⏱ 1h 13m
📚 8 lessons
🎧 Audio version
About this course
Once your self-employment income stabilizes and grows, the strategies available to you also expand. A solo freelancer earning $40,000 and a self-employed professional earning $150,000 face the same Schedule C but have very different strategic options. This course addresses the decisions that become relevant as income rises: choosing between retirement account types designed for the self-employed, evaluating whether a formal business entity changes your tax picture, and building proactive expense and income-timing strategies.
By the end of this course you will be able to evaluate the SEP-IRA and Solo 401(k) as retirement vehicles for self-employed individuals and calculate maximum contribution amounts for each, understand at a conceptual level how S-corporation election affects self-employment tax obligations and at what income level it becomes worth analyzing, implement income-timing and expense-timing strategies at year-end, and build a multi-year tax-reduction plan that integrates retirement contributions, deductions, and the QBI deduction.
What you will learn:
- SEP-IRA versus Solo 401(k): contribution limits, deadlines, and the Roth 401(k) option for the self-employed
- Calculating maximum Solo 401(k) contributions: employee and employer portions as a percentage of net self-employment income
- S-corporation election: what it changes about self-employment taxes, the reasonable salary requirement, and the income threshold where the analysis begins to make sense
- Income timing strategies: deferring December invoices, timing year-end client billing, and the effect on QBI and SE tax
- Year-end expense acceleration: prepaying deductible expenses before December 31
- The QBI deduction at higher income levels: W-2 wage and capital limitations for specified service trades
- Integrating retirement contributions with the QBI deduction: how large SE retirement contributions reduce QBI and net SE income simultaneously
- Building a multi-year self-employment tax projection worksheet
The course uses detailed case studies — a freelance consultant at $90,000 net income and a self-employed physician at $250,000 — to illustrate how each strategy applies at different income levels. Planning worksheets accompany each module, and reflection prompts ask you to identify which strategies are relevant to your current income level and near-term trajectory.
This course is designed for established self-employed professionals and small business owners whose income has grown to the point where basic recordkeeping is no longer sufficient. Suitable for those who already understand Schedule C and want to move toward deliberate tax minimization. This course is informational and educational; it does not substitute for advice from a licensed CPA or tax attorney familiar with your business structure and state tax obligations.
What you'll get
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📜
Certificate of completion
Add it to your LinkedIn profile
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🎧
Audio version included
Learn on the go — no screen needed
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♾️
Lifetime access
Come back anytime, no expiry
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📱
Phone or computer
Works anywhere, any device
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💸
30-day refund
No questions asked
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⚡
Short & focused
1h 13m of practical content
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Frequently asked
What do I need to take this course?
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Just a phone or computer with internet. No installs, no special hardware.
How do I pay?
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By card via Stripe, or with cryptocurrency. We do not store card details — Stripe handles them securely.
Can I get a refund?
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Yes — full refund within 30 days, no questions asked.
How long will I have access?
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Forever. Once you purchase, the course is yours to revisit anytime.
Will I get a certificate?
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Yes. On completion you'll receive a certificate you can add to your LinkedIn profile.
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