Important Tax Filing Deadlines You Don’t Want to Miss
Before you send in your tax return there are a lot of things you have to remember, which is why having a tax checklist is good idea. Of course, the right accountant will help you with that as well. However, before you ever get to that final point in the tax-filing process, you need to be aware of several changes to the tax laws, and of course deadlines. After all, missing a deadline can end up being very costly.
So as the 2017 tax season kicks off, here are a few important deadlines to make a note of, because missing these might hurt you.
- 1040 Filing Deadline – first off, the deadline this year for filing your taxes is actually on April 18 and not April 15. That’s because the 15 & 16 fall on the weekend and April 17 is a holiday. The extension deadline falls on October 16, but you have to file for that extension by April 18.
- Refund Delays – for those claiming the additional child tax credit or the earned income credit, they will have to wait a little longer to get their refunds, due to a new law to help fight tax fraud. The IRS will begin sending those refunds on February 15 and they will likely start arriving around Feb. 27.
- Small Business Filing Dates – there are several deadlines that will affect many small businesses, including the date to turn in Form 1065 partnership return, which has been pushed up by a month. It’s now due two and half months after the tax year closes instead of three and half months. That means this year the deadline is March 15 instead of April 15. Conversely, the deadline for Form 1120 C corporation returns has been moved back a month from March 15 to April 15. The due date for 1120S returns of S corporations will remain the same.
- Compensation Forms – employers and business used to have till the last day of February or March 31 to turn in W-2 and 1099 forms to the IRS, but that deadline is now January 31.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/important-news-on-tax-filing-deadlines-and-refunds-2017-01-10
Beyond the Exit: Alex Bean on Why True ROI Means Return on Impact
Beyond the Exit: Why Divvy’s Alex Bean Believes True ROI Means Return on Impact For most entrepreneurs, selling a billion-dollar company would be the final chapter—the ultimate validation of long nights and relentless ambition. For Alex Bean, co-founder of Divvy, that milestone became only the beginning of a deeper journey. In 2016, Bean and longtime friend Blake Murray launched…
Connor Boyack on Empowering the Next Generation of Entrepreneurs
Connor Boyack never set out to be a children’s author or an architect of youth entrepreneurship programs. His career began in politics and web development, but a persistent search for meaning and impact ultimately led him to build one of the most influential educational movements of the past decade. Today, as founder of the Libertas…
Jerry Browder: A Mission Driven Legacy
Jerry Browder on Building Signet Health: A Legacy of Purpose, Faith, and Life-Saving Mental Health Care For most entrepreneurs, the journey is measured in revenues, exits, and market share. For Jerry Browder, founder of Signet Health, success is measured in lives saved, hope restored, and a mission that will outlive him. “I started Signet with a…
Why Scaling Requires Impossible Goals
Impossible Goals: Inside Dr. Ben Hardy’s Game Changing Psychology of Business Growth In a business world obsessed with incremental growth and conventional playbooks, Dr. Benjamin Hardy is breaking all the rules. An organizational psychologist and bestselling author, Hardy has spent the last decade redefining how entrepreneurs scale—not just their companies, but their very identities. Now,…