Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why you say LLC has high taxes. It doesn't, in fact it saves you a ton of money on taxes. Your places of home is a business expense, everything you buy for the company (computers, etc) is a business expense. Last year our consulting LLC grossed $30,000 and we only paid taxes on $9000.
Unless there is some sort of special circumstance, your entire home is not a business expense. You are required to calculate only the percentage you use for work. And no, you can't count places like the kitchen and bathroom because you use them to make lunch or wash your hands during your work time. There are very specific and limiting guidelines.
If your home is a condo then the whole thing counts.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why you say LLC has high taxes. It doesn't, in fact it saves you a ton of money on taxes. Your places of home is a business expense, everything you buy for the company (computers, etc) is a business expense. Last year our consulting LLC grossed $30,000 and we only paid taxes on $9000.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why you say LLC has high taxes. It doesn't, in fact it saves you a ton of money on taxes. Your places of home is a business expense, everything you buy for the company (computers, etc) is a business expense. Last year our consulting LLC grossed $30,000 and we only paid taxes on $9000.
Unless there is some sort of special circumstance, your entire home is not a business expense. You are required to calculate only the percentage you use for work. And no, you can't count places like the kitchen and bathroom because you use them to make lunch or wash your hands during your work time. There are very specific and limiting guidelines.
If your home is a condo then the whole thing counts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why you say LLC has high taxes. It doesn't, in fact it saves you a ton of money on taxes. Your places of home is a business expense, everything you buy for the company (computers, etc) is a business expense. Last year our consulting LLC grossed $30,000 and we only paid taxes on $9000.
Unless there is some sort of special circumstance, your entire home is not a business expense. You are required to calculate only the percentage you use for work. And no, you can't count places like the kitchen and bathroom because you use them to make lunch or wash your hands during your work time. There are very specific and limiting guidelines.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why you say LLC has high taxes. It doesn't, in fact it saves you a ton of money on taxes. Your places of home is a business expense, everything you buy for the company (computers, etc) is a business expense. Last year our consulting LLC grossed $30,000 and we only paid taxes on $9000.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I want to set up our own consulting business for work we'll be doing on the side, apart from regular day jobs. I looked briefly at the LLC option, but it seems like the income taxes are pretty high and it requires a bunch of other stuff we'll never need. (We will never have employees, for example.) Are we better off setting up a PC? I know very little about this kind of thing, so any tips or suggestions about where to start would be very appreciated!