Succession Planning

WARNING: Passing Your Business to a Family Member or Associate Can Be a Risky Proposition.

7 out of 10 family owned businesses will not survive the transfer of the business from one generation to another. Lack of planning and discomfort discussing topics such as aging, death, and financial affairs will more often than not result in loss of a business due to estate taxes, family discord, or some combination thereof.

If you want to assure that the business you worked so hard to build will be there to support future generations, you must clarify your plans for succession and finalize, as well as legalize your priorities.

Get professional advice for dealing with these key issues and more…

What will happen to your business?

9

Do you wish to keep it in the family, sell it to a third party or pass it on in some other manner?

We can help you weigh the advantages and disadvantages of each of your options, as well as help you determine how the business can best provide for you as you enter your retirement years.

How can you minimize the tax burden upon transfer?

9

When businesses transfer ownership, taxes are a reality regardless of the relationship between the parties. Review your options with an expert in the field in order to make the decisions that will best support your family members and the business.

If you are not running the business, who is?

9

Ownership of the business and management of the business are often two distinctly separate entities.

How will your retirement or death affect the day-to-day decision making of how the business is run?

Will your children take active roles in the running the business, or will they exist as owners only?

Clarifying your expectations in legal terms and making these decisions in advance will help ease the transition of ownership, as well as management, without further risk of detriment to the business as a whole.

Remember that inherited assets, such as family businesses, are often the cause of tremendous emotional strain and stress for individual family members. It is best to address any actions that might be seen as fair or unfair ahead of time, so that family members know what to expect and why you are making the decisions that you are making.

They may not realize, for instance, that the tax implications of inheriting a business might be more burden than they could financially handle or that decisions involving management vs. ownership have been taken into account.

Contact us about our Succession Planning Services to determine the value of your business, before restructuring your business, to review the tax consequences and tax projections of your actions, and to help you plan for retirement.

Let Us Help:

What Payroll Checklist Steps Do Rockville, MD Business Owners Need to Complete for Clean Data?

Key TakeawaysFocus on data integrity. Ensure payroll wages, taxes, benefits, and GL postings are clean, consistent, and reconciled. Your tax preparer depends on one crucial “three-way match”: W-2 totals, Form 941 totals, and the General Ledger wage expense should...

Rockville, MD Small Business Holiday Expenses: What Can I Deduct On Taxes?

Key TakeawaysCompany-wide holiday parties for employees (categorized as Employee Recreation/Entertainment) are generally 100% deductible, but confirm with your CPA. Meals with clients must be logged separately as Client Meals. Your tax preparer will apply the 50%...

Can Rockville, MD Investors Use Losses To Lower Capital Gains Federal Tax?

Key TakeawaysYou can sell losing investments to realize a capital loss that offsets taxable gains. If your losses exceed gains, you can deduct up to $3,000 against ordinary income ($1,500 if married filing separately). Unused losses carry forward...

Mary Salloom’s Perspective: What Are The Most Important Cybersecurity Measures for Small Businesses?

Key Takeaways Create a written data protection policy. Every employee should know the rules for handling sensitive data. Back up data regularly with secure cloud services or encrypted physical backups. Encrypt everything so stolen data is useless to...

Can End-Of-The-Year Giving Mean Tax Deductions For My Rockville, MD Business?

Key TakeawaysWhen your business gives back, make sure it’s documented correctly so your tax professional can secure any potential tax benefits.  Charitable contributions to qualified 501(c)(3) organizations can be deductible. Marketing-related giving...

The Work Opportunity Tax Credit: Year-End Hiring Benefit for Rockville, MD Businesses

Key TakeawaysYes, the WOTC applies if you hire someone before December 31, 2025.  You must submit IRS Form 8850 to your State Workforce Agency (SWA) within 28 days of the new employee’s start date. The potential tax savings can be worth up to $2,400 per...

Why Cash Flow Management Is Important At Year-End in Your Rockville, MD Business

Key Takeaways Profit doesn’t equal liquidity: You can look great on paper (i.e., profitable) and still run out of cash. Year-end cash flow management is about accelerating what comes in and strategically optimizing (delaying) what goes out (legally, of...

What Year-End Moves Can Protect Rockville, MD Owners From Form W9 Mistakes?

Key TakeawaysKeep every contractor’s Form W9 on file before the first payment. If your contractor won’t give you a W9, follow the three-step written request process to prove due diligence. Use the IRS TIN Matching tool before filing your 1099s to verify...

Changing Your Business Entity Means Smarter Profits, Rockville, MD Owners

Quick Summary: Could Changing My Business Entity Mean Smarter Profits?If you’re a Sole Proprietor or single-member LLC, you’re likely paying a hefty 15.3% Self-Employment (SE) tax on 100% of your profit. Electing S-Corp status splits your income between...

Smart Accounting For Rockville, MD Small Businesses in 2025

Quick Summary: What Smart Accounting For Small Businesses Looks Like In 2025Call your CPA/tax advisor before making financial moves to avoid missed deductions or costly surprises… and ask your bookkeeper to prep clean, current numbers so that advice is...

Ready to come in for an appointment?

Click here to schedule a time to meet with us. We will NOT make dealing with a tax professional as painful as it’s been in the past!