Tax Reform Update on Business Meals with Clients and Prospects Here’s the updated strategy: Deduct your client and business meals as if tax reform never took place. Wow. Is this aggressive? Not if the IRS comes out with regulations that follow a model set by the...
Does Tax Reform Dislike Your Reputation or Skill? Here’s a troubling thought. Did lawmakers put you in the out-of-favor tax group that denies you the 20 percent Section 199A deduction because: your business makes too much money, and it does so thanks to the reputation...
Tax Reform Allows Bigger Vehicle Deductions Finally, lawmakers did the right thing by increasing the luxury auto depreciation limits on business cars. The old luxury limits were unrealistic, punitive, unfair, and discriminatory against any car that cost more than...
Tax Reform Allows 100 Percent Deductions for Presentation Expenses Tax reform did much damage to tax deductions for business entertainment and meal expenses. But meals served at business presentations survived the entertainment and prospect and client meal...
Tax Reform Destroys Entertainment Deductions for Businesses First, lawmakers reduced the directly related and associated entertainment deductions to 80 percent with the 1986 Tax Reform Act. Later, in 1993, they reduced that 80 percent to 50 percent. And now, with...
Tax Reform Cuts Deductions for Employee Meals to 50 Percent Tax reform (Public Law 115-97) includes winners and losers. Employers who for their convenience provided business meals for their employees are losers—50% losers to start and then total losers later. Meal...