How LLC Owners Save on Taxes in 2026

Musician Find more write-offs — search your profession or a specific deduction
Try:
YOUR TAX PROFILE
Musician
82 write-offs found • Estimated savings: $6,000 – $40,000/year
Potential Annual Savings
$6,000 – $40,000
Urgent for Musicians
The standard deduction may be costing you thousands — itemizing often saves more for homeowners and business owners.
3 Quick Wins for Musicians
1
Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction
A consultant earning $200,000 in QBI deducts $46,000 (23%), saving $17,020 at a 37% rate…
2
Retirement Plan Contributions (Self-Employed)
Maximizing a Solo 401(k) at ~$70,000 in 2026 saves $25,900 at a 37% rate —…
3
QBI Deduction — Section 199A (20% Pass-Through Deduction)
A business owner with $200,000 in QBI at a 24% rate: 20% deduction = $40,000…
Business IRC §199A 2026 Law Update

Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction

Pass-through business owners (sole props, partnerships, S-Corps, LLCs) can deduct up to 23% of qualified business income starting in 2026, permanently under the OBBBA. The deduction reduces effective tax rates significantly.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Income from a pass-through entity or sole proprietorship
  • Taxable income below income thresholds for full deduction (consult advisor for 2026 inflation-adjusted limits)
  • Specified service trades may be phased out above thresholds
  • New minimum deduction of $400 for taxpayers with at least $1,000 of active QBI
Example Savings Scenario

A consultant earning $200,000 in QBI deducts $46,000 (23%), saving $17,020 at a 37% rate — $2,220 more than under the old 20% rule.

MERNA Strategy Notes

The OBBBA (July 4, 2025) permanently extended and increased the QBI deduction from 20% to 23% starting in 2026. W-2 wage and property limitations still apply above income thresholds. Restructuring into an S-Corp can maximize the W-2 wage limitation.

Common Mistake: Specified service businesses (law, health, consulting) phase out above income thresholds.
UNK Client Win Small Business Owner / Sole Proprietor

How a Denver Plumber Claimed a $36,000 QBI Deduction He Didn't Know Existed

A UNK client ran a plumbing business generating $180,000 in net income. His previous tax preparer had never mentioned the QBI deduction. Uncle Kam identified that he qualified for the full 23% deduction under the OBBBA — $41,400 off his taxable income. At his 22% marginal rate, this saved $9,108 in federal taxes. The deduction is now permanent, so the client is working with Uncle Kam to stack it with retirement contributions and S-Corp election for maximum benefit.

Result: $9,108 in annual federal tax savings through a deduction the client had been missing for years.

Own a pass-through business? The QBI deduction is now 23% and permanent. Book a call to confirm you're capturing the full amount.

Be the Next Win — Book a Call
Common Questions About Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction
Self-Employed IRC §401, §408

Retirement Plan Contributions (Self-Employed)

Self-employed individuals have access to powerful retirement plans — Solo 401(k), SEP-IRA, SIMPLE IRA — with contribution limits far exceeding W-2 employee options.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Net self-employment income
  • Plan established by December 31 (Solo 401k) or tax deadline (SEP-IRA)
  • No full-time employees for Solo 401(k)
Example Savings Scenario

Maximizing a Solo 401(k) at ~$70,000 in 2026 saves $25,900 at a 37% rate — the equivalent of a $25,900 tax refund.

MERNA Strategy Notes

Solo 401(k) allows the highest contributions for most self-employed individuals. SEP-IRA is simpler but limited to 25% of net earnings.

Common Mistake: Solo 401(k) must be established by December 31 — SEP-IRA can be opened until tax deadline.
UNK Client Win Freelancer / Self-Employed

How a Freelance Videographer Cut His Tax Bill by $19,200 With the Right Retirement Plan

A UNK client earned $160,000 as a freelance videographer and had no retirement plan in place. Uncle Kam compared the options side by side: a SEP-IRA would allow $29,535 in contributions; a Solo 401(k) would allow $52,000 (employee deferral plus profit-sharing). The client chose the Solo 401(k), contributed the full $52,000, and saved $19,240 in federal taxes at his 37% marginal rate. He also elected a Roth contribution option within the Solo 401(k) to build tax-free growth alongside the pre-tax bucket.

Result: $19,240 in annual tax savings. The client now has a clear retirement strategy that maximizes both pre-tax and tax-free contributions simultaneously.

Self-employed with no retirement plan? Every year without one is money left on the table. Book a call to set up the right plan for your income level.

Be the Next Win — Book a Call
Common Questions About Retirement Plan Contributions (Self-Employed)
Business IRC §199A

QBI Deduction — Section 199A (20% Pass-Through Deduction)

Pass-through business owners (sole props, S-Corps, LLCs, partnerships) can deduct up to 20% of qualified business income from taxable income. This is one of the largest tax breaks available to small business owners.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Own a pass-through business
  • Taxable income under $197,300 (single) or $394,600 (married) for full deduction
  • Specified service businesses (law, consulting, finance) phase out above these thresholds
Example Savings Scenario

A business owner with $200,000 in QBI at a 24% rate: 20% deduction = $40,000 reduction in taxable income = $9,600 in tax savings.

MERNA Strategy Notes

Set to expire after 2025 — Congress may extend. Maximize by keeping income below phase-out thresholds. W-2 wage limitation applies above thresholds.

Common Mistake: Specified service trades (law, consulting, financial services) lose the deduction above income thresholds.
UNK Client Win Freelancer / Self-Employed

How a Consultant Claimed a $42,000 QBI Deduction and Paid Tax on Only 80% of His Income

A UNK client earned $210,000 as an independent management consultant. He had heard of the QBI deduction but assumed his consulting work was a "specified service trade or business" (SSTB) that disqualified him. Uncle Kam analyzed the facts: management consulting is not on the IRS's SSTB list (which includes law, health, financial services, and performing arts — but not general consulting). Under the OBBBA, the client qualified for the full 23% QBI deduction: 23% x $210,000 = $48,300. At his 37% marginal rate, this saved $17,871 in federal taxes.

Result: $17,871 in annual federal tax savings through a deduction the client almost missed. Uncle Kam also implemented S-Corp election and retirement contributions to further reduce taxable income.

Self-employed or own a pass-through business? The QBI deduction could reduce your taxable income by 23% in 2026. Book a call to confirm you're capturing it.

Be the Next Win — Book a Call
Common Questions About QBI Deduction — Section 199A (20% Pass-Through Deduction)
Business Expenses IRC §162

Internet & Broadband Deduction

Your home internet bill is deductible to the extent it is used for business. For most self-employed professionals who work from home, this is 50–100% of the monthly cost. A dedicated business internet line is 100% deductible.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Self-employed, freelancer, or business owner
  • Internet used for business purposes
  • Allocate business vs personal use if mixed
Example Savings Scenario

A self-employed consultant paying $80/month for internet and using it 80% for business deducts $768/year, saving $230–$307 in taxes.

MERNA Strategy Notes

If you have a home office, the internet deduction stacks on top of the home office deduction — they are separate line items. A dedicated business fiber line is 100% deductible with no allocation.

Common Mistake: Do not double-count internet costs if you are also claiming them as part of a home office deduction — allocate carefully.
Business Expenses IRC §162 / IRC §280A

Studio Space & Creative Workspace Deduction

If you rent a separate studio space for your creative work, the full cost of rent, utilities, and equipment for that space is deductible. If you use a dedicated room in your home exclusively as a studio, it qualifies for the home office deduction. This applies to photography studios, podcast recording studios, video production spaces, and any other dedicated creative workspace.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Dedicated space used exclusively for business creative work
  • Rented studio: full cost deductible; home studio: home office deduction rules apply
  • Self-employed creative professional
Example Savings Scenario

A photographer renting a studio for $1,500/month deducts $18,000/year in rent, saving $5,400–$7,200 in taxes.

MERNA Strategy Notes

A home studio used exclusively for client work qualifies for the home office deduction even if you also have an office elsewhere — the exclusive use test is what matters.

Common Mistake: A studio space used for both personal and business creative work does not qualify — the space must be used exclusively for business.
Retirement IRC §408(k)

SEP-IRA Contribution

Self-employed individuals and small business owners can contribute up to 25% of net self-employment income (maximum $72,000 in 2026) to a SEP-IRA with minimal administrative requirements.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Self-employed or small business owner
  • Net self-employment income
  • Can be established and funded up to tax filing deadline including extensions
Example Savings Scenario

A freelancer earning $150,000 contributes $27,500 (25% × $110,000 net SE income) to a SEP-IRA, saving $10,175 in taxes at a 37% rate.

MERNA Strategy Notes

Simpler than a Solo 401(k) but lower contribution limits for high earners. Can be established and funded up to the tax deadline including extensions.

Common Mistake: If you have employees, you must contribute the same percentage for all eligible employees.
UNK Client Win Freelancer / Self-Employed

How a Freelance Photographer Opened a SEP-IRA in April and Saved $11,000 in Taxes

A UNK client was a freelance photographer who had just filed for a tax extension. She had $95,000 in net self-employment income and no retirement plan. Uncle Kam informed her that a SEP-IRA could be opened and funded up to the tax filing deadline — including extensions. She contributed $17,666 (the maximum 25% of net SE income after the SE deduction) in April, reducing her taxable income by $17,666 and saving $4,240 in federal taxes and $2,500 in SE taxes.

Result: $6,740 in total tax savings from a retirement account she opened in April — after the tax year had already ended. The SEP-IRA is now her primary retirement vehicle.

Self-employed and haven't set up a retirement plan? A SEP-IRA can be opened and funded up to your tax deadline. Book a call today.

Be the Next Win — Book a Call
Common Questions About SEP-IRA Contribution
The Strategy Your Accountant Is Probably Not Using

There is one strategy on this page that most Musicians have never heard of.

It involves a home-based business structure that turns your personal lifestyle spending — travel, gear, instruments, clothing — into legitimate business deductions.

Worth $5,000–$20,000/year for the average Musician.

It is unlocked below.

76 more strategies locked — here’s what you’re missing:
Retirement Locked
Solo 401(k) Contribution
Worth up to $200,000
Self-employed individuals can contribute both as employee ($24,500 in 2026, or $31,000 if 50+) and employer (u...
Self-employed with no full-time employees (other than spouse)
Net self-employment income
Business Expenses Locked
Advertising & Marketing Deduction
Worth up to $8,000/year
All costs of advertising and promoting your business are fully deductible.
This includes Google Ads, Facebook and Instagram ads, business cards, flyers, brochures, signage, website design and hos...
Advertising directly promotes your business
Self-employed, freelancer, or business owner
Business Expenses Locked
Fitness Equipment, Certifications & Supplies Deduction
Worth up to $2,500/year
Personal trainers and fitness professionals can deduct the cost of equipment and supplies used in their business.
This includes resistance bands, foam rollers, kettlebells, dumbbells, mats, stopwatches, heart rate monitors, fitness ap...
Equipment and supplies used with clients or in your fitness business
Self-employed personal trainer or fitness professional
FREE ACCESS

Unlock 76 More Strategies — Free

These are the high-impact strategies that save Uncle Kam clients $40,000–$150,000/year. Enter your email for instant access.

No spam. No obligation. Instant access.
Strategies reviewed: 0 of 82  —  Savings unlocked: $0
Retirement IRC §401(k) Uncle Kam Clients Only

Solo 401(k) Contribution

Self-employed individuals can contribute both as employee ($24,500 in 2026, or $31,000 if 50+) and employer (up to 25% of compensation), for a combined maximum of approximately $70,000.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Self-employed with no full-time employees (other than spouse)
  • Net self-employment income
  • Roth option available for after-tax contributions
Example Savings Scenario

A self-employed consultant earning $200,000 contributes ~$70,000 to a Solo 401(k), reducing taxable income to $130,000 and saving $25,900 at a 37% rate.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Advertising & Marketing Deduction

All costs of advertising and promoting your business are fully deductible. This includes Google Ads, Facebook and Instagram ads, business cards, flyers, brochures, signage, website design and hosting, domain names, email marketing tools (Mailchimp, Klaviyo), and any other promotional expenses.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Advertising directly promotes your business
  • Self-employed, freelancer, or business owner
  • Expenses paid in the tax year
Example Savings Scenario

A real estate agent spending $8,000/year on Facebook ads, business cards, and listing photography deducts the full amount, saving $2,400–$3,200 in taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Fitness Equipment, Certifications & Supplies Deduction

Personal trainers and fitness professionals can deduct the cost of equipment and supplies used in their business. This includes resistance bands, foam rollers, kettlebells, dumbbells, mats, stopwatches, heart rate monitors, fitness apps, and any other tools used with clients. Certification renewal fees (NASM, ACE, NSCA, ACSM) and continuing education are also fully deductible.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Equipment and supplies used with clients or in your fitness business
  • Self-employed personal trainer or fitness professional
  • Certification renewal fees for your current profession
Example Savings Scenario

A personal trainer spending $2,500/year on equipment, certification renewals, and liability insurance deducts the full amount, saving $750–$1,000.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Self-Employed IRC §164(f) Uncle Kam Clients Only

Self-Employment Tax Deduction

Self-employed individuals can deduct 50% of the self-employment tax they pay (the employer-equivalent portion) as an above-the-line deduction, reducing adjusted gross income.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Net self-employment income
  • Filed Schedule SE
  • Available to all self-employed individuals regardless of itemizing
Example Savings Scenario

A freelancer with $100,000 in net SE income pays $14,130 in SE tax. The 50% deduction ($7,065) saves $2,614 at a 37% rate.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Self-Employed IRC §162(l) Uncle Kam Clients Only

Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction

Self-employed individuals can deduct 100% of health insurance premiums paid for themselves, their spouse, and dependents as an above-the-line deduction.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Self-employed with net profit
  • Not eligible for employer-sponsored health insurance
  • Includes medical, dental, and long-term care premiums
Example Savings Scenario

Paying $18,000/year in family health insurance premiums deducts the full amount, saving $6,660 at a 37% rate.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 / IRC §179 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Camera Gear & Production Equipment Deduction

Photographers, videographers, and content creators can deduct the full cost of cameras, lenses, tripods, lighting equipment, microphones, audio recorders, drones, gimbals, memory cards, hard drives, and any other production equipment used in their business. Under Section 179, the full cost can be expensed in Year 1 instead of depreciated over 5 years.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Equipment used for business photography, video, or content creation
  • Self-employed photographer, videographer, or content creator
  • Business use percentage must be documented for mixed-use equipment
Example Savings Scenario

A photographer purchasing a $3,500 camera body and $1,200 in lenses expenses the full $4,700 under Section 179, saving $1,410–$1,880 in taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 / IRC §179 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Computer, Laptop & Hardware Deduction

Computers, laptops, tablets, monitors, keyboards, mice, external hard drives, and other hardware used in your business are fully deductible. Under Section 179, you can expense the full cost in Year 1 instead of depreciating over 5 years. For mixed business/personal use, only the business-use percentage is deductible.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Computer or hardware used for business purposes
  • Self-employed, freelancer, or business owner
  • Business-use percentage documented for mixed-use devices
Example Savings Scenario

A freelance software engineer purchasing a $2,500 laptop used 95% for work expenses $2,375 under Section 179, saving $713–$950 in taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Continuing Education & CE Credits Deduction

Continuing education required to maintain your professional license or improve skills in your current trade is fully deductible. This includes CME credits for physicians, CLE credits for attorneys, CPE credits for CPAs, CE credits for nurses, real estate CE, and any other mandatory or voluntary professional development directly related to your current work.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Education maintains or improves skills in your current profession
  • Does not qualify you for a new career or profession
  • Self-employed or business owner
Example Savings Scenario

A CPA spending $3,000/year on CPE courses, webinars, and AICPA membership saves $900–$1,200 in taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business IRC §280A(g) Uncle Kam Clients Only

Augusta Rule (Section 280A Home Rental)

Under IRC §280A(g), a homeowner can rent their personal residence to their business for up to 14 days per year. The rental income is completely tax-free to the homeowner, and the business deducts the full rental payment.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Own a business (S-Corp, C-Corp, or partnership)
  • Own your personal residence
  • Have legitimate business meetings, retreats, or events at your home
Example Savings Scenario

A business owner renting their home to their S-Corp for 14 days at $2,000/day: $28,000 in tax-free income to the owner + $28,000 business deduction saves $10,360 at a 37% rate.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business OBBBA 2025 — New IRC Provision Uncle Kam Clients Only 2026 Law Update

Tip Income Tax Deduction (OBBBA 2026)

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) creates a new deduction allowing workers in tip-based industries to exclude qualifying tip income from federal taxable income. This is one of the most significant new deductions for service industry workers in decades.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Work in a tip-based industry (restaurant, hospitality, beauty, delivery)
  • Tips received in the ordinary course of employment
  • Employer must report tips correctly on W-2 or 1099
  • Applies to tax years beginning after December 31, 2025
Example Savings Scenario

A restaurant server earning $20,000/year in tips at a 22% federal rate saves $4,400/year in federal income taxes under the new tip income deduction.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business IRC §179 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Section 179 Expensing

Immediately expense the full cost of qualifying business equipment, software, and certain vehicles in the year of purchase instead of depreciating over multiple years.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Business equipment, machinery, or software
  • Property placed in service during the tax year
  • Business income must be sufficient (cannot create a loss with §179)
Example Savings Scenario

Purchasing $500,000 in equipment. Full §179 deduction saves $185,000 in taxes at a 37% rate in Year 1 vs. spreading over 5–7 years.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Delivery Supplies, Insulated Bags & Equipment Deduction

Gig delivery drivers can deduct all supplies and equipment used in their delivery business. This includes insulated delivery bags, hot bags, cold bags, phone mounts, car chargers, power banks, flashlights, and any other gear used to complete deliveries. These are small but real deductions that add up over a year of full-time delivery work.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Supplies used in your delivery business
  • Self-employed gig delivery driver (1099)
  • Equipment purchased and used for deliveries
Example Savings Scenario

A DoorDash driver spending $400/year on insulated bags, phone mounts, and car accessories deducts the full amount, saving $120–$160 in taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business IRC §1366, Rev. Rul. 74-44 Uncle Kam Clients Only

S-Corp Reasonable Salary Optimization

S-Corp shareholders pay payroll taxes only on their "reasonable salary," not on all business profits. Distributions above the salary avoid 15.3% self-employment tax.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Operate as an S-Corporation
  • Pay yourself a reasonable salary for services rendered
  • Take remaining profits as distributions
Example Savings Scenario

A business earning $300,000 net. Salary set at $80,000 (reasonable). Distributions: $220,000. SE tax savings: $220,000 × 15.3% = $33,660/year.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Scrubs, Uniforms & Protective Clothing Deduction

Work clothing that is required as a condition of employment and not suitable for everyday wear is fully deductible. For healthcare professionals, this includes scrubs, lab coats, surgical gowns, nursing shoes, compression socks worn for work, and any other required clinical attire. The clothing must be required by your employer or profession and not adaptable to everyday use.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Clothing required as condition of employment
  • Not suitable for everyday personal wear
  • Self-employed healthcare professionals can deduct fully; W-2 employees need employer reimbursement
Example Savings Scenario

A travel nurse spending $800/year on scrubs, compression socks, and nursing shoes deducts the full amount, saving $240–$320 in taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Retirement IRC §223 Uncle Kam Clients Only

HSA Triple Tax Advantage

Health Savings Accounts offer a triple tax advantage: contributions are tax-deductible, growth is tax-free, and withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are tax-free. The OBBBA also expanded HSA eligibility to include bronze and catastrophic plans starting 2026.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Enrolled in a High Deductible Health Plan (HDHP) or qualifying bronze/catastrophic plan (new for 2026)
  • Not enrolled in Medicare
  • Not claimed as a dependent on someone else's return
Example Savings Scenario

Contributing $8,750 (family) to an HSA in 2026 saves $3,237 in taxes at a 37% rate. Investing the balance for 20 years at 7% grows to $33,800+ tax-free.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Self-Employed IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Education & Professional Development Deduction

Deduct education expenses that maintain or improve skills required in your current trade or business, including courses, books, subscriptions, and professional conferences.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Education maintains or improves skills in current trade
  • Not required to meet minimum educational requirements for a new profession
  • Self-employed, freelancer, or business owner
Example Savings Scenario

Spending $5,000 on courses, conferences, and books deducts the full amount, saving $1,850 at a 37% rate.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Office Supplies & Materials Deduction

Any supplies you purchase and use in your business are fully deductible in the year purchased. This includes paper, pens, printer ink and toner, folders, binders, postage, envelopes, labels, staples, tape, and any other consumable materials used in your work.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Self-employed, freelancer, or business owner
  • Supplies used for business purposes
  • Consumed or used up within the tax year
Example Savings Scenario

A small business owner spending $1,200/year on office supplies saves $360–$480 in taxes depending on their bracket.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Software & Subscription Deduction

Any software subscription or SaaS tool you pay for and use in your business is fully deductible in the year paid. This includes accounting software (QuickBooks, FreshBooks), design tools (Adobe Creative Cloud, Figma, Canva), communication tools (Zoom, Slack, Microsoft 365), project management tools (Asana, Monday.com), and any other business application.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Software used for business purposes
  • Self-employed, freelancer, or business owner
  • Annual or monthly subscription fees qualify
Example Savings Scenario

A freelance designer paying $600/year for Adobe Creative Cloud, $150 for Figma, and $200 for project management tools deducts $950/year, saving $285–$380.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Booth Rental & Chair Rental Deduction

If you rent a booth, chair, or suite in a salon or barbershop, your rental fees are fully deductible as a business expense. This is typically the largest deduction for booth renters — most pay $200–$600/week in booth rent, adding up to $10,400–$31,200/year in fully deductible expenses.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Rent a booth, chair, or suite in a salon or barbershop
  • Self-employed (booth renters are independent contractors, not employees)
  • Weekly or monthly rental fees paid to the salon owner
Example Savings Scenario

A hair stylist paying $350/week in booth rent deducts $18,200/year, saving $5,460–$7,280 in taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Coworking Space & Office Rent Deduction

If you rent a coworking space, shared office, or dedicated office for your business, the full cost is deductible. This includes WeWork, Regus, local coworking memberships, and any other office rental. Monthly membership fees, day passes, and dedicated desk or private office costs all qualify.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Coworking space or office used for business purposes
  • Self-employed, freelancer, or business owner
  • Monthly or annual fees paid for the space
Example Savings Scenario

A freelancer paying $400/month for a coworking membership deducts $4,800/year, saving $1,440–$1,920 in taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business IRC §280A Uncle Kam Clients Only

Home Office Deduction

Deduct a portion of your home expenses (mortgage interest, rent, utilities, insurance, depreciation) based on the percentage of your home used exclusively and regularly for business.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Self-employed, freelancer, or business owner
  • Space used exclusively and regularly for business
  • Principal place of business or where clients are met
Example Savings Scenario

A 200 sq ft office in a 2,000 sq ft home = 10% allocation. $30,000 in home expenses × 10% = $3,000 deduction, saving $1,110 at a 37% rate.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Business Travel Deduction

Deduct ordinary and necessary travel expenses when traveling away from home for business, including transportation, lodging, and 50% of meals.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Travel away from your tax home for business
  • Travel requires sleep or rest (overnight trip)
  • Primary purpose of the trip is business
Example Savings Scenario

A business owner spending $15,000/year on travel (flights, hotels, meals) deducts $13,500 (meals at 50%), saving $4,995 at a 37% rate.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Retirement IRC §408A Uncle Kam Clients Only

Backdoor Roth IRA

High-income earners above the Roth IRA income limit (approximately $165,000 single / $246,000 MFJ in 2026) can make a non-deductible traditional IRA contribution and immediately convert it to a Roth IRA.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Income above Roth IRA direct contribution limits
  • No existing pre-tax IRA balance (to avoid pro-rata rule)
  • Contribute $7,500 ($8,500 if 50+) to traditional IRA, then convert
Example Savings Scenario

Contributing $7,000/year to a backdoor Roth starting at age 40 grows to $560,000+ tax-free by retirement at 7% annual return.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Structure IRC §1362, §11 Uncle Kam Clients Only

LLC Tax Election Strategy (S-Corp vs. C-Corp vs. Sole Prop)

LLCs are tax-neutral entities — the tax election determines how income is taxed. S-Corp election saves self-employment taxes; C-Corp election enables retained earnings at 21% rate.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Own an LLC
  • Net profit over $40,000/year for S-Corp consideration
  • Net profit over $100,000/year for C-Corp consideration
Example Savings Scenario

An LLC earning $200,000 net profit: default taxation costs $28,240 in SE tax. S-Corp election with $80,000 salary saves $12,000+/year in SE taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Personal OBBBA 2025 — IRC §63 Enhancement Uncle Kam Clients Only 2026 Law Update

Senior Standard Deduction Enhancement (OBBBA 2026)

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) adds an enhanced $6,000 standard deduction for taxpayers age 65 and older, on top of the regular standard deduction. This is in addition to the existing extra standard deduction for seniors and represents a significant tax reduction for retirees and older Americans.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Age 65 or older by December 31 of the tax year
  • Take the standard deduction (not itemizing)
  • Applies to both single and married filing jointly (each spouse qualifies if both are 65+)
  • Applies to tax years beginning after December 31, 2025
Example Savings Scenario

A married couple both age 65+ in the 22% bracket receive an additional $12,000 in standard deductions ($6,000 each), saving $2,640/year in federal taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business IRC §105, §9831 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Section 105 HRA / QSEHRA Health Reimbursement

Qualified Small Employer Health Reimbursement Arrangements (QSEHRAs) allow small businesses to reimburse employees for individual health insurance premiums and medical expenses tax-free.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Fewer than 50 full-time employees
  • No group health plan offered
  • Employees have individual health insurance coverage
Example Savings Scenario

A business owner reimbursing 5 employees $500/month each: $30,000 in annual reimbursements are fully deductible, saving $11,100 at a 37% rate vs. paying after-tax.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business IRC §73, §3121 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Hire Your Children in the Business

A sole proprietor or single-member LLC can hire their children under 18 and pay them wages up to the standard deduction amount ($14,600 in 2025) — the child pays no income tax and the business deducts the full amount.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Own a sole proprietorship or single-member LLC (not S-Corp for FICA exemption)
  • Children under 18 performing legitimate work
  • Paying reasonable wages for actual services rendered
Example Savings Scenario

A business owner in the 37% bracket paying two children $14,600 each: $29,200 in deductions saves $10,804 in federal taxes. Children owe $0 in income tax.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Medical Supplies & Clinical Equipment Deduction

Healthcare professionals can deduct the cost of medical supplies and clinical equipment used in their practice. This includes stethoscopes, blood pressure cuffs, otoscopes, diagnostic tools, syringes, gloves, masks, bandages, and any other consumable or durable medical supplies used in patient care. Larger equipment qualifies for Section 179 immediate expensing.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Used in clinical practice or patient care
  • Self-employed healthcare professional or practice owner
  • Consumable supplies deducted in year purchased; equipment may be Section 179 expensed
Example Savings Scenario

A self-employed nurse practitioner spending $2,000/year on clinical supplies, a new stethoscope, and diagnostic tools deducts the full amount, saving $600–$800.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Malpractice & Professional Liability Insurance Deduction

Professional liability insurance (malpractice insurance) premiums are fully deductible as a business expense. This applies to all licensed professionals including physicians, dentists, nurses, attorneys, financial advisors, CPAs, architects, and any other professional who carries liability coverage for their practice.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Professional liability or malpractice insurance policy
  • Coverage related to your professional practice
  • Self-employed or business owner
Example Savings Scenario

A physician paying $8,000/year in malpractice insurance premiums deducts the full amount, saving $2,400–$3,200 in taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 / IRC §179 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Tools, Equipment & Supplies Deduction (Trades)

Tradespeople and contractors can deduct the full cost of tools and equipment used in their business. Small tools (under $2,500) are expensed immediately. Larger equipment qualifies for Section 179 immediate expensing or 100% bonus depreciation. This includes hand tools, power tools, ladders, scaffolding, safety gear, hard hats, work boots, and any other equipment used on the job.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Tools and equipment used in your trade or business
  • Self-employed contractor or business owner
  • Small tools expensed immediately; larger equipment via Section 179
Example Savings Scenario

A general contractor spending $5,000/year on tools, safety equipment, and work gear deducts the full amount, saving $1,500–$2,000 in taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Beauty Supplies, Products & Professional Tools Deduction

All professional beauty supplies and tools used in your business are fully deductible. This includes hair color and developer, shampoos and conditioners, styling products, scissors, clippers, trimmers, blow dryers, flat irons, curling irons, capes, towels, gloves, and any other supplies used on clients. Product purchased for resale to clients is also deductible as cost of goods sold.

Eligibility Requirements
  • Supplies used in your beauty business or on clients
  • Self-employed hair stylist, barber, or beauty professional
  • Tools used in your trade
Example Savings Scenario

A hair stylist spending $4,000/year on color, supplies, and tools deducts the full amount, saving $1,200–$1,600 in taxes.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business IRC §168(k) Uncle Kam Clients Only 2026 Law Update

Bonus Depreciation

Deduct 100% of the cost of qualifying new or used property in the first year it is placed in service. The OBBBA permanently restored 100% bonus depreciation for property with a recovery period of 20 years or less.

Eligibility Requirements
  • New or used qualifying property
  • Property with recovery period of 20 years or less
  • Placed in service after January 19, 2025
Example Savings Scenario

A $1M equipment purchase at 100% bonus depreciation generates a $1M Year 1 deduction, saving $370,000 at a 37% rate.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Business IRC §45E Uncle Kam Clients Only

Retirement Plan Startup Tax Credit

Small businesses with 100 or fewer employees receive a tax credit of up to $5,000 per year for 3 years for the costs of starting a new retirement plan, plus an additional credit for employer contributions.

Eligibility Requirements
  • 100 or fewer employees earning at least $5,000
  • No retirement plan in the prior 3 years
  • At least one non-highly compensated employee participates
Example Savings Scenario

A 10-person company starting a 401(k) receives $5,000/year for 3 years = $15,000 in direct tax credits, covering most of the setup and administration costs.

Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

No spam · No obligation · Instant access
Mortgage IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

Realtor & Builder Relationship Marketing

Expenses incurred to build and maintain referral relationships with real estate agents, builders, and financial planners are fully deductible. This includes meals with referral partners (50% deductible), co-branded marketing materials, client appreciation events, and educational seminars you host for Realtors.

Eligibility Requirements
    Example Savings Scenario

    A loan officer spending $500/month on Realtor relationship marketing deducts $6,000/year (meals at 50%, materials at 100%).

    Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

    Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

    No spam · No obligation · Instant access
    Business IRC §162, §179 Uncle Kam Clients Only

    Vehicle & Mileage Deduction

    Deduct business vehicle expenses using the standard mileage rate or actual expenses (depreciation, gas, insurance, repairs). Section 179 and 100% bonus depreciation allow full expensing of heavy SUVs and trucks in Year 1.

    Eligibility Requirements
    • Vehicle used for business purposes
    • Mileage log maintained for standard rate method
    • Heavy SUV (6,000+ lbs GVWR) for Section 179 bonus
    Example Savings Scenario

    Driving 20,000 business miles at 72.5¢/mile = $14,500 deduction. A $80,000 SUV over 6,000 lbs can be fully expensed under 100% bonus depreciation, saving $29,600 at 37%.

    Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

    Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

    No spam · No obligation · Instant access
    Business Expenses IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

    Bank Fees, Merchant Fees & Payment Processing Deduction

    All fees associated with your business bank account and payment processing are fully deductible. This includes monthly account maintenance fees, wire transfer fees, Stripe processing fees (typically 2.9% + 30¢), PayPal fees, Square fees, and any other merchant processing costs. For businesses processing significant revenue, these fees add up to thousands per year.

    Eligibility Requirements
    • Business bank account or merchant account
    • Fees directly related to business transactions
    • Self-employed, freelancer, or business owner
    Example Savings Scenario

    An ecommerce seller processing $200,000/year through Stripe pays approximately $5,830 in fees — fully deductible, saving $1,749–$2,332 in taxes.

    Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

    Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

    No spam · No obligation · Instant access
    Individual IRC §1211 Uncle Kam Clients Only

    Tax Loss Harvesting

    Sell investments at a loss to offset capital gains from other investments, reducing or eliminating capital gains tax. Excess losses offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income annually.

    Eligibility Requirements
    • Taxable investment accounts (not IRAs or 401(k)s)
    • Investments with unrealized losses
    • Must avoid wash sale rule (30-day window)
    Example Savings Scenario

    Harvesting $50,000 in losses offsets $50,000 in capital gains, saving $10,000 at a 20% long-term rate. Excess losses carry forward indefinitely.

    Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

    Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

    No spam · No obligation · Instant access
    Executive Compensation IRC §83 Uncle Kam Clients Only

    RSU Tax Optimization Strategy

    Restricted Stock Units vest as ordinary income. Strategic timing of sales, pairing with charitable contributions, and tax-loss harvesting can significantly reduce the tax impact.

    Eligibility Requirements
    • Receive RSUs from employer
    • RSUs vesting in current or future tax years
    • Income over $150,000
    Example Savings Scenario

    An employee with $300,000 in RSU income who donates $50,000 of appreciated shares to a DAF avoids $11,500 in capital gains and gets a $50,000 deduction — saving $30,000 total.

    Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

    Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

    No spam · No obligation · Instant access
    Employment OBBBA 2025 — New IRC Provision Uncle Kam Clients Only 2026 Law Update

    Overtime Pay Tax Deduction (OBBBA 2026)

    The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) creates a new deduction allowing qualifying workers to exclude overtime pay from federal taxable income. This directly benefits hourly workers, tradespeople, nurses, and anyone earning overtime wages under the Fair Labor Standards Act.

    Eligibility Requirements
    • Receive overtime pay under FLSA (time-and-a-half for hours over 40/week)
    • Employed as a W-2 employee
    • Overtime must be properly reported on W-2
    • Applies to tax years beginning after December 31, 2025
    Example Savings Scenario

    A worker earning $15,000/year in overtime pay at a 22% federal rate saves $3,300/year in federal income taxes under the new overtime deduction.

    Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

    Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

    No spam · No obligation · Instant access
    Business IRC §172 Uncle Kam Clients Only

    Net Operating Loss (NOL) Carryforward

    When business deductions exceed income, the resulting net operating loss can be carried forward indefinitely to offset future taxable income, reducing taxes in profitable years.

    Eligibility Requirements
    • Business or individual with deductions exceeding income
    • NOL from trade or business activities
    • Carried forward indefinitely (limited to 80% of taxable income per year)
    Example Savings Scenario

    A startup with $200,000 in NOL carries it forward. In Year 3 with $300,000 profit, the NOL offsets $200,000, saving $74,000 in taxes.

    Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

    Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

    No spam · No obligation · Instant access
    Individual IRC §529 Uncle Kam Clients Only

    529 College Savings Plan

    Contribute to a 529 plan for tax-free growth and withdrawals for qualified education expenses. Many states offer a state income tax deduction for contributions.

    Eligibility Requirements
    • Any individual can open a 529 for any beneficiary
    • Qualified expenses: tuition, fees, books, room and board, K-12 tuition ($10,000/year)
    • Superfunding: contribute 5 years of gifts at once ($90,000 per beneficiary)
    Example Savings Scenario

    Contributing $500/month to a 529 for 18 years at 7% growth = $193,000 in tax-free education funds. State deduction on $5,000/year saves $300–$500 annually.

    Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

    Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

    No spam · No obligation · Instant access
    Mortgage IRC §162 Uncle Kam Clients Only

    NMLS License & Renewal Fees

    All fees paid to maintain your NMLS license — initial application, annual renewal, state licensing fees, and background check fees — are fully deductible. Mortgage professionals licensed in multiple states can deduct all state-level renewal fees.

    Eligibility Requirements
      Example Savings Scenario

      A mortgage broker licensed in 5 states may deduct $2,500–$4,000/year in NMLS and state fees.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Retirement IRC §412 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Defined Benefit Pension Plan

      A defined benefit plan allows high-income self-employed individuals and business owners to contribute $200,000–$300,000 per year based on actuarial calculations, far exceeding 401(k) limits.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Self-employed or small business owner
      • High income ($300,000+) for maximum benefit
      • Actuarial calculation required annually
      • Commitment to fund the plan each year
      Example Savings Scenario

      A physician earning $500,000 contributes $265,000 to a defined benefit plan, saving $98,050 in taxes at a 37% rate — far exceeding the $69,000 Solo 401(k) limit.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Real Estate IRC §280A(g) Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Augusta Rule (Home Rental Exclusion)

      Rent your personal home to your business for up to 14 days per year. The rental income is tax-free to you personally, and the business deducts the full rental expense.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Own a business (S-Corp, LLC, or sole prop)
      • Home rented for 14 days or fewer per year
      • Rental rate must be comparable to local market rates
      • Document with a rental agreement and business purpose
      Example Savings Scenario

      Renting your home to your S-Corp for 14 days at $2,000/day = $28,000 tax-free income to you, $28,000 deduction for the business, saving $10,360 in combined taxes.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Business IRC §62(a)(2)(A), Reg. 1.62-2 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Accountable Plan Reimbursements

      Establish a formal accountable plan to reimburse employees (including owner-employees) for business expenses tax-free. The business deducts the reimbursement; the employee pays no income or payroll tax on it.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Operate as an S-Corp, C-Corp, or partnership
      • Expenses have a business connection
      • Employee substantiates expenses and returns excess amounts
      Example Savings Scenario

      An S-Corp owner with $15,000 in home office, vehicle, and phone expenses reimburses through an accountable plan, saving $5,550 in combined income and payroll taxes.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Business IRC §164, State Law Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Pass-Through Entity Tax (PTET) SALT Workaround

      Many states allow S-Corps and partnerships to elect to pay state income tax at the entity level, generating a federal deduction that bypasses the $10,000 SALT cap for individual owners.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • S-Corp or partnership in a state with a PTET election
      • Owners subject to state income tax on pass-through income
      • Election made at the entity level by the state deadline
      Example Savings Scenario

      An S-Corp owner in California paying $50,000 in state income tax: PTET election moves $40,000 above the SALT cap to a federal deduction, saving $14,800 at a 37% rate.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Business IRC §162, §3121(b)(3) Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Hiring Family Members in Your Business

      Hire your children or spouse in your business to shift income to lower tax brackets. Children under 18 working for a sole proprietorship or partnership owned by parents are exempt from FICA taxes.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Sole proprietorship or partnership owned by parents
      • Children performing legitimate work for the business
      • Wages must be reasonable for the work performed
      Example Savings Scenario

      Paying a 16-year-old child $15,750/year (2026 standard deduction): $0 federal income tax for the child, $15,750 deduction for the business, saving $5,828 at a 37% rate.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Retirement IRC §402(g) Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Mega Backdoor Roth

      Contribute after-tax dollars to a 401(k) plan (up to the ~$70,000 total 2026 limit minus pre-tax contributions) and convert them to Roth, creating tax-free growth on a much larger balance.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • 401(k) plan allows after-tax contributions and in-service withdrawals or in-plan Roth conversions
      • High-income W-2 employee or business owner with qualifying plan
      Example Savings Scenario

      Contributing $46,000 in after-tax 401(k) and converting to Roth annually for 20 years at 7% growth = $1.9M in tax-free retirement assets.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Retirement IRC §664 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT)

      Transfer appreciated assets into a CRT, receive an immediate charitable deduction, avoid capital gains on the sale, and receive income payments for life or a term of years.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Highly appreciated assets (real estate, stocks, business interests)
      • Charitable intent — remainder goes to charity at death or term end
      • Assets worth $500,000+ for meaningful benefit
      Example Savings Scenario

      Transferring $1M in appreciated stock (basis $100,000) to a CRT eliminates $180,000 in capital gains tax, generates a $300,000+ charitable deduction, and provides lifetime income.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Retirement IRC §408 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Self-Directed IRA for Real Estate

      A self-directed IRA allows investment in alternative assets including real estate, private loans, and businesses — generating tax-deferred (Traditional) or tax-free (Roth) returns.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Have IRA or 401(k) funds to roll over
      • Want to invest in real estate or alternative assets
      • Understand prohibited transaction rules
      Example Savings Scenario

      A Roth self-directed IRA that purchases a $300,000 rental property generating $24,000/year in rent: all rental income and appreciation grow completely tax-free.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Individual IRC §409A Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Deferred Compensation Plan (NQDC)

      Executives and highly compensated employees can defer a portion of their compensation to future years, deferring income tax until the funds are received — typically in lower-income retirement years.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Highly compensated employee or executive
      • Employer offers an NQDC plan
      • Deferral election made before the compensation is earned
      Example Savings Scenario

      Deferring $200,000 in bonus income from a 37% bracket to retirement at a 24% bracket saves $26,000 in taxes on that deferral.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Executive Compensation IRC §409A Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation (NQDC)

      Non-qualified deferred compensation plans allow highly compensated employees to defer a portion of salary or bonus to a future date, deferring income taxes until distribution.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Highly compensated employee (typically $150,000+ salary)
      • Employer offers an NQDC plan
      • Willing to accept unsecured employer obligation
      Example Savings Scenario

      An executive deferring $200,000 of bonus income at a 37% rate saves $74,000 in current-year taxes. If distributed at a 24% rate in retirement, permanent savings of $26,000.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Estate Planning IRC §170, §2522 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Charitable Lead Trust (CLT)

      A Charitable Lead Trust pays income to a charity for a set term, then passes the remaining assets to heirs. Creates an upfront charitable deduction and reduces estate taxes.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • High net worth individual ($5M+ estate)
      • Philanthropic intent
      • Assets expected to appreciate significantly
      Example Savings Scenario

      A $2M CLT with a 5% payout to charity for 20 years generates a $1.2M charitable deduction upfront, saving $444,000 in income taxes at a 37% rate.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Real Estate IRC §453 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Installment Sale

      Spread the recognition of capital gains from a property sale over multiple years by receiving payments in installments, keeping annual income in lower tax brackets.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Selling real estate or business assets
      • Buyer agrees to pay over multiple years
      • Not dealer property or publicly traded securities
      Example Savings Scenario

      Selling a property with $600,000 in gains. Spreading over 6 years keeps you in the 15% capital gains bracket instead of 20%, saving $30,000+.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Business IRC §831(b) Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Captive Insurance Company

      A business owner creates their own insurance company to insure business risks. Premiums paid to the captive are deductible by the business; the captive pays tax only on investment income under §831(b).

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Business with $2M+ in annual revenue
      • Genuine insurable business risks
      • Captive receives $2.45M or less in premiums (§831(b) election)
      • Proper actuarial analysis and domicile compliance
      Example Savings Scenario

      A business paying $1.2M in captive premiums deducts the full amount, saving $444,000 at a 37% rate. The captive pays minimal tax on investment income.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      High Net Worth IRC §1202 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) Exclusion

      Founders and investors in qualified small businesses can exclude up to $10 million (or 10× their adjusted basis) in capital gains from federal income tax when selling stock held for more than 5 years.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Stock in a domestic C-Corporation
      • Corporation had assets under $50M at time of issuance
      • Stock acquired at original issuance
      • Held for more than 5 years
      Example Savings Scenario

      A founder selling $10M in QSBS stock (basis $100K) excludes the entire $9.9M gain, saving $1.98M in federal capital gains taxes.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      High Net Worth IRC §7702 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Private Placement Life Insurance (PPLI)

      Private Placement Life Insurance wraps a customized investment portfolio inside a life insurance policy structure, providing tax-free growth, tax-free loans, and estate tax-free death benefits.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Accredited investor ($1M+ net worth or $200K+ income)
      • Long-term investment horizon (10+ years)
      • Minimum investment typically $2M+
      Example Savings Scenario

      A $5M portfolio growing at 8%/year inside PPLI vs. a taxable account: after 20 years, PPLI generates $2.3M more in after-tax wealth by eliminating annual income taxes on growth.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Investments IRC §263(c) Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Oil & Gas Intangible Drilling Costs (IDC)

      Investments in oil and gas working interests allow immediate deduction of 65–80% of the investment as Intangible Drilling Costs (IDC), plus ongoing depletion allowances on production.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Accredited investor
      • Investing in working interests (not royalties)
      • High ordinary income to offset
      Example Savings Scenario

      A $500,000 investment in an oil and gas working interest generates $325,000–$400,000 in Year 1 IDC deductions, saving $120,000–$148,000 at a 37% rate.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Real Estate IRC §1400Z-2 Uncle Kam Clients Only 2026 Law Update

      Opportunity Zone Investment

      Defer and potentially eliminate capital gains taxes by investing in Qualified Opportunity Zone Funds within 180 days of a capital gain event.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Capital gain from any asset sale within 180 days
      • Investment in a Qualified Opportunity Fund (QOF)
      • Hold for 10+ years to eliminate gain on appreciation
      Example Savings Scenario

      Investing $500,000 of capital gains into a QOF and holding 10 years eliminates all taxes on the new appreciation — potentially $300,000+ in tax-free gains.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Business IRC §41 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Research & Development (R&D) Tax Credit

      A dollar-for-dollar tax credit for qualified research expenses including wages, supplies, and contract research. Startups can apply up to $500,000/year against payroll taxes.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Conducting qualified research activities (new or improved products/processes)
      • Incurring qualified research expenses (wages, supplies, contract research)
      • Startups with < $5M revenue can apply against payroll taxes
      Example Savings Scenario

      A software company spending $500,000 on R&D wages qualifies for a $50,000–$100,000 federal tax credit, dollar-for-dollar against taxes owed.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Business IRC §179D Uncle Kam Clients Only

      179D Energy-Efficient Commercial Building Deduction

      Deduct up to $5.00 per square foot for energy-efficient improvements to commercial buildings, including HVAC, lighting, and building envelope upgrades.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Own or design commercial buildings
      • Building meets energy efficiency standards (ASHRAE)
      • Architects, engineers, and designers can claim on government buildings
      Example Savings Scenario

      A 50,000 sq ft commercial building with qualifying improvements generates $250,000 in deductions, saving $92,500 at a 37% rate.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      High Net Worth IRC §1400Z-2 Uncle Kam Clients Only 2026 Law Update

      Qualified Opportunity Fund (QOF)

      Invest capital gains from any source into a Qualified Opportunity Fund within 180 days to defer the gain until December 31, 2026, and eliminate all taxes on appreciation after 10 years.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Capital gain from any source (stocks, real estate, business sale)
      • Investment made within 180 days of the gain event
      • Fund must be a certified QOF investing in Opportunity Zones
      Example Savings Scenario

      A $2M capital gain invested in a QOF: defers $400,000 in taxes until 2026. If the fund doubles to $4M in 10 years, the $2M appreciation is completely tax-free.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      High Net Worth IRC §2042 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT)

      An ILIT owns your life insurance policy, keeping the death benefit out of your taxable estate while providing liquidity to pay estate taxes or transfer wealth to heirs tax-free.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Estate value over $15M+ (2026 federal exemption, permanently doubled under OBBBA)
      • Life insurance policy with significant death benefit
      • Irrevocable trust established by an estate planning attorney
      Example Savings Scenario

      A $5M life insurance policy owned by an ILIT removes $5M from the taxable estate, saving $2M in estate taxes at a 40% rate.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      High Net Worth IRC §2702 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (GRAT)

      Transfer assets into a GRAT, receive annuity payments for a term of years, and pass all appreciation above the IRS hurdle rate to heirs completely free of gift and estate tax.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • High-value assets expected to appreciate significantly
      • Assets worth $1M+ for meaningful benefit
      • Grantor must survive the GRAT term
      Example Savings Scenario

      Transferring $5M in stock expected to grow 15%/year into a 2-year GRAT: $1.5M in appreciation passes to heirs tax-free, saving $600,000 in gift/estate taxes.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      High Net Worth IRC §181, State Credits Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Film & Entertainment Tax Credit Investment

      Invest in qualifying film, TV, or entertainment productions to generate federal deductions under §181 and state tax credits of 20–40% of qualifying production expenditures.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Investment in a qualifying domestic film or TV production
      • Production costs under $15M ($20M in low-income areas) for §181
      • State credits vary by state — Georgia, Louisiana, California offer the most generous programs
      Example Savings Scenario

      A $500,000 investment in a Georgia film production generates a $100,000 state tax credit (20%) plus a federal §181 deduction, saving $285,000+ in combined taxes.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      High Net Worth IRC §170(h) Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Conservation Easement

      Donate a conservation restriction on qualifying land to a land trust, generating a charitable deduction equal to the reduction in property value — often 2–5× the cost of the easement.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Own qualifying land with conservation value
      • Donation to a qualified land trust or government entity
      • Appraisal by a qualified appraiser required
      Example Savings Scenario

      A $500,000 easement on land with $2M in conservation value generates a $2M charitable deduction, saving $740,000 at a 37% rate.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Business IRC §45F Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Employer-Provided Childcare Credit

      Employers who provide or pay for childcare facilities for employees receive a tax credit of 25% of qualifying childcare expenditures and 10% of childcare resource and referral expenditures, up to $150,000/year.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Employer provides or pays for childcare facilities
      • Qualifying childcare expenditures for employees
      • Credit limited to $150,000 per year
      Example Savings Scenario

      An employer spending $500,000 on an on-site childcare facility receives a $125,000 tax credit (25%), plus the remaining $375,000 is deductible.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Executive Compensation IRC §422 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Incentive Stock Options (ISO) & AMT Planning

      Incentive Stock Options qualify for long-term capital gains rates if held correctly, but the spread at exercise is an AMT preference item. Strategic exercise timing minimizes total tax.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Receive ISOs from employer
      • Planning to exercise options
      • Income subject to potential AMT
      Example Savings Scenario

      An executive with $1M in ISO spread who exercises in a low-income year and holds for 12 months pays 20% long-term rates vs. 37% ordinary income — saving $170,000.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Investments IRC §1400Z-2 Uncle Kam Clients Only 2026 Law Update

      Qualified Opportunity Zone (QOZ) Investment

      Invest capital gains into a Qualified Opportunity Fund within 180 days to defer the original gain until 2026 and eliminate all appreciation on the QOZ investment after a 10-year hold.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Have capital gains from any source (stocks, real estate, business sale)
      • Invest in a Qualified Opportunity Fund within 180 days of the gain
      • Willing to hold the investment for 10+ years
      Example Savings Scenario

      An investor with $500,000 in capital gains invests in a QOZ fund. The $500K gain is deferred to 2026. If the fund grows to $1.5M, the $1M appreciation is completely tax-free.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Estate Planning IRC §2512, §2036 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Family Limited Partnership (FLP)

      A Family Limited Partnership allows transfer of assets to family members at a valuation discount (typically 20–40%) due to lack of control and marketability, reducing estate and gift tax exposure.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Estate value over $5 million
      • Own a business, real estate portfolio, or investment assets
      • Want to transfer wealth to heirs while maintaining control
      Example Savings Scenario

      A $10M real estate portfolio transferred via FLP at a 35% discount reduces the taxable estate by $3.5M, saving $1.4M in estate taxes at a 40% rate.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Investments IRC §1202 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Section 1202 QSBS — 100% Capital Gains Exclusion

      Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) under Section 1202 allows founders, employees, and investors to exclude up to $10 million (or 10x basis) in capital gains when selling stock held for more than 5 years.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Stock in a domestic C-Corporation
      • Company had assets under $50M when stock was issued
      • Stock acquired at original issuance (not secondary market)
      • Held for more than 5 years
      Example Savings Scenario

      A founder who sells $10M in QSBS stock pays $0 in federal capital gains tax — saving $2,380,000 vs. the 23.8% long-term rate.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Investments IRC §181, State Credits Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Film & TV Production Tax Credit Investment

      Investments in qualified film and television productions generate state tax credits (25–35% of production spend) plus federal deductions under IRC §181 for productions under $15M.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Accredited investor
      • State with active film tax credit program (Georgia, New Mexico, Louisiana, etc.)
      • Investment in a qualified production entity
      Example Savings Scenario

      A $200,000 investment in a Georgia film production generates a $60,000 Georgia state tax credit (30%) plus potential federal deductions — total tax benefit of $80,000–$100,000.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Real Estate IRC §469(c)(7) Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Real Estate Professional Status (REPS) — 750 Hours

      Qualify as a Real Estate Professional to treat all rental losses as non-passive, allowing unlimited deduction against any income including W-2 wages. Requires 750+ hours per year in real estate activities.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • More than 750 hours per year in real estate activities
      • Real estate activities represent more than 50% of personal services
      • Material participation in each rental property (or group election)
      Example Savings Scenario

      A physician earning $400,000 W-2 whose spouse qualifies as a REPS can deduct $200,000 in rental losses, saving $74,000 in federal taxes.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Real Estate IRC §469(c)(7) Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Short-Term Rental (STR) Loophole

      STR properties with average guest stays of 7 days or less are NOT subject to passive activity loss rules, allowing losses to offset active W-2 or business income.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Average rental period 7 days or less
      • Material participation in the rental activity (100+ hours, most of anyone)
      • Property rented on Airbnb, VRBO, or similar platforms
      Example Savings Scenario

      A $600,000 STR property with a cost seg study generates $150,000 in Year 1 deductions, offsetting $150,000 of W-2 income and saving $55,500 at a 37% rate.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Investments IRC §1001, §1031 Uncle Kam Clients Only

      Crypto-to-Crypto Exchange Tax Treatment

      Each cryptocurrency trade, swap, or exchange is a taxable event. Proper structuring — holding periods, loss harvesting, and entity selection — can dramatically reduce crypto tax liability.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Active crypto trader or long-term holder
      • Multiple transactions per year
      • Gains exceeding $10,000 annually
      Example Savings Scenario

      A trader with $200,000 in short-term crypto gains who restructures to maximize long-term holds and harvests $60,000 in losses saves $37,000 in taxes.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      Real Estate IRC §168 Uncle Kam Clients Only 2026 Law Update

      Cost Segregation Study

      Accelerates depreciation on commercial and residential rental property by reclassifying components into shorter recovery periods (5, 7, or 15 years) instead of 27.5 or 39 years.

      Eligibility Requirements
      • Own commercial or rental property
      • Property cost basis over $500,000 for best ROI
      • Conducted by a qualified engineer or CPA firm
      Example Savings Scenario

      A $2M commercial building can generate $200,000–$400,000 in accelerated deductions in Year 1, saving $80,000–$160,000 in taxes at a 40% effective rate.

      Unlock the Full Strategy Breakdown — Free

      Enter your email for instant access to MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide.

      No spam · No obligation · Instant access
      What Most Musicians Don't Know

      Your instruments, recording gear, and music software are 100% deductible business expenses — Section 179 lets you write off the full cost in the year of purchase instead of depreciating over years.

      A dedicated home studio or practice room qualifies for the home office deduction, covering a proportional share of rent, mortgage interest, utilities, and soundproofing costs.

      An S-Corp election can save musicians earning $80,000+ net income $8,000–18,000/year in self-employment taxes — most touring and recording artists never make this structural move.

      Common Questions for Musicians

      Get answers to the most frequently asked tax questions for your profession.

      What tax deductions can a musician claim?
      Self-employed musicians can deduct instruments, recording equipment, music software (DAWs, plug-ins, sample libraries), home studio expenses, touring and travel costs, music lessons, professional development, marketing, website costs, health insurance premiums, and retirement contributions. Most musicians miss $6,000–$25,000 in deductions annually.
      Can a musician deduct instruments and recording equipment?
      Yes — instruments, amplifiers, microphones, PA systems, recording interfaces, and any gear used for business are 100% deductible. Section 179 and bonus depreciation allow you to write off the full cost in the year of purchase instead of depreciating over years. Keep receipts and document business use percentage if equipment is also used personally.
      Can a musician deduct a home studio?
      Yes — if you have a dedicated room used exclusively for recording, practicing, or music business work, you qualify for the home office deduction. You can deduct a proportional share of rent or mortgage interest, utilities, internet, and soundproofing. A 200 sq ft studio in a 1,500 sq ft home = 13.3% of all home expenses deductible.
      Are touring and travel expenses deductible for musicians?
      Yes — 100% of transportation costs (flights, rental cars, mileage) and lodging for business travel to gigs, tours, recording sessions, and music conferences are deductible. Meals are 50% deductible while traveling away from home overnight. Keep a travel log with the business purpose for each trip.
      Should a musician form an S-Corp?
      Musicians earning $80,000+ in net self-employment income typically save $8,000–$18,000/year with an S-Corp election. You pay yourself a reasonable salary and take remaining profit as distributions, avoiding self-employment tax on the distribution portion. The S-Corp pays for itself in Year 1 for most full-time musicians at this income level.

      Your Biggest Missed Deduction Is Probably Locked Above

      Uncle Kam clients save an average of $6,000–$40,000/year. The strategies that make that possible are unlocked on a free strategy call.

      Book A Free Strategy Call Free consultation. No obligation.
      ';// ── Open in a new window and print ─────────────────────────────── var win = window.open('', '_blank', 'width=850,height=700,scrollbars=yes,noopener=0'); if (!win) { // Fallback: inject an iframe for printing if popup is blocked var iframe = document.createElement('iframe'); iframe.style.cssText = 'position:fixed;top:-9999px;left:-9999px;width:850px;height:700px;border:0;'; document.body.appendChild(iframe); iframe.contentDocument.open(); iframe.contentDocument.write(html); iframe.contentDocument.close(); setTimeout(function() { iframe.contentWindow.focus(); iframe.contentWindow.print(); setTimeout(function() { document.body.removeChild(iframe); }, 2000); }, 600); return; } win.document.open(); win.document.write(html); win.document.close(); win.focus(); setTimeout(function() { win.print(); }, 600); }// ── Email Unlock: post to GHL silently, expand locked cards ────────────── function ukwfUnlockStrategies(e) { e.preventDefault(); // Support both the main wall form AND per-card gate forms var form = e ? e.target : null; var gateInput = form ? form.querySelector('.ukwf-gate-email-input') : null; var mainInput = document.getElementById('ukwf-unlock-email'); var emailInput = (gateInput && gateInput.value.trim()) ? gateInput : mainInput; var errorEl = document.getElementById('ukwf-unlock-error'); var email = emailInput ? emailInput.value.trim() : ''; // Also check the gate input if main is empty if (!email && gateInput) email = gateInput.value.trim(); // Basic email validation if (!email || !/^[^\s@]+@[^\s@]+\.[^\s@]+$/.test(email)) { if (errorEl) errorEl.style.display = 'block'; if (gateInput) { gateInput.style.borderColor = '#ff6b6b'; gateInput.focus(); } else if (emailInput) emailInput.focus(); return; } if (errorEl) errorEl.style.display = 'none'; if (gateInput) gateInput.style.borderColor = ''; // Disable all unlock buttons document.querySelectorAll('.ukwf-email-unlock-btn, .ukwf-gate-email-btn').forEach(function(b) { b.disabled = true; b.textContent = 'Unlocking...'; }); // Send lead to GHL via server-side PHP AJAX (bypasses webhook workflow) var professionEl = document.querySelector('.ukwf-profile-name'); var professionName = professionEl ? professionEl.textContent.trim() : ''; var nameParts = professionName.split('/'); var ghlFirstName = nameParts[0] ? nameParts[0].trim() : professionName; var ghlLastName = nameParts[1] ? nameParts[1].trim() : 'Tax Write-Off Finder'; var ajaxUrl = (typeof ukwfConfig !== 'undefined' && ukwfConfig.ajaxUrl) ? ukwfConfig.ajaxUrl : '/wp-admin/admin-ajax.php'; var nonce = (typeof ukwfConfig !== 'undefined' && ukwfConfig.leadNonce) ? ukwfConfig.leadNonce : ''; var formData = new FormData(); formData.append('action', 'ukwf_ghl_lead'); formData.append('nonce', nonce); formData.append('email', email); formData.append('firstName', ghlFirstName); formData.append('lastName', ghlLastName); formData.append('profession', professionName); formData.append('source', 'ukwf-unlock'); formData.append('page', window.location.pathname); fetch(ajaxUrl, { method: 'POST', body: formData }).catch(function() {}); // fire-and-forget // Expand all locked cards immediately ukwfDoUnlock(); } function ukwfDoUnlock() { // Hide the email wall var wall = document.getElementById('ukwf-email-unlock-wall'); if (wall) { wall.style.transition = 'opacity 0.3s ease'; wall.style.opacity = '0'; setTimeout(function() { wall.style.display = 'none'; }, 300); } // Unlock all locked cards instantly — no stagger (stagger caused 4+ second delay for 70+ cards) var lockedCards = document.querySelectorAll('.ukwf-result-card--locked'); lockedCards.forEach(function(card) { // Remove locked state — keep collapsed so user can open each card individually card.classList.remove('ukwf-result-card--locked'); card.classList.add('ukwf-result-card--open'); // Clear any inline styles that might block the toggle var body = card.querySelector('.ukwf-result-body'); if (body) { body.style.display = ''; body.style.maxHeight = ''; } // Remove lock badge var badge = card.querySelector('.ukwf-result-lock-badge'); if (badge) badge.style.display = 'none'; // Replace the locked gate with an unlocked badge var gate = card.querySelector('.ukwf-locked-strategy-gate'); if (gate) { gate.innerHTML = '
      Unlocked — tap to expand
      '; } }); // Show success banner var banner = document.getElementById('ukwf-unlock-banner'); if (banner) { banner.style.display = 'flex'; } // Persist unlock in localStorage so it survives refresh, tab close, and navigation // Uses the same ukwfSetUnlocked() that the book-call path uses, which sets // localStorage key 'ukwf_unlocked' = '1'. The main script block already checks // ukwfIsUnlocked() on page load and calls ukwfUnlockAll() automatically. if (typeof ukwfSetUnlocked === 'function') { ukwfSetUnlocked(); } else { try { localStorage.setItem('ukwf_unlocked', '1'); } catch(err) {} } // Also run the main unlock function to handle any card variants we might miss if (typeof ukwfUnlockAll === 'function') { ukwfUnlockAll(); } } // NOTE: Auto-unlock on page load is handled by the main script block which // checks ukwfIsUnlocked() and calls ukwfUnlockAll(). No DOMContentLoaded // listener needed here (it was broken anyway because LiteSpeed defers scripts // past DOMContentLoaded).// ── SAVINGS METER — scroll-driven progress bar (mobile-first) ────────────── (function() { var meter = document.getElementById('ukwf-savings-meter'); var fill = document.getElementById('ukwf-savings-meter-fill'); var reviewed = document.getElementById('ukwf-meter-reviewed'); var amount = document.getElementById('ukwf-meter-amount'); if (!meter || !fill || !reviewed || !amount) return;// Hide meter if already unlocked if (typeof ukwfIsUnlocked === 'function' && ukwfIsUnlocked()) return;// Collect all result cards in DOM order var cards = Array.from(document.querySelectorAll('.ukwf-result-card')); var total = cards.length; if (total === 0) return;// Savings range embedded as data attributes on the meter element var rangeMax = parseInt(meter.getAttribute('data-range-max') || '40000', 10); var rangeMin = parseInt(meter.getAttribute('data-range-min') || '5000', 10); var totalRange = rangeMax - rangeMin; var freeCount = cards.filter(function(c){ return !c.classList.contains('ukwf-result-card--locked'); }).length || 6; var lockCount = Math.max(total - freeCount, 1);// Build per-card savings increments // Free cards share 30% of range; locked cards share 70% (bigger reward for scrolling further) var increments = cards.map(function(card) { var isLocked = card.classList.contains('ukwf-result-card--locked'); var weight = isLocked ? Math.round((totalRange * 0.70) / lockCount) : Math.round((totalRange * 0.30) / freeCount); return Math.max(300, weight); });var currentReviewed = 0; var currentSavings = 0; var lastTriggered = -1; var meterShown = false;// Smooth counter animation with ease-out cubic function animateCounter(el, from, to, prefix, duration) { var start = null; function step(ts) { if (!start) start = ts; var progress = Math.min((ts - start) / duration, 1); var ease = 1 - Math.pow(1 - progress, 3); var val = Math.round(from + (to - from) * ease); el.textContent = prefix + val.toLocaleString('en-US'); if (progress < 1) requestAnimationFrame(step); } requestAnimationFrame(step); }function updateMeter(newReviewed, addedSavings) { var prevReviewed = currentReviewed; var prevSavings = currentSavings; currentReviewed = newReviewed; currentSavings = Math.min(currentSavings + addedSavings, rangeMax);if (!meterShown && currentReviewed >= 1) { meterShown = true; meter.classList.add('ukwf-savings-meter--visible'); }var pct = Math.min((currentReviewed / total) * 100, 100); fill.style.width = pct + '%';animateCounter(reviewed, prevReviewed, currentReviewed, '', 400); animateCounter(amount, prevSavings, currentSavings, '$', 600); }// Throttled scroll handler var ticking = false; function onScroll() { if (ticking) return; ticking = true; requestAnimationFrame(function() { ticking = false; if (typeof ukwfIsUnlocked === 'function' && ukwfIsUnlocked()) { meter.classList.remove('ukwf-savings-meter--visible'); return; } var viewportTrigger = window.innerHeight * 0.65; var highestTriggered = lastTriggered; for (var i = lastTriggered + 1; i < cards.length; i++) { var rect = cards[i].getBoundingClientRect(); if (rect.top < viewportTrigger) { highestTriggered = i; } else { break; // cards are in DOM order, stop when first unscrolled card found } } if (highestTriggered > lastTriggered) { var addedSavings = 0; for (var j = lastTriggered + 1; j <= highestTriggered; j++) { addedSavings += increments[j] || 0; } lastTriggered = highestTriggered; updateMeter(highestTriggered + 1, addedSavings); } }); }window.addEventListener('scroll', onScroll, { passive: true }); onScroll(); // run once on load })();