by maintenanceguy » 14 Oct 2011 5:24
Taxes aren't all that complicated but you will get into trouble if you don't understand them. There are a lot of good books on taxes or accounting for the small business. Get one. You will get into trouble getting tax advice on the internet.
That said, Yes as a sole proprieter, YOU pay the taxes. The income and expenses are yours, not the busnesses because legally, there is no business, only you. If you hire employees, you need an EIN to pay your contributions to their taxes. If you don't you just pay taxes the way you always have.
You will use one of the IRS forms that allows you to attach a "schedule C". On schedule C you list all of your business expenses.
For example: You do a job and charge the customer $100. If OK has sales tax, you collect that from the customer too and you send the sales tax to your state (probably quarterly). If you had to purchase $50 in parts, you get to deduct the $50 from your income on schedule C. You really only made $50 so you pay taxes on that.(about $15) so you walk away with $35 on a $100 job.
That's why it's hard to make money in business.
Other things you might buy for the business get deducted differently. You can deduct 50 cents per mile for the use of your work truck as an expense. You can depreciate your truck at 23 cents per mile until you have depreciated the entire value then you can't any more.
There are lots of other things. You need a good book or you need to sit down with an accountant who can help you set up your record keeping system.
-Ryan
Maintenanceguy