149motorsports
New Member
I was just looking through my quickbooks expenses and saw they had sales tax as a write off, is this true, i can write my quarterly sales tax off? my accountant never told me this:Oops:
i use the cash method...i pay sales tax to the state 4 times a yr, basically every 3 months Jan 1 to March 31,ect.
This may be dumb question, but i took the total sales from jan 1 to march 31 2008, and paid the 7% sales tax (quarter 1). now i would take the sales from April 1 to june 30 2008 (quarter 2)and pay the 7% sales tax on the amount correct? i know not all of us have the same schedule,ect. thanks!
You can write it off if you count the collection of it in sales. The reason for this would be if your state, like most, allows you a small discount for collecting their tax for them. That way the discount you take is what's left and counted as profit.
For example, in my state the rate is 6.5% and we get a 2% fee of the tax collected for collecting and reporting. Therefore on $1000 in taxable sales I actually charge $1065.00. The report goes like so:
Total sales = $1000.00
Tax Collected = $65.00
Total Sales with Tax = $1065.00
Total Due Dept of Revenue = $65.00
Dealer Discount = $1.30
Amount Enclosed = $63.70
Quickbooks Accounting would go like so:
Gross Sales with Tax = $1065.00 (Credit)
Gross Tax Remitted = $63.70 (Debit)
Gross Sales = $1001.30
Holy Moly! We've been paying sales tax to the good old state of Florida for 21 years and had no idea this existed. I guess I need to check with my CPA and see if we can do the same, and why I didn't know about this sooner!
Think we are talking two diffenent credits. The collection credit should be part of you tax return calculations. The credit for tax paid on a product and charged again is another.
Bought roll vinyl $100 + $7.00 tax. $7.00 expense. Sold vinyl $110. Tax $7.70 owe $.70 additional. Will usually show $110. sales and pay $7.70 in taxes again, meaning on $100. vinyl paid $14.70 in tax..OMO
Think we are talking two diffenent credits. The collection credit should be part of you tax return calculations. The credit for tax paid on a product and charged again is another.
Bought roll vinyl $100 + $7.00 tax. $7.00 expense. Sold vinyl $110. Tax $7.70 owe $.70 additional. Will usually show $110. sales and pay $7.70 in taxes again, meaning on $100. vinyl paid $14.70 in tax..OMO
You should not be paying tax on your supplies, at least not in Florida. Your suppliers should have a copy of your sales tax certificate. Otherwise the state would collect tax twice on the products you sell, I think double taxation is illegal.
i was talking about if i sold a decal for 100$ and tax was 7$, total $107.00..would the $7.00 i owe to the state be a write off or not?
Write-offs are amounts that can be charged off against gross reciepts. (gross income) Since the tax you collect is not in that column (reciepts) there is no writing it off.
You are merely acting as an agent of the state. A trustee if you will. The money is not yours, but theirs. You're holding it until you remit it to the Dept. of Revenue, or whatever it's called in your state.
I hope that's clear.
I stand corrected. The discount is actually 2.5%. Your accountant has either been handling that for you without you knowing it or you should refile for as far back as the Dept. of Revenue will allow. If you haven't been taking it, you might want to shop for a new accountant.