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Perspectivas, análisis y actualizaciones de la economía de agentes IA. Explorar por etiqueta.
Section 1041 and Divorce: A Guide to Property Transfers, Carryover Basis, and QDROs
Section 1041 lets spouses transfer property tax-free during and after divorce, but carryover basis, the six-year window, QDROs, ISO conversions, and post-TCJA alimony rules quietly reshape every settlement. A working guide to what must be fixed before the decree is signed.
Schedule M-1: Reconciling Book Income to Tax on Forms 1120, 1120-S, and 1065
Schedule M-1 reconciles book net income to taxable income on Forms 1120, 1120-S, and 1065. Walk through every line, the permanent versus temporary differences that drive the gap (federal tax, 50% meals, MACRS depreciation, deferred revenue), when Schedule M-3 takes over at $10 million in assets, and the workpaper discipline that keeps books and returns tied together.
Salon and Barbershop Booth Rental Bookkeeping: Schedule C vs Schedule E, 1099 Rules, and Self-Employment Records
Salon and barbershop booth rent can land on Schedule C, Schedule E, or both — and it is usually the booth renter, not the shop, who owes the Form 1099-MISC. A practical guide to worker classification, deductions, and audit-ready bookkeeping for shop owners and booth renters.
SaaS Revenue Metrics: Building the MRR Waterfall and Reading What It Says About Growth
A 2026 reference for SaaS founders on calculating MRR and ARR, decomposing the five-bucket recurring-revenue waterfall, interpreting NRR/GRR, and reconciling subscription metrics to GAAP revenue under ASC 606.
Regulation Crowdfunding: How Founders Raise Up to $5 Million From the Public Without Hiring Wall Street
Reg CF lets non-reporting U.S. companies sell securities to the public up to $5 million per rolling 12 months through an SEC-registered funding portal. This guide walks through the $124,000 investor limits, Form C disclosure, bad-actor checks, tombstone advertising, ongoing C-U and C-AR filings, and the bookkeeping for SAFEs, offering costs, and escrow that founders most often get wrong.
How to Reconcile Payment Processor Payouts: A Clearing Account Guide
A payment processor payout bundles gross sales, fees, refunds, chargebacks, sales tax, and rolling reserves into one net deposit. Route every piece through a clearing account so your books tie out to the penny and match the gross volume on your 1099-K.
The Standard Deduction Is Now Permanent: How OBBBA Reshapes the Itemize-vs-Standard Decision for 2026
How the One Big Beautiful Bill Act made the doubled standard deduction permanent, raised the SALT cap to $40,000, added a 0.5% AGI charitable floor, and stacked a $6,000 senior bonus deduction — with concrete math for the 2026 itemize-versus-standard decision.
OBBBA Locks In the Section 199A QBI Deduction: A 2026 Playbook for Pass-Through Owners
Section 199A is now permanent under OBBBA. Pass-through owners get a 20% deduction, wider SSTB phase-in ranges ($75K single / $150K joint above the 2026 threshold), a new $400 minimum for material participants, and the same W-2 wage and UBIA tests at the top of the band.
Permanent 100% Bonus Depreciation Returns: How Small Businesses Stack Section 168(k), Section 179, and QIP in 2026
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act made 100% bonus depreciation under Section 168(k) permanent for qualified property placed in service after January 19, 2025. This guide explains how small businesses coordinate Section 179, qualified improvement property, and the new Section 168(n) manufacturing deduction — and the acquisition-date rules that decide eligibility.
The $15 Million Estate Tax Exemption Is Now Permanent: How High-Net-Worth Families Should Recalibrate SLATs, GRATs, and Lifetime Gifts in 2026
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act locks the federal estate, gift, and GST exemption at $15 million per individual with no sunset. Here is what changes for SLATs, GRATs, dynasty trusts, GST allocation, and basis planning in 2026 — and what to actually do this year.
The Charity Deduction You Get Without Itemizing: A 2026 Guide to the New $1,000 / $2,000 Above-the-Line Write-Off
Starting in 2026, taxpayers who take the standard deduction can deduct up to $1,000 ($2,000 for joint filers) of cash gifts to qualified public charities under new IRC Section 170(p) — cash only, no donor-advised funds, no carryforward, and the same $250 documentation rules as itemizers.
Mobile Notary and Loan Signing Agent Bookkeeping: Separating SE-Tax-Exempt Notarial Fees on Schedule C and Schedule SE
Mobile notaries and loan signing agents can exclude statutory notarial fees from self-employment tax under IRC Section 1402(c)(1), but only if their books cleanly split per-act notarial revenue from taxable signing, travel, and print fees. A chart-of-accounts and Schedule C/SE walk-through that can save a moderately busy LSA $800 to $2,000 a year.