[This article has been updated to reflect the new tax law that went into effect on January 1, 2018]
Tax Strategist or Tax Evader?
C’mon…admit it. You know someone who’s done it. Maybe they:
- Took some petty cash and used it to pay for a couple of cases of beer, some food at the store, and lunch with friends.
- Shared a company car with a teenage daughter on the weekends.
- Charged that expensive dinner with the missus on the corporate card.
- Bought a bunch of clothes and other household stuff, and charged it to the business.
- Wrote off an entire resort vacation with the family because they made a single, one-hour sales call to a customer while in town.
- Had the contractor who upgraded a home kitchen send an invoice to the company.
Yeah, you know someone who’s done this stuff. Or at least some of it. Right?
The truth is, many small business owners have, at one time or another, blurred the lines between “business expenses” and “personal expenses” to try to save money on taxes. No one’s perfect. No one talks about it, or likes to admit it.
But it’s too tempting.
Charging a personal expense through the business means taking a deduction for it against income. And if our state and federal tax rates are somewhere between 20 to 30% combined, then effectively that could be like getting a 20 to 30% discount on those things purchased. It’s a perk of being a business owner, right?
What harm is there?
And really, who’s going to know? Chances are someone probably won’t even get audited. And besides, even if a small business owner fudges the numbers a bit on their tax deductions, it’s such a small amount, relatively — the IRS has much bigger fish to fry, right?
Is charging personal expenses through the business legal? Of course not. It is fraudulent. But the legality is not the issue. There’s another bigger issue at stake here…
Tax Minimizer or Tax Evader?
My dad used to tell me there are two types of taxpayers in this world: tax minimizers and tax evaders.
Smart business people are tax minimizers. These business owners do everything they can, within the law, to minimize their taxes. They plan. They defer income where they can, and increase expenses when they’re able. They take advantage of credits and deductions. They may take an aggressive position here or there, but always with good, documented reasons. Considering that taxes are the number one highest expense for any business person, smart business people are always good at (legally, prudently) minimizing their tax obligations.
But dumb business people are tax evaders. These are the people who seek to reduce their taxes by any means, legal or not. These are the people who cut corners and cook the books. This is not a good practice.
Running personal expenses through a business may not seem significant. It may only represent a small amount of your overall expenses. But it represents something much more significant: Someone who willfully runs personal expenses through the company without any explanation, justification, or reason, has officially categorized themselves as a tax evader. And, if they one day are unfortunate enough to be the subject of an IRS audit, an IRS auditor will judge them on this behavior.
Going through an IRS audit is a stressful and risky endeavor for tax evaders, because it opens up their entire business finances to stricter scrutiny. A $500 fraudulent deduction for personal expenses could be, in the eyes of an IRS agent, a clue to something much, much bigger. If there is distrust or lack of credibility with the business owner, then the agent may dig further, create more havoc, and spend more time disrupting the business — whether there’s good reason or not. That stupid $500 personal dinner bill that was run through the company could cost countless unproductive hours responding to IRS requests. That’s painful — and the tax penalties, business disruptions, and other potential consequences are not even remotely worth it.
So, the next time you see someone charging a personal expense to their business, do them a favor and share this article with them. It’ll make you a better friend, and help them become better business owners.
New Tax Law
Also, under the new tax law that took effect Jan. 1, 2018, there are significant tax breaks for small business owners. For example, business owners who operate their businesses as pass-through entities (LLCs, partnerships, S corporations, or sole proprietorships) can now take a special 20% deduction on their business income (with certain limitations). Taxes are never fun, but why bother trying to cheat on your business expenses when the government is giving you this new deduction?
Talk to your tax adviser about what the new tax law means for you — and keep on being a smart tax minimizer, not a dumb tax evader.
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View Comments (30)
If I hired the residential remodeling company that I own to remodel my own kitchen, is there anything stating the specific amount that I have to charge or can the company charge me say $10 to remodel my kitchen?
If you are receiving services from a related party at a less than fair market value price than the IRS would likely require that you impute that income on your return so that it’s taxable.
I work for a small LLC construction business. Family owned and there are 6 total employees. The CEO and CFO are business owners and they always use company money to pay their personal taxes every year. And they use company money and employees to do work on their personal homes to build equity for when they sell them. They buy trucks with company money and use tax refunds they get for buying them as personal use money. (Ex. A new back yard and siding.) They also label us as “exempt” employees to avoid paying overtime. How much of this is illegal? It’s hard to hear them say stuff like we can’t afford raises and to see them do stuff like this. It takes a personal toll on us employees.
I am a bookkeeper for a company, not their accountant. I do not work on taxes. However, I am very well aware that the company is applying non-business expenses through their business accounts. And, I am told by them where to apply these expenses (they attach a receipt and tell me which category to apply it--often "Office Supplies" for example). Am I in any way legally liable as an employee/bookkeeper for the actions of my employer?
If you’re aware of tax fraud and you are complicit then you are potentially liable. Consider being a whistleblower:
https://www.irs.gov/compliance/whistleblower-informant-award
You may make a cash deposit or security deposit comparable to those minimum requirements with the state. Local insurance agents offer insurance products through a lot of companies and can help you save time by shopping you through all of their companies at once.
Thanks for sharing this information, Gabrielle!
My son-in-law has a small ($300,000) retail business, "LLC". He wants to pay for his sons grade school ($5000) through the company. Those payments would be added back to the companies profit, thus becoming his taxable income.
Company Profit $50,000
Payment for school $ 5,000
Taxable Income $55,000
What is the downside to doing this?
Thank you
Hi David! Here is Gene's response to your question:
I wouldn't do it this way. Some suggestions:
-take a loan from the company and use those funds to personally pay for the education expense. Make sure the loan is documented and uses market interest rates. the business can deduct the interest.
-as an LLC you can take the money out as a distribution. It does not affect profits, just your cash flow.
-setup a 529 plan and contribute after tax money to it. It will grow tax free and can be used in the future for private or religious school or for higher education.
I can I buy rental property with company funds that will be in my name not the company that will be investment income for me ( or do I have to the rental property in the company name
Hi Ken,
Assuming this is a privately held company your bosses are free to mismanage and drive their firm into ground as they please. You're just an employee and it's not your perogative to question what they do, sorry. If you believe that they are breaking laws then you can report to them to the police. The IRS and SEC also has whistlewblower programs for things like this, although it's generally used by employees at large public companies.
I wouldn't want to keep working for people like this. You can obviously see the writing on the wall. If you can, you should look for employment elsewhere and spend time with people that you enjoy and for owners that you respect...and respect you.
Ken | August 11, 2019 at 4:48 pm
I have a question about this… I recently found out by my HR person that my 2 bosses are taking a large salary for themselves since the company started and also have both their wife’s on payroll who do not work at all for the company in any way shape or form. They also bought 2 range rovers and the company makes the monthly payments for them along with the gas,tolls, and parking fees. They can take the bus to work since all they do is drive to work to sit at there office and that’s it. They are not traveling sales men. They also charge there large lunches and bar bills to the company every day. The business is now suffering due to a tough time in our business sector and they are laying people off and looking to slash people’s salaries but I can’t help and feel that we would have been ok had they not done these things as well as other things that are legal but severely stupid…. what can I do if I lost my job because they say money is tight but the sales for the company are higher then last year and I can prove they mismanaged company funds?
I have a question about this... I recently found out by my HR person that my 2 bosses are taking a large salary for themselves since the company started and also have both their wife’s on payroll who do not work at all for the company in any way shape or form. They also bought 2 range rovers and the company makes the monthly payments for them along with the gas,tolls, and parking fees. They can take the bus to work since all they do is drive to work to sit at there office and that’s it. They are not traveling sales men. They also charge there large lunches and bar bills to the company every day. The business is now suffering due to a tough time in our business sector and they are laying people off and looking to slash people’s salaries but I can’t help and feel that we would have been ok had they not done these things as well as other things that are legal but severely stupid.... what can I do if I lost my job because they say money is tight but the sales for the company are higher then last year and I can prove they mismanaged company funds?
T,
Who's "the tax person" you're referring to? This doesn't seem kosher, sorry.
T | July 22, 2019 at 11:50 am
What if you know someone who writes off family vacations and gives everyone money to spend and 1099 each one for the spending money? The tax person knows it and let’s it happen.
What if you know someone who writes off family vacations and gives everyone money to spend and 1099 each one for the spending money? The tax person knows it and let’s it happen.