Ok, I'm here. A little about me before I go into this. I am not a tax person. I have, since high school, been in business classes (payroll, accounting, blah, blah) have filed my own taxes for my own businesses since 1995 (Ebay) including mystery shopping for the past 3 years. I have an associates in Criminal Justice (working on my bachelors and hope to gain my masters after that) and my concentration is in forensic accounting.
That being said I can not tell you what to do or how to do it I can only share what I do. If you want actual advice that is going to get you backed during an audit, go to a professional, even better... snag a tax shop and get it paid for. The benefits of having a tax professional behind you is if you do get audited, they will help.
I count everything that is required for payment of a job as income. Here is where it gets tricky. My spread sheet has the 2
columns (fee and reimbursement) but I also have 3 expense columns. And I will try my best to explain to you why.
Fee and reimbursement (we all have a pretty good idea of what these are) if the fee is $0 and reimbursement is $40 and I spend $32.78 then $32.78 goes into the reimbursement column. If I spend $41.78 then $40 goes into the reimbursement and $1.78 goes into FOOD EXPENSE. Same with those grocery shops that only have reimbursement... $10.50 goes into the reimbursement column and the extra goes into FOOD EXPENSE. Now the clothing I bought to "fit in" with the environment (high end restaurant), this is a BUSINESS EXPENSE.
So FEE $0 REIMBURSEMENT $40 FOOD EXPENSE $1.78 and BUSINESS EXPENSE $50 (for the dress). The last expense column is anything vehicle related. Yes, I separate EVERYTHING.
I staple the job sheet (first page that shows the fee, reimbursement and requirements of food order) these are HARD PAPER COPIES and put it in a file chronologically with the other jobs for the month. In that same hard copy file I make a copy of the dress receipt and couple that with another copy of the job sheet. This is also the file that I put my gas receipts and any other expenses (pens, paper, computer purchase, tolls, parking, car maintenance and don't forget ATM fees (yes they are deductible)... whatever/everything.) I print a hard copy of my spread sheet and payment invoices, placing those into the same file for the month. So 2 files, one within another. One for jobs and one for expenses.
This seems like a ton of work but when you get called in for an audit... It's an easy month by month of hard copy evidence that, in fact, these deductions were taken in the commission of a job and if there is a question... the requirements are right there for an easy 2 second answer. Your auditor will love it and so will you when you are sweating it out. By the time you get to March of the audit year, your auditor will "get it" and you will breeze through the rest. Top it off with a spread sheet total for the year and your 1099's to match everything that you have on your tax form and it's "Thank you very much, your audit is complete, have a nice day!!!"
I also keep hand written records and these are what I hold as the audit is being done.
My best advice, most of us are going to be claiming MORE than the amount of our 1099's (those companies you didn't make over $599) so don't sweat the audit. Keep good records and keep them strictly organized. It may seem like a pain in the azz now but you will be patting yourself on the back by the time your audit is over. Another little tid bit... when they ask "did you start this business in (current tax year)" you check yes and it is the biggest flag for audits. Expect it! I have started 5 businesses in 18 years, 3 of which I still run, and every 1st year I get audited, Mystery shopping was the most record keeping and the only time I requested an "in person audit" and if I were to be audited again on this business I would opt for the same type of audit.
Just remember, do not double deduct... separate the reimbursement from the overages, the gas example again, reimbursement is $2 but you bought $5, the $2 goes to the reimbursement and $3 goes to gas, same with the tax prepare fees. If it is a shop and you got reimbursed for it DO NOT put it in the allotted spot for tax prep fees on your return. The second the auditor finds a mistake or finds that you double deducted something just upped your audit hours of time.
So that is just me... it's a lot I know and if anyone needs clarification I will try to clarify, post it here as it will give others the chance to input as well... the Quicken program suggestion by LisaSTL in the other post was right on for the kinds of programs that are out there to help.
O.o o.O
Happily shopping New England and beyond!!!!!