Private Contractor Taxes

Private Contractor Taxes


Surprisingly Simple: Independent Contractor, Sole Proprietor, and LLC Taxes Explained in 100 Pages or Less


Surprisingly Simple: Independent Contractor, Sole Proprietor, and LLC Taxes Explained in 100 Pages or Less


$8.64


Find all of the following, explained in plain-English with no legal jargon:Business Taxation 101: A brief primer on tax topics in general, especially as they apply to businesses.Home Office Deduction: How to ensure you qualify for it and how to calculate it.Estimated Tax Payments: When and how to pay them, as well as an easy way to calculate each payment.Self-Employment Tax: What it is, why it exi…

Private Contractor Taxes

Boston Tax Firm Caturano and Company’s Greg Natalucci Appointed To Board Of Directors For Construction Financial Management Association

Greg Natalucci Of Boston Tax Firm Caturano and Company Appointed To The Board Of Directors For The Massachusetts/Rhode Island Chapter Of The CFMA

Boston, MA (PRWEB) April 9, 2009 — Boston Tax firm Caturano and Company today announced that Greg Natalucci, Vice President in the firm’s assurance practice, has been appointed to the Board of Directors for the Massachusetts/Rhode Island chapter of the Construction Financial Management Association (CFMA). He is also a member of the organization’s programs committee.

Established in 1981, the CFMA is the only non-profit organization dedicated to serving the construction financial professional. Its members represent all types of contractors, as well as developers, construction managers, architects, engineers, principals, and material and equipment suppliers.

“CFMA is dedicated to providing resources to meet the challenges facing construction financial professionals, including education and networking events, industry publications, and local chapter resources. My involvement since 2006 has enabled me to grow as a professional, and has helped me to better serve our diverse client base at Caturano and Company. I am excited to accept my new leadership role in the organization,” said Natalucci.

Greg began his career in public accounting with Caturano and Company in 1997. He provides audit, tax, financial reporting, and management advisory services to a diverse client base, including manufacturers, service companies, contractors, and many others. Greg has extensive experience in providing audit services for single and multi-employer benefit plans and is one of the leaders of the firm’s employee benefit team. In addition, he services many closely held private companies and provides value-added financial reporting and tax recommendations. Greg received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Accounting from St. Anselm College.

About Caturano and Company
Caturano and Company is largest New England CPA firm, including: consulting, and Boston Wealth Management firm and one of the top 40 CPA firms in the country, with 35 partners and over 370 employees. The firm provides services in the areas of assurance, tax, management and technology consulting, business risk and controls, transactional services, business valuation, and wealth management for companies ranging from small and emerging, to middle market and prominent public companies.

To serve the needs of our multi-location clients, the firm is an active member of Baker Tilly International, one of the world’s top ten accounting and business advisory services networks, focused on serving the global needs of growing multi-national enterprises; comprised of 145 independent member firms with 509 offices in 110 countries.

About the Author

For tax purposes, my husband wants me to incorporate myself. Can I incorporate all that I do into one corp?

I work in entertainment, teach as a private contractor for a non-profit, write, and operate a home-based business. I’d like to bring them all together in one corporation. The reason I want to do this is that some of my ventures have a lot of business expense with little income while others have a lot of income with little expense. I’d like to even things up a bit and save on taxes.
Lawyers or paralegals please help!

I have such a setup. When setting up the corp we set no limitations on what it could do. If you have to list such as articles of incorporation then use one that covers everything.

Buy, sell, trade, bartor, service and otherwise conduct business and own property for investment or otherwise.

Sort of cover your bases. Ask a legal beagle for exact wording.

I had a store that lost money and a data transfer thing that made money but had lots of expenses. So one offset the other and all billed out from the one copmpany. Worked out good as over all we made money (not a fortune) but paid little in taxes.

Calls for Contractor Tax System Improvements

In by gone days all a contractor had to do was give the customer good quality and good service and he/she would be set. Then set back and let your customers do your selling for you. They would tell a friend and then that friend would tell a friend. Your phone would be ringing off the hook. I remember as an Architectural designer some days I would have up to four people wanting to schedule appointments for designs. Those days are long gone! But Fear Not! Click Here For Help

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