Showing posts with label dental tax break. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dental tax break. Show all posts

Friday, April 7, 2017

Tax Savings for Dentists


Could you be paying too much in taxes for your dental practice? Below are five areas where you may be overspending.
Deducting Business Expenses
Other than the typical business expenses you’re probably aware of, like meals and entertainment and mileage, there are other deductible business expenses that could save you more on taxes. These include business insurance premiums, retirement plans, employee pay, medical benefits, rent, tax preparation services, and more. The key is if the business expense is ordinary and necessary.
Entity Type
Your dental practice’s business structure can also be a source of tax savings. For example, if you’re structured as a Limited Liability Corporation (LLC) or Sole Proprietorship, you’re paying the full amount of self-employment taxes, which are about 15 percent. If your practice is an S-Corporation, on the other hand, you only pay the employer’s share of self-employment taxes, or about 7.5 percent.
There are other savings in business structure, too. You could consider more than one entity type. For example, patient and insurance receivables go through an S-Corporation, which saves money on self-employment taxes. You also avoid the double taxation characteristic of a C-Corporation. Your secondary entity, a C-Corporation, is used for management and administrative expenses. Or, you can elect to have your LLC taxed as an S-Corporation, whereby only the owner’s salary is subject to full self-employment taxes.
Income shifting can be a complicated but very effective tax savings strategy.
Employee Benefits
Offering employee benefits is a win-win: you create a more engaged, productive work environment and you can typically write off the costs. A sample of employee benefits you can deduct is below.
  • Medical
  • Retirement
  • Fringe Benefits, including:
    • Transportation costs
    • Insurance (disability, life, etc)
    • Dependent care
    • Education reimbursement
There is added value with employee benefits, since they’re not counted as taxable income (unless your staff pays a portion of fringe benefits).

Check out these 20 U.S. companies with the best employee benefits.


Medical Benefits
Because this can be such an overlooked area of tax savings, medical benefits merits its own section.
In general, you can write off the costs of the following payments on your dental practice’s taxes:
  • Group health insurance premiums
  • Health savings accounts (HSAs)
  • Health reimbursement arrangements (HRAs)
An HRA option for smaller dental practices that do not offer group medical insurance is a Medical Expense Reimbursement Plan (MERP). MERPs allow you to cover a portion of your staff’s medical costs, including copayments, deductibles, and qualified medical expenses. In doing so, you can write off those medical expenses. MERPs can be useful for dental practices structured as sole proprietors or LLCs with less than 50 full-time and full-time equivalent employees. Although MERPs previously did not conform to ACA standards, updated regulations permitting MERPs took effect after December 31, 2016.
Note: if your dental practice is a sole proprietorship, maximizing medical benefits will be more difficult.
Year-End Tax Planning and Projections
There are few better ways to manage your tax burden than planning ahead. If you schedule a year-end planning session with your CPA, you can look at paying certain known expenses in December or making a charitable donation before year-end, both of which result in tax deductions. You will also get an idea of your income in the next year, and plan quarterly estimated payments. This saves money because if you underpay your taxes, you’ll incur a penalty come Tax Day.
We’re here to help manage your taxes. With tax season nearly over, now is a great time to plan for the rest of 2017. Contact our office to schedule an appointment.

Thursday, March 16, 2017

At a Glance: Important Tax Deadlines for March and April

According to a recent study on dental practice seasonality trends, March and April are among the busiest months of the year. Does this sound like your dental practice?
If so, you’ve no doubt also noticed this coincides with tax season. To help make your busiest months a little easier, here are the tax deadlines for March and April.
March 15
Dental Partnerships should File a 2016 tax return (Form 1065). Provide each partner in your dental practice with a copy of Schedule K-1 of Form 1065, or a substitute Schedule K-1. To request an automatic 6-month extension to file the return and provide Schedules K-1, use Form 7004 to extend your filing deadline to September 15.
Large Dental Partnerships (100+ partners) should file a 2016 tax return (Form 1065-B). Provide each partner in your dental practice with a copy of Schedule K-1 of Form 1065-B, or a substitute of Schedule K-1. This due date applies even if you request an extension of time to file Form 1065-B by filing Form 7004. To request an automatic 6-month extension and move your filing deadline to September 15, use Form 7004.
If your dental practice is structured as an S-Corporation, file a 2016 income tax return (Form 1120S) and pay any tax due. Provide each shareholder with a copy of Schedule K-1  of Form 1120S, or a substitute of Schedule K-1. To get an automatic 6-month extension of time to file, use Form 7004 and pay what you estimate you owe on your return.
If your dental practice is electing S corporation treatment beginning with calendar year 2017, you should file Form 2553 (Election by a Small Business Corporation). If you file Form 2553 late, S corporation treatment of your dental practice will begin with calendar year 2018.
March 31
File the following forms with the IRS if they apply to your dental practice. Note that a deadline of March 31 for these forms only applies if you’re filing online.
  • Form 1098 (Mortgage Interest Statement)
  • Form 1099 (Self-Employment Income)
  • Form 3921 (Exercise of an Incentive Stock Option), and
  • Form 3922 (Transfer of Stock Acquired Through an Employee Stock Purchase Plan)
April 18
Dental Corporations should file a 2016 income tax return (Form 1120) and pay any tax due. To request an automatic 6-month extension of time to file, use Form 7004 and pay what you estimate you owe on your return.
You should also deposit the first installment payment for your 2017 estimated income tax.
If you’re not already working with Dental CPAs for your practice’s tax planning, contact us today. We can help manage your tax liability and reduce your stress during your busiest months.
For more information, contact out DentalCPA team at 844-DENT CPA (336-8272) or email info@dentalcpas.com 

Monday, August 4, 2008

Dental Tax Break? Renting Equipment from Wife and Kids?

What is the tax advantage of putting equipment, etc. in your children's/wife's names and then renting it back? I ran across a practice for sale where the owner does no draw to himself but rents everything from his kids/wife.

There's absolutely nothing wrong or illegal with this set-up. It's no different than owning the real estate your practice is in and renting it back, is it?

I'm guessing the seller is older and the kids are probably older as well. I say this because before the kiddie tax & then the more recent tightening of the kiddie tax rules, this was a very common strategy for businesses to shift income from the higher income tax brackets of the parents to the lower income tax brackets of their children. Why the wife's name is involved, I'm not sure, it might also be a move to NOT have assets in the name of the doctor in case of patient lawsuits...

As long as the rent being paid is fair & the income is being reported on another tax return the IRS can't say a thing about it.

What a prospective buyer needs to do is to make sure they consider these expenses when analyzing the target practice financials to narrow in on the REAL practice expenses.

This post first appeared on DentalTown.

Send your questions to Tim Lott, CPA, CVA at tlott@dentalcpas.com

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