05/29/2026
Your business was profitable this month.
So why haven’t you paid yourself?
Profit is what your books say you earned.
Cash flow is what’s actually in your account.
Owner’s pay requires intentional planning — not whatever is left over.
If you’ve ever had a profitable month and still felt financially stressed — this is exactly why.
💡 Save this and share it with a business owner who needs to hear it.
📞 CALL US TODAY: 718-313-0499
FinancialLiteracy
05/27/2026
A write-off is not free money.
It reduces your taxable income — not your tax bill dollar for dollar.
A $1,000 deduction in the 22% tax bracket saves you $220. Not $1,000.
That still matters. Those savings add up across a full year of legitimate expenses. But understanding the math helps you make smarter decisions about what to track and claim.
What qualifies: ordinary and necessary business expenses.
What doesn’t: personal expenses labeled as business.
The goal is making sure every legitimate expense is accounted for so you never overpay.
💡 Save this — it’s one of the most misunderstood concepts in small business taxes.
📞 CALL US TODAY: 718-313-0499
FinancialLiteracy
05/25/2026
Mark your calendar.
June 15 is coming and if you’re self-employed, a 1099 contractor, a business owner, or earn income outside of a traditional W-2 job, this deadline applies to you.
The IRS operates on a pay-as-you-go system. That means they expect payments as your income is earned; not just once a year in April.
Missing a quarterly estimated tax deadline doesn’t just mean you’ll owe more in April. It means the IRS adds penalties and interest on top of what you already owe.
The deadline is June 15.
The time to prepare is now.
💡 Save this post as your reminder.
📞 CALL US TODAY: 718-313-0499
05/21/2026
If you’re running a business but don’t know these terms, your money is moving without direction.
Understanding your numbers isn’t just for accountants. It’s for every business owner who wants to make smarter decisions, stop guessing, and actually build something sustainable.
Here are 5 financial terms you need to know:
→ Gross Income vs Net Income — what you earn vs what you keep
→ Accounts Receivable vs Accounts Payable — what’s coming in vs what’s going out
→ Operating Expenses vs Capital Expenses — day-to-day costs vs long-term investments
→ Net Profit Margin — how efficiently your business turns revenue into profit
→ Owner’s Draw vs Salary — how you pay yourself and how it affects your taxes
These aren’t complicated concepts. They’re the foundation of every financial decision you make as a business owner.
The more clearly you understand them the better equipped you are to grow and to protect what you’re building.
💡 Save this post as your business finance reference guide.
📞 CALL US TODAY: 718-313-0499
05/11/2026
A big tax refund feels like a win.
But here's what it's actually telling you:
You overpaid the government throughout the year - and they're returning what was always yours. With no interest. No return on that money. Nothing.
A large refund means your withholding or estimated payments were higher than your actual tax liability. In other words, the IRS held your money all year and gave it back in April.
That's not a bonus. That's your own money coming back late.
A smaller refund - or even owing a small amount - often means your tax situation was calibrated correctly throughout the year. Your money stayed in your hands where it could actually work for you.
Now that doesn't mean owing a large amount is fine either. That's a planning problem.
The goal is accuracy. Knowing what you owe, when you owe it, and making sure your money is working for you all year - not sitting with the IRS.
05/07/2026
Tax season is over.
But if you're not thinking about taxes right now - you're already behind for next year.
Most people close out April and don't think about taxes again until March. By then\ the decisions that could have saved them money have already been made - just not in their favor.
The business owners who build real financial stability don't wait for a deadline. They treat tax strategy as a year-round conversation.
That means reviewing what you owed this year.
Adjusting your quarterly payments. Evaluating your business structure. And making sure the next filing season looks different from the last one.
The work that reduces your tax bill doesn't happen in April.
It happens right now.
Save this as your reminder to stay ahead of it.
04/27/2026
If you’re not tracking your numbers monthly, you’re operating without full visibility.
Revenue alone isn’t enough.
You need to understand:
What you’re earning
What you’re spending
What you’re keeping
What you owe
Structure leads to better decisions and better outcomes.
If you want support building that structure, schedule a consultation.