Business Tax
Most business owners pay more than necessary not because of missing loopholes, but because structure, filing, and planning are handled separately. We handle all three together for businesses at every stage: returns, entity structure, and year-round planning, including catch-up work when prior years were missed or filed incorrectly.
Common filings include:
- Form 1065 for partnerships
- Form 1120-S for S-corporations
- Form 1120 for C-corporations
- Schedule C for sole proprietors and single-member LLCs
- State business income tax returns
- Extension filings and quarterly estimated tax payment support
Related Business Tax Pages
Some businesses need a deeper look at entity structure, multi-owner partnership issues, or real estate-specific tax strategy. These pages go further on the situations that most often drive the tax result.
Entity Structure and Tax Planning
Business tax planning works best when structure and year-round decisions are handled together. As income grows, the right entity, the right owner-pay strategy, and the right timing decisions can all change.
Our work in this area focuses on:
- Entity structure review
- Tax planning around owner compensation, distributions, and timing
- Quarterly estimate calculations and planning discussions
- Year-round tax planning as income and business needs change
Operations and Back Office
Tax work is cleaner when the books behind it are clean. For business owners who want one firm handling everything, we offer back office services alongside the tax work: bookkeeping, payroll, sales tax, and entity back office support including LLC registration, annual renewals, registered agent coordination, and EIN setup. Having the same team handle the operations and the returns means no year-end scramble and no gap between what the books say and what gets filed.
Business Owners We Work With
We work with sole proprietors, single-member LLCs, S-corporations, partnerships, and C-corporations that want a CPA involved year-round, not just at filing time. This is especially useful for owner-operated businesses where the owner’s personal and business tax situations are connected. The business return feeds the personal return, and the planning work needs to account for both.