How to legally reduce business taxes 2026 every dollar you legally keep out of the hands of the IRS is a dollar that stays in your business. Year-end tax planning is not just a good idea for large corporations. It is one of the most powerful financial tools available to small business owners, freelancers, LLC owners, and self-employed professionals across the United States.
The window to act closes on December 31. After that date, most tax-saving strategies for the current year are no longer available to you. That is why understanding exactly which moves to make and when to make them is so critical.
At TaxMagic, we help business owners across California, Texas, and the rest of the country implement smart, legal, and proven year-end tax strategies that reduce what they owe without creating compliance risk. This guide covers every major strategy you need to know before the year ends in 2026.
1. Accelerate Deductible Expenses Before December 31
One of the simplest and most effective year-end tax strategies is accelerating deductible business expenses into the current tax year. If you are a cash-basis taxpayer, which most small businesses are, you can deduct expenses in the year you pay them rather than the year you receive the benefit.
This means that if you have upcoming business expenses you were planning to pay in January, paying them in December instead moves that deduction into the current tax year and reduces your 2026 taxable income right now.
Common expenses worth accelerating include software subscriptions and annual licenses, professional development courses and certifications, office supplies and equipment under the expensing threshold, marketing and advertising campaigns, and professional service fees for accountants, consultants, or attorneys.
At the same time, if you are expecting a large payment from a client near the end of the year, consider whether delaying that invoice until January makes sense for your tax situation. Deferring income shifts that revenue into the following tax year, effectively giving you an extra year before that money is taxed.
2. Maximize Section 179 and Bonus Depreciation Deductions
If your business purchased equipment, machinery, vehicles, computers, or other qualifying assets during 2026, you may be able to deduct the full cost of those purchases in a single year rather than depreciating them over time.
Section 179 of the IRS tax code allows businesses to expense the full purchase price of qualifying assets placed in service during the tax year. According to the IRS Section 179 guidance, the deduction limit for 2026 allows businesses to write off significant equipment investments immediately, making it one of the most valuable year-end tools for businesses that have made capital investments.
Bonus depreciation works alongside Section 179 and allows businesses to deduct a percentage of the cost of qualifying assets beyond the Section 179 limit. The bonus depreciation percentage has been phasing down in recent years following the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, so checking the current applicable rate with a tax professional before year-end is essential.
TaxMagic helps clients identify every qualifying asset and apply Section 179 and bonus depreciation correctly to maximize the deduction without triggering IRS scrutiny.
3. Take Full Advantage of Retirement Plan Contributions
Contributing to a qualified retirement plan before year-end is one of the most powerful ways to legally reduce your taxable income. The money you contribute reduces your gross income dollar for dollar, and it grows tax-deferred until you withdraw it in retirement.
For self-employed business owners and LLC owners, the two most popular options are the SEP IRA and the Solo 401(k).
A SEP IRA allows self-employed individuals to contribute up to 25 percent of their net self-employment income, with a maximum contribution limit that the IRS adjusts annually for inflation. For 2026, check the IRS retirement plan contribution limits page for the most current figures before making your contribution.
A Solo 401(k) is often even more powerful for business owners because it allows both an employee contribution and an employer contribution to the same account. The combined limit is significantly higher than a SEP IRA for many business owners, making it the preferred choice for those who want to maximize their retirement savings and minimize their tax bill simultaneously.
The key advantage here is timing. SEP IRA contributions can be made up until your tax filing deadline, including extensions, but Solo 401(k) plans must be established by December 31 of the tax year, even if contributions can be made later. If you do not yet have a Solo 401(k) and want to use it for 2026, act before December 31.
4. Claim the Qualified Business Income Deduction
One of the most significant tax benefits available exclusively to small business owners, freelancers, and self-employed professionals is the Qualified Business Income deduction, commonly known as the QBI deduction or the Section 199A deduction.
The QBI deduction allows eligible business owners to deduct up to 20 percent of their qualified business income from their taxable income. This deduction is available to sole proprietors, LLC owners, S-Corp shareholders, and partners in a partnership, provided their income falls within the applicable thresholds.
According to the IRS Section 199A guidance, the deduction phases out at higher income levels for owners of specified service trades or businesses such as law firms, medical practices, and financial advisory services. For other business types, the deduction may be available at higher income levels, subject to wage and property limitations.
Before year-end, review your projected net business income with a tax professional to determine whether you qualify for the full 20 percent QBI deduction and whether any planning moves, such as adjusting owner draws or timing income and expenses, can help you maximize it.
TaxMagic ensures that every eligible client claims the QBI deduction correctly and in full, which is one of the most commonly missed deductions among self-filing business owners.
5. Use the Home Office Deduction If You Qualify

If you operate your business from a dedicated space in your home, the home office deduction can reduce your taxable income meaningfully before year-end. This deduction is available to self-employed individuals and LLC owners who use part of their home regularly and exclusively for business purposes.
The IRS offers two calculation methods. The simplified method allows a deduction of $5 per square foot of your home office space up to 300 square feet, for a maximum deduction of $1,500. The regular method calculates the actual percentage of your home used for business and applies that percentage to your actual home expenses, including rent or mortgage interest, utilities, insurance, and repairs.
For many business owners, the regular method produces a larger deduction but requires more recordkeeping. TaxMagic helps clients calculate both methods and select the one that produces the maximum benefit for their specific situation.
6. Hire Family Members as Legitimate Business Employees
If your business genuinely needs help and you have family members who can perform real work, hiring them before year-end can be a smart tax strategy. When you pay a family member a reasonable wage for legitimate services, that payment is a deductible business expense for you and is taxed at their income rate, which may be significantly lower than yours.
Hiring your minor children is a particularly effective strategy for sole proprietors and single-member LLCs. Children under 18 who work for a parent-owned business are exempt from Social Security and Medicare taxes, and their standard deduction shelters a portion of their wages from income tax entirely.
The IRS provides specific guidance on the rules for hiring family members, including what constitutes legitimate employment and what documentation is required. The key requirement is that the work must be real, the wage must be reasonable for the work performed, and proper payroll records must be maintained.
TaxMagic helps clients structure family employment arrangements correctly so the deduction is fully defensible and compliant with IRS requirements.
7. Claim Every Available Business Tax Credit
Tax deductions reduce your taxable income. Tax credits reduce your actual tax bill dollar for dollar, making them even more valuable. Before year-end, review whether your business qualifies for any of the major business tax credits available in 2026.
The Research and Development Tax Credit, also called the R&D Tax Credit, is available to businesses that develop new products, improve existing processes, or engage in technical experimentation. Many small business owners do not realize that this credit applies to a wide range of industries far beyond traditional technology companies.
The Energy Efficient Commercial Buildings deduction and related energy credits provide incentives for businesses that make qualifying energy improvements to their facilities. If your business owns or leases commercial space and has made energy-related upgrades during 2026, these credits may apply.
The Work Opportunity Tax Credit rewards businesses that hire employees from certain targeted groups, including veterans, long-term unemployment recipients, and individuals transitioning from government assistance programs.
Each of these credits has specific eligibility requirements and documentation standards. TaxMagic conducts a comprehensive credit review for every business client to ensure no available dollar-for-dollar reduction is overlooked.
8. Harvest Tax Losses Before December 31
If your business holds investments or assets that have declined in value during 2026, selling those assets before December 31 allows you to recognize the loss and use it to offset capital gains elsewhere in your return. This strategy is known as tax loss harvesting.
For businesses that have realized significant capital gains during the year from selling property, equipment, or investments, identifying offsetting losses before year-end can dramatically reduce the net gain that is subject to tax.
Tax loss harvesting requires careful coordination to avoid the IRS wash sale rule, which disallows a loss if you repurchase the same or a substantially identical asset within 30 days before or after the sale. TaxMagic helps clients execute loss harvesting strategies correctly and in compliance with all applicable IRS rules.
9. Make Charitable Contributions in the Name of Your Business
If your business is a C-Corporation, charitable contributions made before December 31 are directly deductible as a business expense up to 10 percent of your taxable income. For pass-through entities, including LLCs, S-Corps, and sole proprietorships, charitable deductions flow through to your personal return and are claimed as itemized deductions.
Timing charitable giving strategically before year-end ensures the deduction falls in the current tax year. Donating appreciated assets such as stock or real property rather than cash can also produce additional tax advantages by allowing you to deduct the full fair market value of the asset while avoiding capital gains tax on the appreciation.
TaxMagic helps business owners structure charitable giving strategies that align their philanthropic goals with their tax planning objectives.
10. Review Your Business Structure Before Year-End
The legal structure of your business has a direct and significant impact on how much tax you pay. Year-end is an ideal time to review whether your current structure is still the most tax-efficient option for your income level and business goals.
For LLC owners generating consistent net profits above $50,000 per year, electing S-Corporation tax treatment can reduce self-employment taxes significantly. Under an S-Corp election, you pay yourself a reasonable salary and take additional profits as owner distributions that are not subject to the 15.3 percent self-employment tax.
If you have been operating as a sole proprietor and your income has grown substantially, forming an LLC and evaluating an S-Corp election before the new year may reduce your 2027 tax burden from day one.
According to the IRS Business Structures guidance, the tax implications of different business structures vary significantly, and making changes at the right time in the calendar year is important for maximizing the benefit.
TaxMagic conducts entity structure reviews for clients at year-end to identify whether a change in structure would produce meaningful savings and handles all required filings if a change makes sense.
Year-End Business Tax Planning Checklist for 2026

Before December 31, make sure you have addressed the following items. Accelerate any deductible expenses that can be paid before year-end. Confirm that all qualifying equipment purchases are placed in service before December 31 to qualify for Section 179. Establish a Solo 401(k) if you plan to use one for 2026. Calculate your projected QBI deduction eligibility. Review family employment arrangements and ensure payroll is documented. Identify any capital losses that can be harvested before year-end. Make any planned charitable contributions before December 31. Review your business structure with a tax professional to evaluate whether changes make sense for 2027.
Final Thoughts
The strategies outlined in this guide are all completely legal, IRS-compliant, and used by smart business owners across the United States every single year. The difference between business owners who pay too much in taxes and those who do not is rarely luck. It is planning, timing, and professional guidance.
Every strategy in this guide has a deadline of December 31, 2026. After that date, the opportunity is gone for another year.
TaxMagic is here to help you implement every applicable strategy before the clock runs out. Whether you need a comprehensive year-end tax planning review, help with retirement account setup, entity structure analysis, or simply a second set of expert eyes on your return, our team is ready to help.
Contact TaxMagic today and make sure 2026 is the year you stop overpaying and start keeping more of what you earn.

