Anonymous wrote:We pay estimated taxes and while it requires planning/budgeting it does not affect our tax burden. I believe you have an option to align the payments with the cash flow if it is very uneven. It sounds like you need a better accountant rather than a change in tax policy.
I second the above. There's no reason you should be paying estimated tax payments on income you have not received, and there are easy-to-find instructions detailing the various ways these situations can be handled. Any competent CPA should be able to handle this for you easily. If they can't, or if they are charging you a fortune for doing it, then you should find another one. On the other hand, it might not be the CPA's fault if your business records are not well maintained. If they have to spend hours just trying to determine what figures they need, then that would also explain high fees being charged. Either way, the tax policy itself doesn't sound like the primary issue here.