Showing posts with label income taxes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label income taxes. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

The Business of Writing: Personal Income Tax Reporting for Authors

Venice, Italy-February 26th, 2011.
Person wearing Venetian Carnival mask,
c2011 by razvanphoto.
Depositphotos ID 9047805, Editorial license.

I'm sporting my pretty mask again to discuss an ugly subject: income tax reporting for authors. 

I make no apologies for today's topic; it's one of those disgusting but necessary chores, like spring cleaning, that must be done every year. Unless you happen to be like my late father-in-law, who left three years' worth of unfiled income taxes for his executor and assistant executor (*user waves and smiles only because all that unpleasantness is over, thank God*) to deal with.

All my tax reporting is done for the year, including the requisite state filings. If you cannot make a similar claim, then I suggest you get cracking: you have no more than 9 calendar days to make the deadline. Since April 15 falls on a Friday this year, there's no temporary reprieve either.

Furthermore, if you have incorporated your writing business but haven't yet filed your 2015 corporate taxes, you're at least three weeks late. Before you panic, I invite you to head over to this blog post, where I talk about corporate tax filing.

What to do about that overflowing shoebox of expense receipts? Again, don't panic. Check out this blog post from August 2015, wherein I offer suggestions about how to record and classify expenses.

On the income side of the paperwork pile, by now you should have received one or more 1099-MISC paper or electronic royalty statements from every company who paid you for the books you sold in 2015. These all get reported to the IRS, so if you mislaid or didn't happen to receive one for a particular income source, but you recorded the deposit in your checkbook or ledger, then you need to factor it into your total royalty income.

What I did a year ago, in terms of income tax reporting, is a blur because of having to file the last of my late father-in-law's estate income taxes, but I surely don't recall Amazon as having sent out password-protected 1099-MISC PDF files for all the various business units around the world where I sold copies of my books.  And a mind-numbingly cryptic password, at that.

Do I care if anyone hacks my computer to learn that I got a $5 refund in VAT from the European Union last year? Not particularly, but there you have it. Annoyance on the half shell, courtesy of Big Brother Amazon. :-P

By the way, if you got paid in US dollars by an e-tailer (Amazon, Nook Press, Draft2Digital, etc.) for book sales made in foreign countries, then you don't have to report it as "foreign income," and thank God for that minuscule mercy. My husband inherited a few foreign stocks from his father, which we dumped as soon as humanly possible so we wouldn't have to worry about that tax rathole.

Also, if you have incorporated your writing business and filed corporate taxes, then the data reported on the subsequent K-1 should flow into your IRS 1040 form in the appropriate areas. Don't ask me offhand which specific areas those are—I've been using TurboTax for more than 20 years, and I pay good money for the software to remember those bazillion details for me so that I don't have to. :D

It's never too late to establish a system of business income/expense organization and tax reporting that works for you. The good news is that once you've invested the thought, time, and effort to set it up, maintaining it on a regular basis is much easier.

Good luck, and may you earn enough from your refund to finance your next writing project!

***

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Please enter often, and good luck!

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

The Business of Writing: An Author's Corporate Taxes with @circlelegal

Venice, Italy-February 26th, 2011.
Person wearing Venetian Carnival mask,
c2011 by razvanphoto.
Depositphotos ID 9047805, Editorial license.
Psst! 

Pssssst! I'm talking to you from behind this mask.  Today I need to speak to you about… the dreaded t-word: 

Taxes.

If you have established a corporation for your writing business, and you haven't already filed your annual corporate tax return, now is the time! They are due March 15th.

Yeah, I know; we're in the same boat. I have get cracking on mine soon too. :D

If you haven't incorporated, you will need to report your writing-related income (all those bazillion 1099-MISCs generated by KDP and other book e-tailers) and expenses on your individual IRS form 1040 by April 15. But first ask yourself: do you have a hobby or a business?

There's no room for fudging the answer, and an incorrect (or "wishful thinking") assessment can be shockingly expensive.

Kelly Keller, president of Circle Legal law firm, offers some excellent advice in this article published on the She Owns It blog. I encourage you to read the entire article, but if you're in a hurry, the biggest takeaway is the application of the "3 of 5 Rule"—to whit, you'll be far less likely to raise flags at the IRS if you have earned income from your writing activity in 3 out of 5 years.

I checked out the Circle Legal web site, and their home page gets my immediate thumbs-up for starting out with, "We've heard the jokes. How many attorneys does it take to screw in a light bulb… We get it." They advertise a presence in all 50 states as well as worldwide, so if you have any specific questions about tax preparation for authors or other legal issues, please open a dialogue with Ms. Keller.

If you live in Virginia and would like to consult with my corporate attorney instead, leave a comment below, along with a way you may be reached, and I'll be happy to get you in touch.

So, to be clear, I am not an attorney of any stripe, a CPA, or a tax specialist, but I do have more than 20 years' experience owning and operating my S-corporation, including handling the ledgers and taxes.

Although I established System Support Services, Inc. in 1995 for the purpose of invoicing my computer-consulting clients (my first was a multimillion-dollar client who insisted upon being invoiced by a corporation rather than an individual; go figure :D), I found that shunting my publishing income and expenses through my S-corporation was the single easiest way to convince the IRS that I am serious about making a profit.

And although that gives me twice as many reasons to dread "tax season" each year, I have never looked back.

Should you, as an author, incorporate your business? This post of mine may give you some additional insight. But ultimately, only you and your attorney can answer that question.

Meantime, good luck with your foray into TurboTax Land, or whatever your tax preparation software, company, or individual of choice!

***
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All this month, you are invited to...
— Follow Kim on Twitter
— Follow Kim on Pinterest
— Subscribe to Kim's YouTube channel
— Leave a comment on any page of The Maze, especially if you have done the Twitter, Pinterest, and/or YouTube follow
... and each action this month is good for one chance to win a copy of any of Kim's e-books. Please enter often, and good luck!

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

TurboTax 2013 Installation Error 1603 Demystified


Today's post is a public-service announcement for owners of older computers upon which they are trying—and failing—to install TurboTax 2013 software.

My household boasts several computers, the oldest being an XP desktop model that I have used for running TurboTax pretty much since XP became a stable operating system, well before the days when Vista became a gleam in anyone's eye. This is the computer that gets exposed to the Internet the least, and therefore it's my go-to choice for having to deactivate the antivirus software just to get other programs like TurboTax to install.

Understand that I have been running TurboTax far more than usual lately, because my late father-in-law left the legacy of three years' worth of unfiled income taxes to have to square away. So perhaps my nerves are a bit more raw than usual in this regard. In any case, I was not pleased to see "Windows Installer Error 1603" while attempting to install the 2013 edition of TurboTax for Business, since the filing deadline of 17 March for my S Corporation was looming. This error happened not once but twice—the first time I hadn't shut down the antivirus software as I should have done—and it entailed an inordinate amount of wasted time as TurboTax rolled back the installation.

After giving myself a day to simmer down, I found the following link via Intuit's virtual help center: Error 1603 fix. Steps and links to the various patches are listed there if you need them. But wait, there's more.

I have been programming computers since the days of toggle switches (four decades at least), and when Step #1 directed me to a site for downloading a European Union FONT extension for an OS-level fix, I said, "Wait. What??" But it was a Microsoft site so I clicked the "Download" button... and got a page that read only "Bad Request" in letters so tiny they seemed apologetic. As well they should have been.

Hoping for the best anyway, I followed the instructions in Step # 2—which seem daunting but in actuality are very straightforward, and I downloaded & installed the Business patch. 

Four decades of computer programming have taught me to hate having to watch an installation "thumbsucker" bar with my heart in my mouth, and it certainly kept leaping there even after it passed the dreaded 31% mark, the point at which the installation had failed twice before—it ground to a near halt at 51% and again at 74% before the TurboTax and Windows gods deigned to smile upon my efforts.

The bottom line: Don't bother with Step #1, which doesn't work.

The only question remains whether I need to install the patch for TurboTax Deluxe when I get ready to compile the tax records for my household and my father-in-law's estate. If I'm feeling brave that day, I may just try to install it without taking that step. I will let you know what happens either way.