On this page
- Tax Planning vs. Tax Preparation
- The Advantage of Tax Planning
- Year-Round Tax Planning Strategies
- 1. Quarterly Estimated Taxes
- 2. Retirement Contributions
- 3. Charitable Giving
- 4. Business Expense Timing
- 5. Losses and Gains Harvesting
- 6. Roth Conversions
- Worked Example: Tax Planning Benefits Over 5 Years
- How to Implement Tax Planning
- Step 1: Meet with CPA early (January or February)
- Step 2: Make contributions and deductions throughout the year
- Step 3: Track all deductions
- Step 4: File taxes early
- Common Tax Planning Mistakes
- Action Items: Start Tax Planning
Tax Planning vs. Tax Preparation
Tax preparation: Filing your tax return correctly and on time. Reactive. Deadline: April 15.
Tax planning: Reducing your tax bill throughout the year through strategic decisions. Proactive. Ongoing.
Think of it like fitness:
- Tax prep = weighing yourself on January 1
- Tax planning = exercising throughout the year so the number is good on January 1
The Advantage of Tax Planning
Tax prep scenario (reactive):
- January: You work all year, earn $120,000
- March: Tax deadline approaches
- You call a CPA: "Can you file my taxes?"
- CPA calculates: Income $120,000, standard deduction $14,600, taxable $105,400
- Tax owed: $25,296
- April 15: You file and pay
Tax planning scenario (proactive):
- January: You talk to a CPA
- CPA says: "You'll earn ~$120,000. Here's what we can do to reduce taxes:"
- Max out SEP-IRA: $22,000 (saves $5,280 in taxes)
- Charitable donations: $5,000 (saves $1,200)
- Home office deduction (if self-employed): $2,500 (saves $600)
- Bunching itemized deductions: $8,000 (saves $1,920)
- Total planned deductions: $37,500
- Throughout year: You make these contributions and deductions
- March: Tax deadline approaches
- CPA files: Income $120,000, deductions $37,500, taxable $82,500
- Tax owed: $19,800
- Difference: $25,296 - $19,800 = $5,496 saved
Same income, $5,496 less tax, simply from planning.
Year-Round Tax Planning Strategies
1. Quarterly Estimated Taxes
Proactive: Pay estimated taxes quarterly (April 15, June 15, Sept 15, Jan 15). This spreads the burden and allows adjustments mid-year.
Reactive: Wait until April 15 to pay. If you owe $30,000, you pay it all at once. Plus, if you haven't been making quarterly payments, you face underpayment penalties (6%–8% annually).
Advantage: Quarterly planning prevents penalties and improves cash flow.
2. Retirement Contributions
Proactive: In January, contribute to SEP-IRA or Solo 401k.
- Contribution: $22,000
- Tax savings: $5,280 (24% bracket)
- Plus: $3,377 self-employment tax savings
- Total: $8,657 saved
- You're building retirement savings while reducing current-year taxes
Reactive: Wait until April 15 (tax filing deadline) to make the contribution.
- Same tax savings, but you've delayed the benefit
- If you don't have cash by April 15, you miss the window entirely
- Opportunity lost
Advantage: Early contributions optimize cash flow and ensure the contribution happens.
3. Charitable Giving
Proactive: Plan charitable giving to exceed the standard deduction (then itemize).
- Standard deduction (single): $14,600
- If you give $8,000 to charity + $3,000 other deductions = $11,000 (below standard, doesn't help)
- But if you plan: Give $20,000 over 2 years in a single year ($15,000 + $5,000) = $15,000 itemized, save $3,600
Reactive: Give $8,000/year without planning. Standard deduction covers it; no tax benefit.
Advantage: Bunching charitable giving (giving multiple years' worth in one year) optimizes deductions.
4. Business Expense Timing
Proactive: If you're self-employed and expect high income, time large business expenses strategically.
- December: Buy office equipment ($5,000). Depreciate it, deduct a portion this year.
- Or: Buy it in January (next year) and deduct it then, reducing next year's taxes
- Timing depends on your income forecast
Reactive: Buy equipment when you need it, don't consider tax timing.
Advantage: Strategic timing can save thousands (especially with depreciation).
5. Losses and Gains Harvesting
Proactive: In December, review your investments.
- Stock A: Bought for $10,000, now worth $8,000 (loss: $2,000)
- Stock B: Bought for $10,000, now worth $15,000 (gain: $5,000)
- Sell both: Realize $2,000 loss + $5,000 gain = net $3,000 gain (vs. $5,000 without harvesting)
- Tax saved: $3,000 × 20% = $600
- Plus: You can carry forward unused losses ($2,000) to reduce future gains
Reactive: Hold both stocks; pay tax on the $5,000 gain.
Advantage: Tax-loss harvesting can reduce annual tax bill and provide loss carryforwards.
6. Roth Conversions
Proactive: If you expect a low-income year, convert traditional IRA to Roth.
- Roth conversion: Move $50,000 from traditional to Roth (taxable as income)
- Your income this year: $40,000
- Conversion adds: $50,000
- Total taxable: $90,000
- Tax bracket: 12% (vs. 22% next year when you're back to normal income)
- You convert at 12% rate instead of 22% rate
- Savings: $50,000 × (22% - 12%) = $5,000
Reactive: Convert when income is high; lose the tax rate arbitrage.
Advantage: Strategic conversions exploit low-income years to build tax-free Roth account.
Worked Example: Tax Planning Benefits Over 5 Years
Scenario: Self-employed person with $120,000 annual income
Year 1–5 (No planning, just tax prep):
- Annual income: $120,000
- Annual taxes: $25,296 × 5 years = $126,480
- Total after-tax income: $600,000 - $126,480 = $473,520
Year 1–5 (With proactive planning):
- Annual income: $120,000
- Annual taxes with planning:
- Year 1: $120,000 income - $22,000 (SEP-IRA) - $5,000 (charitable) - $3,000 (deductions) = $90,000 taxable
- Taxes: $18,000
- Savings vs. year 1 reactive: $7,296
- Year 1–5 total taxes: $18,000 × 5 = $90,000
- Total after-tax income: $600,000 - $90,000 = $510,000
- Difference: $510,000 - $473,520 = $36,480
Over 5 years, proactive planning saves $36,480 (and builds $110,000 in retirement savings via SEP-IRA).
How to Implement Tax Planning
Step 1: Meet with CPA early (January or February)
Don't wait until March. Early consultation allows time for planning.
Discuss:
- Expected annual income
- Expected deductions
- Upcoming major purchases (equipment, real estate)
- Charitable giving plans
- Retirement savings goals
- Business structure (sole prop, LLC, S-Corp)
Step 2: Make contributions and deductions throughout the year
January:
- Max out SEP-IRA or Solo 401k contributions
- Plan charitable giving for the year
April 15:
- Make first quarterly estimated tax payment
- Review taxes if you did W-4 adjustments
June 15:
- Second quarterly estimated tax payment
September 15:
- Third quarterly estimated tax payment
- Mid-year review with CPA
- Adjust fourth quarter payment if needed
December:
- Fourth quarterly estimated tax payment
- Tax-loss harvest investments
- Accelerate income or defer expenses (depending on situation)
- Final charitable giving
- Meet with CPA for next year planning
Step 3: Track all deductions
Keep receipts, invoices, and records:
- Business expenses
- Charitable donations
- Investment losses
- Home office expenses
- Vehicle mileage (if deductible)
Step 4: File taxes early
File by April 15, not on April 14. Early filing:
- Reduces audit risk (earlier filed returns are audited less)
- Gives you time to make adjustments
- Allows IRS to process and credit refunds faster
Common Tax Planning Mistakes
1. Only seeing a CPA at tax time
- Better: Meet quarterly or at least annually early
2. Not contributing to retirement accounts in time
- SEP-IRA must be opened by April 15 of filing deadline (can be extended)
- Solo 401k must be opened by December 31 of the tax year
- If you miss the deadline, you lose the contribution for that year
3. Bunching income and expenses randomly
- Bad: Earn $100k one year, $50k the next (high volatility causes tax swings)
- Better: Plan to smooth income and expenses to optimize tax brackets
4. Not harvesting tax losses
- If you have investment losses, sell them to offset gains
- Unused losses can carry forward indefinitely
5. Taking the standard deduction without considering itemizing
- For many, standard deduction is fine
- But if you have >$14,600 in deductions (high state taxes, mortgage interest, charity), itemize
Action Items: Start Tax Planning
- Schedule meeting with CPA in January: Don't wait until March
- Estimate annual income: Project what you'll earn
- Identify tax planning opportunities:
- Retirement contributions (SEP-IRA, Solo 401k)
- Charitable giving (plan to bunch)
- Business deductions (equipment, home office)
- Tax-loss harvesting (if applicable)
- Make SEP-IRA contribution: Before April 15 of next year
- Pay quarterly estimates: April 15, June 15, Sept 15, Jan 15
- Revisit in December: Plan next year's taxes before year-end
- File early: Don't wait until April 15
Tax planning isn't complicated, but it requires thinking ahead. The difference between people who plan and those who don't is $5,000–$20,000/year for high-income earners. That's worth planning for.





