Submitted by senseibrittany t3_z93om8 in personalfinance
Hello! I am a self employed individual and I need some advice. I've got an s-corp set up and I pay myself and taxes to the IRS/state DOR through a monthly payroll run. I've been lucky enough to have a great year in 2022. The amount I'm paying in taxes each month is based on 2021 income, which was significantly less, so I know I owe a lot in taxes. My accountant just hit me up to run a "mock return" sometime in early December. While I can see the value in doing this for her (she gets to bill me more hours), I'm struggling to see the benefit for me. I've pressed her on it and I'm not really getting a straight answer.
Below is how I understand the situation. I'm hoping some of you redditors with more knowledge than me can chime in to confirm that I'm right or correct me where I'm wrong.
I'm going to owe a lot in taxes. If we had done a mock return in June, it may have had some value. We would have seen that my income was growing quickly, and we could have bumped up the amount I'm paying in taxes each month. Instead of paying a huge tax bill at the end of the year, I would have been slowly paying it each month.
However we didn't do that. That means I owe a lot in taxes now. However, as long as I can afford to pay it (I can), we should be fine. My understanding is that as long as the amount of taxes I've been paying throughout the year is the same or greater than last year's tax bill, I won't get hit with any penalties for the remaining amount I owe. That means I can pay the remainder of my tax bill in April if I want.
My accountant is suggesting we do a mock return in the next week so that I can make a big tax payment before the end of the year. It seems like this doesn't do anything for me except cost me accounting fees. At this point, I'm paying a large tax bill no matter what. I can either pay her to do a mock return so I can pay it now, or we can just do my final return in March and pay roughly the same amount then.
Am I right? Thanks in advance!
dmaxd123 t1_iyetkl0 wrote
i'll be curious to see what others say. i would think that if you were to do something that it would be to see how much equipment/supplies you need to order for the company in 2022 to cut down your taxable rate. s-corp might have a different setup though so like i said, curious to see what others say