Taxes can get extremely complicated depending on your situation. In my relatively simple case as a contractor, I’m on the hook for calculating and paying taxes quarterly (since my employer(s) don’t do it for me). The exact amount I’m meant to pay is yearly income/4, which means I need to predict how much I’ll earn throughout the entire year, which is impossible without a crystal ball.
So I just pay what I think I’ll earn, and at the end of the year calculate the difference from what I actually earned, and either send or receive a payment from the government. From the IRS point of view, whatever interest they end up paying me is probably less than the cost of government having a cashflow issue throughout the year without those quarterly payments.
Okay well that makes a lot more sense for someone that has to pay quarterly I guess. I guess this is a US thing. Luckily I never had to do my own taxes in Canada and looks like I’m never going to have to learn, but I’m interested in US accountingd
Taxes can get extremely complicated depending on your situation. In my relatively simple case as a contractor, I’m on the hook for calculating and paying taxes quarterly (since my employer(s) don’t do it for me). The exact amount I’m meant to pay is
yearly income/4
, which means I need to predict how much I’ll earn throughout the entire year, which is impossible without a crystal ball.So I just pay what I think I’ll earn, and at the end of the year calculate the difference from what I actually earned, and either send or receive a payment from the government. From the IRS point of view, whatever interest they end up paying me is probably less than the cost of government having a cashflow issue throughout the year without those quarterly payments.
Okay well that makes a lot more sense for someone that has to pay quarterly I guess. I guess this is a US thing. Luckily I never had to do my own taxes in Canada and looks like I’m never going to have to learn, but I’m interested in US accountingd