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Ways Through the Maze: A Tax Guide for Indies

#14: Business Checking Account Not Required
 August 2009
 
 
When I ask indies where they get their tax information, often I get the reply: "On the Web."

My fellow indies, "the Web" is not a recognized tax expert. Know your source.
 
And when you've found a professional make sure he or she is the right one for you. An accountant or lawyer may be competent or expert in one area and yet not suitable for you.
 
Choose your professionals with care. No ophthalmologist to fix your broken jaw, just as no corporate accountant to advice you on home office.
 
Several professionals took issue with my column about indies not needing a business checking account. 
 
There's no shortage of bad advice out there is my response to a couple of them. I admit I got a bit edgy but when some guy tells me I'm practicing law without a license because I'm advising about opening a checking account or that it's malpractice not to advise incorporation and another guy refers to one-person businesses as one-man LLCs my Hungarian temper flares. 
 
Please read my column below and then link to the thoughts and reasoning of another accountant and attorney. It will help you assess the tax and legal advice that you receive.
 
June Walker
June Walker
Consultant to Indies

June's Blog
 
2009
 Creative Freelancer Conference

The 2nd annual business development event for the creatively self- employed

AUGUST 26, 27, 28
OMNI SAN DIEGO HOTEL
 

June's Seminar
Money-saving Tax Solutions for Creatives
 
Use my personal code, JW9, for a $25 discount.

Tax Solutions for Creatives

Tax Solutions for Creatives: An Audio CD
 
Basics for the Visual Artist
An Audio CD
by
June Walker

1. Introduction
2. Self-employed in Business 
3. Three Ways to Deductions
4. Expenses in General
5. Office-in-the-Home
6. Auto & Transportation
7. Travel or Transportation
8. Meals & Entertainment
9. Income
10. Taxes  
11. Recordkeeping
12. A Final Caution
June's Book
Self-employed Tax Solutions
 

The What of Ways Through the Maze

To bring you clear and simple solutions to complicated situations about income, expenses, taxes, recordkeeping, indie pensions, and being self-employed
Business Checking Account Not Required.
Get one only when you are ready and need it.
You need only one checking account. Do not open a separate checking account for your business.

Yes, that's the exact opposite of what Sammy Segar, CPA, told you. And it's not just Sammy who tells you that. In an IRS publication, you are urged to open a business checking account and "although a bank may charge you an extra fee for a business account, the new account will more than pay for itself in accounting efficiency." The very next example from the IRS in the publication is the mixed use - personal and business - of your automobile. So, let's see how efficient two checking accounts would be in this situation - hmm ... guess you are expected to pay for each gas purchase with two checks - one for the personal use amount of gas and a business check for the business use portion.

Most accountants disagree strongly with my position - because they don't know you like I know you. My system will save you money and time; their advice will cost you money and time.

Let's look at Luisa Lifecoach shopping for groceries at Total Foods. If she had both a personal and a business checking account, which one should she have used to pay for her groceries, assuming she knew that three business associates were dropping by that evening? Oh! Says Sammy Segar, CPA, she should have divided the groceries into two piles: one for family and one for business guests. And paid with two checks. And what if Luisa's three-year-old was tearing at the display case while she was at the checkout and she was late picking up her 10-year-old at soccer practice?

Sammy Segar always insists that a business checking account is a must. But Sammy, if Luisa is just starting out, where does she get the money to put into her business account? Sammy says, transfer it from her personal account. But I thought that you're supposed to keep these accounts separate. Okay, says Sammy, after she has made a little money, transfer the funds back to her personal account. But whoa, wait a minute, Luisa transferred too much out of the business account; now she'll have to move some back to the business account again. It's beginning to get messy already, and how will she keep a record of those transfers? Well, she won't get any help from Sammy: he hates working with those eccentric freelancers.

As long as your records are accurate one checking account is perfectly acceptable to the IRS. I think one big factor in the insistence on a business checking account is that it's supposed to cover financial shenanigans. Many people like to believe that because something is paid by a business check that makes it a business deduction. Of course, that is not so! The attaché case for your daughter's twentieth birthday, even though purchased with your business check, is not a business expense. But the flowers, paid from your personal account, given to your mother as thanks for reviewing your business plan, is a business expense.

As I've said before, in the lives of self-employeds the line between personal and business is not clearly drawn; it wiggles around a lot. By the nature of the types of businesses that self-employeds are in and by the structure of a sole proprietorship, personal and business often intertwine -- almost always so in the creative fields. You do not want to struggle with business versus personal decisions every time you spend money.

Use one checking account!

Besides, a business checking account costs money, while your own checking or savings account is usually free of charge. So who needs the extra expense? Well, sometimes it's unavoidable. It may be necessary to have a separate account, for instance, if you do not use your own name as your business name.

If graphic designer Victor Visual called his business, the "Double V Studio" most folks would pay him with checks made out to his business name. If his bank does not allow both names - Victor Visual and Double V - on his account he'll have to have an account in the name of his business in order to deposit his checks. The simple (and money-saving) alternative is for Victor to open a savings account in his business name, deposit the checks into it, and then have the bank do an automatic sweep of the funds from his savings to his checking account whenever the funds reach a certain amount specified by Victor.
 
Here's comments from two people who disagree:
The Wandering Tax Pro
and
 
And my response:
There's no shortage of bad advice out there.


I wish you success in your new indie venture,

The Why of

Ways Through the Maze

To guide indies to a more simple and secure tax life. 

To promote indie-business self-confidence.  

To humanize tax issues with glimpses into the lives and concerns of self-employed people. 

Each issue will include one or more Q&As that come out of real-life situations of indies who have visited my blog or my website. 

From time to time I'll also announce indie happenings of interest to you.

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