jducoeur: (Default)
jducoeur ([personal profile] jducoeur) wrote2009-03-23 12:36 pm
Entry tags:

The joys of consulting

Oh, right. One project I am *not* looking forward to this week: figuring out estimated taxes for the first time. Not the end of the world, but it's always a bit intimidating to confront paperwork I haven't dealt with before. (And never fun to hand thousands of dollars to the government.) This is, of course, made worse by the fact that I have nothing more than ballpark guesses about my expected income this year -- while my current project is hopefully going to hold steady for a while, I expect I'll eventually have to find another gig, and it's anyone's guess what things will look like then. (The issue mainly being that whether I continue to work steadily or not changes what bracket we're in -- I assume that factors into the amount I need to send.)

Ah, well -- time to roll up sleeves, download some PDFs, and make a bunch of half-assed guesses...

Simpler way for Estimated Tax figuring

[identity profile] pamelina.livejournal.com 2009-03-25 05:00 am (UTC)(link)
You don't have to do any of that figuring and guessing about future estimated taxes, though. If you take what you paid in taxes for the prior year, you can just pay that same amount in the current year in 4 equal installments. Then you are exempt from penalties and interest if you guess wrong. And it's sooo much easier than trying to figure out your future income and estimated tax payments from those forms and formulas. That's what I've done for over a decade (er, what my accountant does.)

If this is the first year you're paying estimated tax payments, I believe the gov gives you a pass on figuring it out with equal payments as long as you get it all paid by April 15th. But I could be wrong about that one.