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How to Set Up a Bookkeeping Cycle in QuickBooks Online

March 10, 2025 by admin

Young female financier with calculator working inside office at workplace, businesswoman behind paper work satisfied smiling, good achievement results, working with contract, accounts and charts.

Do you have a regular schedule you follow with your QuickBooks Online work? It can be a good strategy.

Bookkeeping is cyclical. You tend to do the same things over and over, which may get to be a bit of a drag for you. QuickBooks Online can automate some processes, and it certainly helps minimize duplicate data entry, but you’ll undoubtedly find yourself growing weary of repetitive tasks.

We can’t help you avoid this drudgery completely, but we’d like to suggest a new, more organized way to attack your accounting tasks in 2025. It could be especially helpful if you’re a new QuickBooks Online user and don’t have a routine established yet. But even long-time users might find this routine helpful. It can keep things from slipping through the cracks and simply make you more productive and confident that you’re addressing all of your accounting issues.

Give it a try and see what you think.

What Should You Do Every Day?

Even if you don’t have expenses to enter or invoices to process, it’s a good idea to log into QuickBooks Online every day. If you’ve connected your online bank and credit cards to the site (which you absolutely should), there will probably be transactions to go over. So after you’ve taken a look at your Dashboard (especially your Tasks), hover your mouse over Transactions in the toolbar and click Bank transactions.

Click Update in the upper right to make sure you’re seeing the most recent transactions. If you’re doing this every day, it shouldn’t take long to go over the income and expenses that have been imported since you last logged in.

You should be looking at newly imported transactions daily and completing the fields provided as comprehensively as possible.

If you don’t know what Match or Record as transfer mean, we should schedule a session to go over transaction management in QuickBooks Online.

Every Week

You need to be monitoring your accounts receivable and payables on a weekly basis – at minimum. There are two ways to do this. You can:

Run reports.

• Click Reports in the toolbar and scroll down first to Who owes you. Run Accounts receivable aging summary. QuickBooks will display past-due transactions in several columns (Current, 1-30 days, 31-60 days, 61-90 days, and 91 and over). If you’re keeping up with your receivables, you shouldn’t be seeing numbers in most of the columns, unless you’re in a known collections process.

• Scroll down to What you owe and run Accounts payable aging summary. This works like the aging receivables report. Again, you shouldn’t be seeing much activity here unless you’re in a payment dispute with a vendor.

• You can also run the Open Invoices report to quickly see the Due date and Open balance entries here. Ditto the Unpaid Bills report.

Consult the All sales page.

Hover your mouse over Sales in the toolbar and click All sales. The colored bars and numbers at the top of the page show you the status of your sales. Click the orange bar in the middle to see a list of overdue invoices. If there are any, you can set a Send reminder by clicking the corresponding down arrow in the Action column. While you’re there, look at estimates and unbilled income and take any action needed.

Every Two Weeks (or more often, depending on product volume)

If you sell products and track inventory in QuickBooks Online, you should keep a close eye on your stock to see if you need to:

• Reorder,

• Bring in a larger supply because something is selling well, or,

• Discount or discontinue a product because it’s not selling.

Click Reports in the toolbar and run Product/Service List under Sales and customers and look at the Quantity on hand column.

Every Month

Reconcile your accounts (Transactions | Reconcile).

It’s really, really important that you reconcile your accounts every month. We can help you with this.

No one likes to do this, but it’s way easier to do regular reconciliations than it is to have to go back several months to track down a problem. If you’ve never done this in QuickBooks Online, it works similarly to how you used to reconcile your accounts by comparing a bank statement and your paper checkbook register. Only you’re comparing your bank or credit card statements to your accounts in QuickBooks Online. Before you start, make sure you’ve matched and categorized all of your downloaded transactions.

Run a Profit and Loss report for the last month.

Click Reports in the toolbar and click Profit and Loss under Business overview. Did you make a profit last month?

Every Quarter

If you’re planning to apply for a loan or looking for an investor, or if you just want a deeper understanding of how your business is doing, consider having us create and analyze standard financial reports for you, like the Balance Sheet and Statement of Cash Flows. You can run these yourself in QuickBooks Online, but it really takes an accountant’s eye to understand and interpret them.

If you decide that you want to work with us in any capacity, like helping you with reconciliation and/or modifying your Chart of Accounts, there’s another way we can help. If you ever have trouble categorizing an expense, select Uncategorized Expenses as the Category. If we’re meeting with you once a month, we can run a report on these and help you categorize them correctly.

Filed Under: Quickbooks

Is Your Favorite Pastime Turning Into a Small Business? The IRS Wants to Know.

February 10, 2025 by admin

Young serious man looking at laptop. Man learning new hobby, knitting on needles. Knitting project in progress. - ImageIf you’re making $400 or more on your hobby, it’s time to start declaring it on your income taxes.

We take on hobbies because we enjoy them. But at some point, we sometimes get enough people wanting the woven towels or the birdhouses or the Christmas ornaments we make that it’s time to start charging for them. Supplies cost money, and your time is certainly worth something.

A lot of people get started that way. Before you know it, they’ve set up a shop on Etsy and started exhibiting at craft shows. At what point does this become a business, they may ask themselves.

If you’re bringing in $400 or more per year on your side gig, you should know that there are two good reasons why you should be reporting your business on your Form 1040:
• You’ll be able to deduct at least some of your expenses, and,
• The IRS mandates it.

8 Questions

When your hobby becomes a small business, you’ll have to complete and file a Schedule C with your 1040.

If your personal enterprise has turned a profit in three of the last five years, it’s quite likely that your creative endeavors have become something that requires a Schedule C along with your 1040. The IRS suggests that you ask yourself eight questions to help determine whether it considers you a business and not a hobby. They go something like this:

1.   Does the time and effort you put into the activity show you intend to make a profit?

2.   Does the activity make a profit in some years, and if so, how much profit does it make?

3.   Can you expect to make a future profit from the appreciation of the assets used in the activity?

4.   Do you depend on income from the activity for (at least part of) your livelihood?

5.   Are any losses due to circumstances beyond your control or are the losses normal for the startup phase of your type of business?

6.   Do you change your methods of operation to improve profitability?

7.   Do you carry out the activity in a businesslike manner and keep complete and accurate books and records?

8.   Do you and any advisors you might work with have the knowledge needed to carry out the activity as a successful business?

How Will You Report Your Income?

Depending on how much money you make and where/how you sell your products, you may receive a 1099 of some sort. If you accept credit cards, it will most likely be the 1099-K: Payment Card and Third-Party Network Transactions. If you take checks and cash, you’ll have to add it all up yourself. Keep any documentation you have if this is the case. You’ll report this on your Schedule C.

How Will You Know If An Expense Is Deductible?

Some business expenses are obvious. If you’re making birdhouses, for example, everything you buy to assemble them should be considered part of your Cost of Goods Sold. If you’re buying products wholesale and reselling them, that should be deductible, too.

But there’s a lot of gray area. The IRS says that legitimate business expenses are those that are “ordinary and necessary.” An ordinary expense is one that is typical and widely accepted in your industry. A necessary expense, on the other hand, is one that is useful and appropriate for your business operations. An expense doesn’t need to be essential to qualify as necessary.

Some small business owners really stretch the interpretation of “ordinary and necessary.” There’s a famous case where a company that had a warehouse tried to deduct the cost of cat food. The contents of the warehouse were attracting rodents and snakes, and they wanted to feed stray cats who would keep the population of unwanted visitors down. The IRS accepted it as a legitimate business expense.

Our point here is not that you should try to find some outlandish business expenses to deduct. But we want you to really think about what it costs you to do business. If you’re ever audited, you’ll have to make a case to the IRS about why you claimed a particular purchase as necessary for your business. Keep meticulous records of your purchases.

On to a New Year

Keep these things in mind as we move into a new year – and tax preparation season. You may want to consider reclassifying your hobby as a business and filing a Schedule C with your 1040. We’re not IRS auditors, of course, so we can’t tell you whether a certain purchase will be considered a deductible business expense. But we can help you deal with the tax-related issues you’ll face should you decide it’s time for you to start claiming income and expenses for your pastime-turned-business.

Filed Under: Quickbooks

5 Often-Overlooked Tax Credits for Your Small Business

January 10, 2025 by admin

Notebook with tax credit sign on a table. Business concept.As a small business owner, tax time can be stressful. That’s why ensuring you’re garnering every benefit possible is essential. Many small businesses overlook some huge benefits when it comes to tax credits. This article reveals five of the most overlooked tax credits for small businesses. Read on to determine if any of these apply to your business.

Tax Credit vs. Tax Deduction

Before jumping to five tax credits often overlooked by small businesses, let’s clarify the difference between a tax credit and a tax deduction.

While tax deductions reduce your taxable income resulting in you paying a lower tax amount, tax credits are a dollar amount deducted from the taxes you owe. So, if you receive a tax credit of $500, you subtract $500 from taxes due.

Tax credits can be highly beneficial come tax time, so knowing which ones your small business is eligible to claim is good. Unfortunately, there are quite a few that many business owners aren’t aware of.

Here are five tax credits that are the most overlooked by small businesses. After you review the list, check with your accountant to see if your business is eligible for these or other tax credits to reduce the amount you owe to the IRS.

5 Tax Credits You May be Overlooking

1. Retirement Saver’s Credit

For small businesses that start a retirement plan for their employees, the IRS offers this credit to offset some of the startup costs they consider “ordinary and necessary.” Your business must employ fewer than 100 employees and not have had a retirement plan previously. The credit is for 50 percent of your startup costs, with a maximum credit of $500.

This tax credit can be claimed for three years, beginning the year before your plan becomes effective. If you do not currently offer a retirement savings plan for your employees, now may be the time to establish one.

2. Research & Development Tax Credit

The R&D tax credit is one of the most overlooked because small business owners not in a “research” field with a laboratory setting often blaze right past this one. But according to the IRS, “research” isn’t necessarily in a lab.

To qualify for this tax credit, a business must improve a product or process, often occurring in many companies as part of their everyday operations. For example, you may qualify if you own a software company and develop or improve an IT process.

Developing, designing, enhancing, or improving a product or process related to your business can qualify you for a credit of 13 cents on every dollar. Of course, you’ll want to confirm whether your business qualifies, identify qualifying activities, and keep copious records so that you can back up your claim to the credit.

3. Rehabilitation Credit (Historic Preservation)

If your business spent money to rehabilitate or renovate a historic structure, this credit likely applies to you. A 20 percent tax credit is available for rehabilitating historic, income-producing buildings determined by the Secretary of the Interior to be “certified historic structures.”

This does not apply to residential structures; however, many businesses purchase historic properties to house their office, restaurant, or other business. Historic structures are certified by the National Park Service, which reports to the IRS. If that applies to the structure where your business is housed, it is worth reviewing this credit with your accountant.

4. Empowerment Zone Employment Credit

Empowerment Zones (EZ) are distressed urban and rural areas needing revitalization. The purpose of the EZ credit is to encourage business owners to operate in these areas and employ EZ residents.

The credit is 20 percent of qualified wages paid during a calendar year. Businesses are eligible for a wage credit of up to $3,000 annually for each eligible employee.

5. Plug-In Electric Vehicle Credit

Suppose you purchase a new plug-in electric vehicle (EV) for your business between 2023 and 2032. In that case, you may qualify for a tax credit of $7,500. To be eligible for the credit, your adjusted gross income (AGI) must not exceed $150,000 in the year you take delivery of the vehicle or the year before (whichever is less).

The EV must meet qualifications regarding battery capacity, retail price, and weight. Speak to your tax accountant for the guidelines and qualifications if you purchased a plug-in EV for your business.

Ensuring you claim every tax credit your small business is entitled to is the key to paying the lowest tax possible. There are dozens of tax credits that small businesses are eligible for. Be sure to have your accountant or CPA review your eligibility for maximum savings come tax time.

Filed Under: Business Tax

Weighing Your Options: Promoting vs Hiring Externally

December 17, 2024 by admin

Business people, hand shake and success in meeting, support and applause, hiring or onboarding with team. Collaboration, shaking hands and congratulations, promotion and achievement with diversityIt’s a quite common dilemma to figure out if you need to hire externally or promote from within to see improvement with your business. There are benefits to both. We will now go over the pros and cons to each side.

Hiring Externally 

Pros 

  • Can help a company gain new perspectives – Oftentimes, hiring a new candidate will allow businesses to gain new ideas that they would not have gotten internally. These hires could be from a different industry and their ideas could make a difference. They also might see flaws in your business model that you were too close to see. The external hires could help improve your business due to their original distance.
  • Gives you more people to consider –  When looking at a pool of candidates for a job, you are able to have a wider pool of people when hiring externally. If you hire internally, it’s going to be a smaller pool. You also could be exposed to people of higher skill sets than the employees you currently have on your team.
  • No conflict within the existing team – Employees in your business will not feel like they are competing for a position if it is already announced to be an external hire joining the team. This makes the environment calmer and you don’t need to worry about any potential conflict.

Cons 

  • More time and money searching – It can take a while to set up the hiring platforms and advertisements saying that you are looking to hire. If the need for a person is immediate, it will be hard to fill it right away due to the time setting up the logistics.
  • You don’t get all the information from their resume – At the end of the day, you only have a few interviews to be able to determine whether or not this person is good for the job. You can look at references but there still can be uncertainty with the offer.
  • You don’t know for certain that they will fit into the office dynamic – When people interview, they are on their best behavior and talk up their abilities and strengths. You can never be certain that they will fit in with your employees and your pace of work. You don’t know their true personality and how well that will mesh with the office environment.

Promoting from Within

Pros 

  • Positive morale for staff – Hiring from within shows that an employee’s work is valued and they will be rewarded for their time going above and beyond expectations. This will also show other employees that if they work hard, they could be promoted in the future. If the promotion is for a managerial role, people can feel more comfortable that they know who they will be working with than an outside recruit.
  • Keep your costs down – Internal recruits will save you money because you don’t need to spend money on external recruiting. You will not need to spend money on sites promoting your position.
  • You know the candidate – Interviews can be much more relaxed when you know the applicants from personally working with them. This allows you to skip the awkwardness of a first interview and ask them what they hope to contribute in the new position.

Cons

  • Stuck in an endless loop of filling positions – You probably will now need to fill in your promoted employee’s position unless they are just getting a promotion of responsibilities rather than a completely different title. This can be frustrating because you probably would have to hire an external candidate to end the repetition of hiring to fill.
  • Lack of change – You are keeping the same ideas that have been in your office already. This may promote a sense of conformity with ideas. The culture will continue to be the same because there is nothing causing a change. You just may lack some originality due to promoting and not hiring externally.
  • Competition between workers – People may become competitive with a position opening up. If employees don’t like the person who gets the promotion, they may leave because they don’t feel properly supported. They also may leave because they don’t feel valued if someone with less experience in the company gets the promotion instead of them.

Overall, consider your employees and the need within your organization to determine whether or not it would be more beneficial to promote or hire externally.

Filed Under: Best Business Practices

Projects That Add to the Value of Your Home

November 20, 2024 by admin

Middle aged couple at home planning living room designYou only have to look at the number of home remodeling shows on television to understand just how many people enjoy watching others upgrade their living spaces. These popular home remodeling shows have inspired many people to try their own hands at various remodeling projects.

If you are interested in having work done on your living space or doing it yourself, you should understand that some remodeling and construction projects will enhance the value of your home as well as its appearance. Other remodeling projects may be on your wish list and make you happy but won’t materially affect the value of your home.

What projects will add to the value of your home? According to the “2023 Cost vs. Value Report” conducted by Remodeling, a leading trade publication/platform, the top five renovations that increase — or come close to increasing — home value are as follows:

HVAC Conversion

Switching out your fossil-fuel burning furnace to a more environmentally friendly alternative — an electric heat pump — is an expensive undertaking but easily recoups its cost. Typically, the cost of converting a 2,000-square-foot home to an electric heat pump is estimated to be $17,747, but the report notes that it adds about $18,366 to the home’s resale value — a 103.5% return on the investment.

Garage Door Replacement

A new garage door definitely enhances a home’s curb appeal and easily recoups its initial cost. The report found that removing and disposing a 16- by 7-foot garage door and replacing it with four-section doors with heavy galvanized steel tracks would cost $4,302 on average but would boost the home’s resale value by $4,418, a 102.7% return on investment.

Manufactured Stone Veneer

Stone veneer has grown in popularity amongst homeowners looking to craft a warm and welcoming feel to their homes’ exterior. It costs an estimated $10,925 to install 36 linear feet of sills, 40 linear feet of corners, an address block, and other materials, including water-resistant and corrosion-resistant barriers. However, homeowners will recoup 102.3% of the project’s cost if they put their home on the market.

Replacing an Entry Door

New front doors can help improve a home’s energy efficiency as well as enhance its appearance. Replacing an old entry door with a new steel one will cost an average of $2,214 but will increase your home’s resale value by $2,235, recouping 102.9% of its original cost.

Replacing Siding

Replacing a home’s siding is an expensive undertaking, but it is one project that delivers immediate eye appeal. New siding refreshes a house’s appearance and adds to the neighborhood’s overall desirability. The report looked at the costs of installing both fiber-cement siding and vinyl siding. It found that the average cost of installing 1,250 square feet with fiber-cement siding would run a homeowner $19,361. The homeowner would expect to recoup 88.5% of the cost of the project, or $17,129. Installing new vinyl siding would be less costly than fiber-cement siding. Siding for a 1,250-square-foot house would cost an estimated $16,348, and the homeowner could expect to get back around 94.7% of that total cost at resale.

Be aware that labor costs vary from state to state and from community to community. The cost of materials fluctuates, sometimes considerably, depending on inflation, supply chain issues, and other economic and political forces.

Filed Under: Real Estate

Rating Bonds

October 11, 2024 by admin

Before you add bonds to your portfolio, you should understand how they work and what variations exist among them. Just as importantly, you need to identify the risks that come with owning bonds and how you can protect yourself from them.

Bond Basics

Bonds are essentially IOUs, issued by federal, state, and municipal governments as well as by corporations and governmental agencies. They are intended to raise revenue for a wide variety of activities. For example, governments issue bonds to finance the construction of infrastructure projects, such as roads, bridges, airports, public housing, and schools. Corporations may use the proceeds of bonds to pay for the construction of new manufacturing facilities, research and development, or to expand into new markets.

Bond investors essentially loan money to the bond’s issuer. In return, they receive interest payments at specified intervals plus a promise that the issuer will return the bond principal to investors when the bond’s term ends on its maturity date.1

Interest Rate Risk

Bonds are not a risk-free investment. Rising interest rates may reduce the desirability of the bonds you own because there is an inverse relationship between bond prices and yield. If you opt to sell a bond before it matures because interest rates on newly issued bonds have gone up, you will most likely have to accept a lower price than you paid for it.

The Importance of Credit Quality

Credit risk — or the risk that a bond issuer will fail to make promised interest and principal payments — is another important consideration. Bonds issued by companies or entities that are financially healthy are not as risky as bonds from issuers that are less financially sound. Bonds with low credit ratings offer higher yields to compensate for added risk to your portfolio.

Rating Agencies

Rating services assess municipal bonds, all types of corporate bonds, and international bonds. U.S. Treasury bonds are not rated. Before rating a bond, analysts assess various factors that could affect the issuer’s willingness and ability to meet its obligations to bondholders. For example, they examine other debt the company carries and how fast the company’s revenues and profits are growing. They take a holistic approach in that they also review the state of the economy and the financial health of other companies in the same business. In the case of municipal bond issuers, they examine and compare municipalities of a similar size and similar budget.

Credit ratings influence the interest rate an issuer must pay in order to sell its bonds. However, credit ratings are opinions about credit risk. Even though credit ratings are forward looking in that they assess the impact of foreseeable future events and can be useful to investors, they are not a guarantee that an investment will pay out or that an issuer will not default. While investors may use credit ratings in making investment decisions, they are not indicators of investment worth nor are they buy, sell, or hold recommendations. You can learn more about the rating systems of the two major services, Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s, on their websites.

This information is not meant as tailored investment or tax advice. Before building a portfolio that includes bonds, you may find it helpful to discuss your strategy with a financial professional.

1Bonds can gain or lose value based on economic conditions and market events. Principal is not guaranteed.

Filed Under: Investments

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