of tax planning for business owners: the core levers you can pull, how planning differs by stage, which professionals can help and with what, and when you should stop relying on general resources and engage a human expert.
Tax Preparation vs. Tax Planning: The Core Distinction
Tax preparation is the process of accurately reporting what happened last year to the IRS. Your accountant or CPA takes your records, produces your return, and files it. This is necessary and valuable. It is also fundamentally backward-looking -- by the time your CPA files your return, the tax year is closed and nothing about it can be changed.
Tax planning is the process of making decisions throughout the current year (and into future years) that legally reduce the amount of tax you will owe. When you should accelerate income, when you should defer it, how to structure your entity to minimize self-employment tax, which retirement account to contribute to and how much, how to time major purchases to maximize deductions -- these are planning decisions. They can only be made before the year ends, not after.
The business owners who pay the least in taxes relative to their income are almost always the ones doing proactive planning with a qualified advisor, not just filing accurately after the fact.
The Core Levers of Tax Planning
Entity Structure
Your legal structure determines how your income is taxed at a fundamental level. A sole proprietor pays self-employment tax (15.3% on the first $160,200 of net profit in 2024, 2.9% above) on all net income. A single-member LLC taxed as a disregarded entity is treated the same as a sole proprietor. An S-corporation election allows you to pay yourself a reasonable salary -- subject to payroll taxes -- while distributing remaining profit without self-employment tax. A C-corporation pays corporate income tax and then the owner pays tax again on dividends -- a structure that can be advantageous in specific situations but is a serious mistake in others. Choosing the wrong entity, or failing to revisit your entity election as your income grows, is one of the most expensive structural tax errors a business owner can make.
Income Timing
If you can control when you receive income (and most self-employed business owners have more control over this than they realize), you can shift income between tax years to manage your bracket. In a year where your income is unusually high, deferring invoices or income to January gives you a lower tax year and a higher one, which can be worth doing depending on your projected income next year. The reverse -- accelerating income into a year where your rate is lower -- can also apply. These decisions require knowing your current year financials and forecasting your next year, which is another reason why quarterly reviews with an advisor are more valuable than one annual filing session.
Retirement Contributions
Retirement account contributions are one of the most powerful and underused tax levers available to self-employed business owners. The three main vehicles are:
- SEP-IRA: Contributions up to 25% of net self-employment income, maximum $69,000 in 2024. Deadline is your tax filing deadline including extensions. Simple to set up, no ongoing administration.
- Solo 401(k): Allows employee contributions of up to $23,000 (plus $7,500 catch-up if you are 50+) plus employer contributions up to 25% of compensation, for a combined maximum of $69,000. Requires a plan document and more administration than a SEP-IRA but allows higher contributions at lower income levels.
- SIMPLE IRA: Designed for small businesses with up to 100 employees. Employee contributions up to $16,000, employer required to contribute either a 3% match or a 2% non-elective contribution. Simpler to administer than a 401(k).
The right vehicle depends on your income level, whether you have employees, and how much you want to contribute. A tax advisor can model the after-tax cost of each option for your specific situation.
Depreciation: Section 179 and Bonus Depreciation
When you purchase business assets -- equipment, computers, vehicles, machinery, software -- you generally have two options: depreciate the asset over its useful life (spreading the deduction across several years) or accelerate the deduction using Section 179 expensing or bonus depreciation. Section 179 allows you to deduct the full purchase price of qualifying business equipment in the year of purchase, up to $1,220,000 in 2024. Bonus depreciation allows additional first-year deductions. The choice between these options depends on your current year income and your projections for future years. Sometimes it is better to spread the deduction; sometimes front-loading it saves more money.
Hiring Family Members
Employing family members in your business is a legitimate and IRS-recognized tax strategy, when done correctly. A child employed by a sole proprietor parent pays no FICA taxes on wages up to the standard deduction amount. Wages paid to a spouse are deductible business expenses. The IRS scrutinizes family employment heavily, so the work must be real and documented, the wage must be reasonable for the work performed, and all the normal employment requirements must be met. Done improperly, this strategy attracts audits and penalties.
Deduction Timing and Documentation
Many business owners leave legitimate deductions on the table because they do not know what qualifies, do not track expenses in real time, or do not maintain the documentation required if audited. Home office, vehicle, travel, professional development, software subscriptions, health insurance premiums -- each has specific rules about what qualifies, how it is calculated, and what records you need. A tax advisor can walk you through a deduction review in a single session and identify what you are currently missing.
How Tax Planning Differs by Stage
Sole Proprietor and Freelancer
The priority at this stage is self-employment tax reduction. Every dollar of net profit is subject to SE tax. The first planning move is evaluating whether an S-corp election makes sense given your net income level. The second is maximizing retirement contributions. The third is ensuring every legitimate business expense is captured and documented.
Small Business $100K to $500K
At this revenue range, entity election becomes a more pressing decision. An S-corp election at $150K net profit can save $10,000 to $15,000 per year in SE taxes, depending on the reasonable salary you set and your state. Retirement account contributions become more impactful because the dollar amounts are larger. A qualified tax advisor at this stage earns their fee many times over.
Growing Business $500K and Above
At this level, the tax planning decisions become more complex. C-corp consideration may come into play if you are retaining earnings in the business, using the lower corporate rate for the delta before you pay yourself. Executive compensation structure -- salary, bonus, S-corp distributions -- becomes a meaningful planning decision. Employee benefit programs (health insurance, retirement matching, HSAs) become deductible ways to compensate the team. State income tax becomes a larger factor as the dollar amounts grow.
The Professionals Who Help with Tax Planning
CPA (Certified Public Accountant)
A CPA is licensed by the state, has passed the CPA exam, and has met experience requirements. CPAs can prepare tax returns, conduct audits, represent clients before the IRS, and provide tax planning advice. Not all CPAs specialize in tax planning -- many specialize in audit, forensic accounting, or other areas. When you need tax planning, ask specifically about their planning work, not just their preparation work.
Enrolled Agent
An enrolled agent is a tax professional licensed by the IRS (not by the state). They have passed a comprehensive IRS exam covering individual and business tax returns and have unlimited representation rights before the IRS. Enrolled agents often specialize deeply in tax planning and representation, and many are excellent choices for complex self-employed and small business tax situations.
Tax Advisor or Tax Strategist
This title is broader. Some tax advisors are CPAs or EAs with a specialization in planning work. Others have different credentials. The key distinction is whether their practice is primarily planning-focused (forward-looking) or preparation-focused (backward-looking). Ask specifically about the ratio of planning to preparation work they do with clients like you.
How AI Tools Fail at Tax Advice
AI tools are genuinely useful for explaining tax concepts. They fail at tax advice because advice requires knowing facts that no AI can access: your specific entity type, your state's tax treatment, your year's actual financials, the IRS positions most relevant to your industry right now, and the law changes that occurred after the model's training cutoff. An AI will answer your tax question confidently. That confidence is the problem. When the answer is wrong and you acted on it, the cost is yours to bear, not the AI's.
When to Get a Tax Advisor
The signals that indicate you need a human tax advisor rather than a general resource:
- Your revenue is crossing a threshold where entity election matters ($50K to $80K+ net profit)
- You are considering a major transaction: sale of an asset, business sale, real estate purchase, equity event
- You are operating in multiple states and are not certain of your nexus and filing obligations
- You received an IRS notice or are concerned about an audit
- You have had a major life change that affects your tax situation: marriage, divorce, inheritance, significant equity liquidity
- You have never had a tax planning conversation, only tax preparation, and your income is above $100K
Find vetted tax advisors at Expert Sapiens Tax Advisory, book directly at Expert Sapiens, and review cost benchmarks at Expert Sapiens cost guide.
