Tax season doesn't have to be a fire drill. Whether you're filing quarterly estimated taxes or preparing your annual return, the secret is the same: stay organized year-round, and do a focused prep before filing.
Here are 7 things every freelancer and small business owner should do before submitting their return.
1. Reconcile All Bank and Credit Card Accounts
Before you look at a single tax form, make sure every bank account and credit card tied to your business is reconciled. That means:
- Every transaction is accounted for
- Your bookkeeping balance matches your bank statement
- No duplicate entries, no missing transactions
If you use automatic bank sync, this is mostly done for you. Check for any transactions flagged as "needs review" and resolve them.
Tip: Reconcile monthly throughout the year so tax time is just a quick verification, not a catch-up marathon.
2. Categorize Every Uncategorized Transaction
This is where most small business owners lose time (and money). Uncategorized transactions mean missed deductions. Common categories people overlook:
- Home office expenses — internet, utilities (proportional), office furniture
- Software subscriptions — SaaS tools, cloud storage, design software
- Professional development — courses, books, conferences
- Vehicle expenses — mileage for business travel (more on this below)
- Bank and payment fees — Stripe fees, PayPal fees, bank charges
AI categorization catches most of these automatically. But it's worth scanning through your transactions manually to catch anything the AI wasn't confident about.
3. Review and Log Business Mileage
If you drive for business — client meetings, supply runs, co-working commutes — those miles are tax-deductible. The IRS standard mileage rate for 2026 is 70 cents per mile. That adds up fast:
| Weekly Miles | Annual Deduction |
|---|---|
| 50 | $1,820 |
| 100 | $3,640 |
| 200 | $7,280 |
The catch? You need records. The IRS requires a log of each trip: date, destination, purpose, and miles driven. If you haven't been tracking, start now — and backfill what you can from calendar entries and Google Maps history.
Mileage tracking tools that integrate with Google Maps can calculate distances automatically based on start and end addresses, making this much easier.
4. Run Your Profit & Loss Statement
Your P&L (also called an income statement) is the single most important document for your tax return. It shows:
- Total revenue — everything you earned
- Total expenses — everything you spent on the business
- Net income — what you actually owe taxes on
Review it line by line. Does every category look right? Is there an expense category that seems too low (meaning transactions were miscategorized elsewhere)? This is your last chance to catch errors before they become part of your tax filing.
5. Check for Estimated Tax Payments Already Made
If you pay quarterly estimated taxes (and as a freelancer, you probably should), tally up what you've already paid. Common places to check:
- IRS Direct Pay or EFTPS payment history
- State tax agency payment records
- Your bank statements for checks written to "United States Treasury"
Subtract your estimated payments from your total tax liability to know what you still owe — or what refund to expect.
6. Organize Supporting Documentation
Even if your bookkeeping is perfect, you need supporting docs in case of an audit:
- 1099 forms from clients who paid you $600+
- Receipts for expenses over $75 (IRS threshold for documentation)
- Bank statements for the full year
- Vehicle mileage log (see step 3)
- Home office measurements if claiming the home office deduction
Store these digitally. A simple folder structure by year and category is fine — you don't need anything fancy.
7. Set Up Next Year's System
The best time to fix your bookkeeping process is right after tax season, while the pain is fresh. Ask yourself:
- Did I have months of uncategorized transactions? → Set up automatic categorization
- Did I forget to track mileage? → Install a mileage tracking tool
- Did I miss quarterly estimated payments? → Set calendar reminders
- Did I spend days reconciling? → Connect your bank for automatic sync
The goal is to make next year's tax prep a 30-minute review instead of a multi-day project.
PennyBot automates transaction categorization, tracks business mileage with Google Maps, and keeps your books in sync with your accounting tool — so tax season is a breeze, not a crisis. Get started free.
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