HCHTech
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 4,213
- Location
- Pittsburgh, PA - USA
Per the title, how are you doing them during the year? Do you ask your accountant to prepare formal projections from time to time or are you using an online calculator? A spreadsheet? some other method?
I had the very happy problem this year of NOT owing as much tax as I was expecting. In fact my estimates were way too high - I had set aside quite a pile of money to cover this expense but ended up getting a refund for the first time in about 10 years. My business revenue and my personal compensation was higher than last year, so I falsely assumed my tax bill would be commensurably higher as well. I'll add that I do appreciate that 2020 was the wrong year to expect accuracy of any taxation estimates.
Pretty much ever since I hired an accounting firm to do my taxes & filings (about a dozen years ago now), I've stopped trying to do projections during the year. I use revenue/profit as a yardstick and then just make sure I have money set aside in case I have to come up with a big check on April 15th.
Given the magnitude of last year's pleasant mistake, I'd like to work harder on better estimates of my ultimate tax liability this year, but I imagine if I ask for something formal from the accountant, it will definitely be billable - so I want to make sure the effort is worth the expense if I go that route.
I've had to pay quarterly estimates ever since my business started making real money, so a long time now. The whole estimates game seems, well, imperfect. Your estimates are based on LAST YEAR'S numbers, so if your revenue/profit & actual tax liability is different THIS year (which I guarantee, it is different every year - how could it not be?) then when you get to the end of this year, you have always paid either too much in estimates or too little. So the whole system does NOT get more accurate as time goes on. In fact, if you have an exceptional year - like we did when Windows 7 went EOL - you KNOW the estimates calculated for the following year are going to be overstated.
Am I the only one who worries about this stuff?
I had the very happy problem this year of NOT owing as much tax as I was expecting. In fact my estimates were way too high - I had set aside quite a pile of money to cover this expense but ended up getting a refund for the first time in about 10 years. My business revenue and my personal compensation was higher than last year, so I falsely assumed my tax bill would be commensurably higher as well. I'll add that I do appreciate that 2020 was the wrong year to expect accuracy of any taxation estimates.
Pretty much ever since I hired an accounting firm to do my taxes & filings (about a dozen years ago now), I've stopped trying to do projections during the year. I use revenue/profit as a yardstick and then just make sure I have money set aside in case I have to come up with a big check on April 15th.
Given the magnitude of last year's pleasant mistake, I'd like to work harder on better estimates of my ultimate tax liability this year, but I imagine if I ask for something formal from the accountant, it will definitely be billable - so I want to make sure the effort is worth the expense if I go that route.
I've had to pay quarterly estimates ever since my business started making real money, so a long time now. The whole estimates game seems, well, imperfect. Your estimates are based on LAST YEAR'S numbers, so if your revenue/profit & actual tax liability is different THIS year (which I guarantee, it is different every year - how could it not be?) then when you get to the end of this year, you have always paid either too much in estimates or too little. So the whole system does NOT get more accurate as time goes on. In fact, if you have an exceptional year - like we did when Windows 7 went EOL - you KNOW the estimates calculated for the following year are going to be overstated.
Am I the only one who worries about this stuff?