There’s some very informative threads on this legality section regarding starting a LLC business and where to report income that’s self made etc etc... I’m totally lost and there’s no way“hey I’m a h00ker & I wanna pay taxes & have proof of income. Walk me through it” Or is that a bad idea??
I do deposit maybe..... 40-50% of my earnings into my bank account. Well half of those deposits are actually electronic transfers through cashapp, Venmo, or a linked bank account from a client. I’m showing proof of about on average $100 dollars a day that passes through my checking account for the last 7 or 8 months.
I can’t keep telling people I have rich parents forever lol. Halppp
Originally Posted by 179sasu
on average $100 dollars a day that passes through my checking account for the last 7 or 8 months.
Let' derive some numbers. 5 work days per week = 20 per month x 8 x $100 = $80,000 that you have taken in: getting to be a lot of fucking money, and more if you are saying you clear $100/day after the hotel which can easily run up to $20K per year.
$80,000 income x 20% assumed tax rate = $16,000 you might be hit for taxes because the IRS has a hard on for hookers.
Get an LLC with you as the sole member because:
It is very easy. You need to go to the Secretary of State (handles on line) where you live and you need the name of an organizer and contact/administrator (different terminology in different states). Best to have an attorney to be a way for the state to contact you if there is a lawsuit, and/or a complaint that needs to be investigated. My last attorney fee for an LLC was $50.
All net income goes straight to the 1040 form you use for taxes.
- You can open a bank account and credit cards in the LLC. CC are easier to document than cash logs and receipts.
- Deduct business expenses: $80K is Gross Sales - expense = net income
- Business expenses can include everything necessary for you to conduct buiness: including motel bills where you do business, the car and all car expenses you use to conduct business (you will need to keep a log if used also for personal): payments for a car, gasoline, repairs, and mileage can take two routes depending what is most favorable to you.
Do not mix your own money with the LLC. Run all business expense through the LLC, and put the car in the name of the LLC. The LLC is considered to be a seperate person from you, but the profit goes to you for taxes. You can also give yourself a paycheck from the LLC for minor expenses with taxes removed (now you have a paystub and with one person to pay it is cheap and can have a direct deposit into your checking account - Talk to Paychex, cheap and fast and your tax is paid before you get the money in your account. ), while the major expenses - such as a car - can be put into the LLC. You will be the sole member (only you involved) so that you can sign the checks and pay the credit card. The credit card at the bank with the checking account makes on line payment of the credit card expenses very easy and easily documente.
I do not own a car, a house, and only my fishing/hunting equipment is not in an LLC.
But I have 5 LLCs registered; all own a seperate downtown building. I also have three S Corp for different reasons.
All the corps have seperate bank accounts, and seperate credit cards. I also have set up seperate checking and savings accounts. As the personal savings acount grew, I used it to fund a new LLC account that was used to put the down payment on the last building. Rehab the building and start collecting rent into the new LLC. The bank used all 5 LLC accounts (and the buildings they own) to pay for the building and set up payment on the new building. All this is for your own protection, never tell others about your business because someone might want to sue you just for the fun of it. Seperate businesses limit that type of stuff.
With the internet banking they all show up together on the bank website. It is easy to make payments back and forth between companies.
Keep your own money seperate from the business accounts. That makes the IRS happy. Pay your taxes and show expenses.
Without accounting the IRS assumes that all the money you have is due to them.
You can't hide that type of money forever. Maybe when you start, you can hide a few thousand, but it gets to be too much of a worry.
Best of Luck
JR
MBA