Attention Business Owners!
Here’s what to do *before year-end* — even if part of you just wants to wrap up and go on vacation already:
- Review your entity & tax structure: If your business has grown or changed (revenues, partners, acquisitions), your choice of S-corp, LLC, partnership, or even a shift to C-corp might need reevaluation. Talk with your CPA about whether a structure tweak makes sense for 2025+
- Check estimated tax payments: Avoid underpayment penalties by tracking income/withholding vs. what you expected. If you’re running ahead of plan, you may want to bump your final estimated payment.
- Accelerate deductible expenses: Pull in deductible purchases or expenses into 2025 if possible (before Jan 1). Be mindful of Section 179 / bonus depreciation thresholds (see below)
- Defer income (if feasible and beneficial): Delay billing or income recognition past Dec 31 if it keeps you in a lower bracket, but don’t do it if it messes up cash flow you need now!
- Track capital expenditures carefully: Document the cost, date placed in service, business use percentage, etc. Good records = ability to elect expensing (Section 179, bonus)
- Mind your home / auto / travel allocations: If you use a home office or vehicle, confirm you have contemporaneous records (mileage logs, usage splits, etc.) Better documentation now beats “I think that’s about right” later!
- Evaluate retirement/benefits contributions: Max out what you can before year-end, as it lowers taxable income. If you set up a new retirement plan, be sure to meet the deadlines
- Review debt/interest strategy: Be aware of how much interest you pay and how much is deductible. Some of the new law interacts with business interests, so we’ll want good debt schedules
- Check payroll & employee benefits rules: Make sure wage expense, bonuses, fringe benefits, and retirement plan contributions are appropriately documented. Use safe-harbor rules, stay up to speed on compliance
- Meet with your tax advisor now: Run a “what-if” tax estimate, stress-test your numbers, catch surprises early. Especially helpful for high-revenue years, acquisitions, or significant capital events
Smart Moves to Reduce Your 2025 Business Tax Bill
Here are some strategic levers you can pull (with guidance) to legally reduce your tax burden:
- Max out Section 179 & bonus depreciation: Take full advantage of expensing for qualifying property rather than depreciating over years.
- Harvest business losses (if any): If you have underperforming assets or projects, consider disposing of them to realize deductible losses.
- Restructure or accelerate R&D / innovation spending: If you invest in R&D or qualifying improvements, consider structuring or timing your investments to maximize credits or deductions.
- Optimize interest expense/debt structuring: With new rules around business interest deductibility, ensure your debt is properly characterized and documented.
- Use “bunching” strategies for deductible items: If certain expenses are near the threshold of being useful (e.g. repairs, maintenance, small capital upgrades), bunch them into the higher-income year where they yield more tax benefit.
- Plan for acquisitions/dispositions: If you’re buying or selling parts of your business, mapping the timing and structure can save real dollars.
- Leverage credits & incentives: Keep your eye out for industry or location-based credits (e.g. new energy incentives, R&D, zone credits) and qualify where possible.
- Revisit your compensation/retirement plan design: If you’re paying owner compensation, bonus structure, or matching retirement contributions, check whether a tweak shifts more into deductible territory or shifts income appropriately.
- Maintain strong documentation: The IRS loves rules, but hates ambiguity. Good records turn gray zones into safe zones.
Let your trusted CPA help your business navigate the complex tax law changes!






