Blog » After the Deadline: 6 After-Tax Season Financial Moves Most Entrepreneurs Forget

After the Deadline: 6 After-Tax Season Financial Moves Most Entrepreneurs Forget

adding with a calculator with money in hand; After-Tax Season Financial Moves Most Entrepreneurs Forget
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You’ve filed your 1040, your accountant has stopped ducking your calls, and either you’ve sent a painful wire to the Treasury, or you’ve gotten a refund. But what’s next? For most entrepreneurs, April 15th (or the October extension deadline) marks the end of a financially stressful season. As a result, you might think it’s time to sit back and relax.

The reality? The day after you file is arguably the most important of your financial year — especially if you need to figure out what to do if you owe taxes.

Most business owners spend tax season cataloging the expenses of a year that has already passed. But wealthy entrepreneurs take advantage of the immediate post-tax window to adjust the windshield. This year, avoid the same “tax surprise” by executing these six often-overlooked financial maneuvers to build actual, spendable wealth.

1. Perform a “Tax Leak” Audit

Most entrepreneurs focus on compliance when they’re rushing to meet the deadline. However, now is the time for optimization. What is the best way to do this? Review your tax filings to look for “tax leaks.”

Have you ignored your home office deduction out of fear of an audit? Last year, did you miss the Section 179 depreciation opportunity? And, more importantly, look at your Effective Tax Rate versus your Marginal Tax Rate.

If your business structure does not match your revenue, you may be paying a high effective rate. When you exceed $100,000 in profits and still operate as a simple LLC, you might be overpaying self-employment taxes. As such, to potentially save thousands in FICA taxes, discuss an S-Corp election with your CPA this month.

2. Front-Load Your Retirement Contributions

Typically, entrepreneurs don’t contribute to their retirement accounts until the following April. In terms of opportunity cost, this is a huge mistake.

The more time you wait to fund your Solo 401(k) or SEP IRA, the more time you lose out on compound growth. Rather than playing catch-up for 2025, automate your contributions for 2026 post-tax season.

  • The move. Set up a recurring monthly transfer. To reach the Solo 401(k) max, split it up into 12 manageable chunks.
  • The bonus. Don’t forget your Health Savings Account (HSA) if you have a high-deductible health plan. After all, there’s no other triple-tax-advantaged vehicle available. Instead of letting it sit in cash, max it out early and invest the balance.

3. Re-Evaluate Your Quarterly Estimated Payments

You can avoid penalties by following safe harbor rules, but they may not support cash flow. Paying 100% of last year’s tax liability could strain your business or result in a large bill next April, depending on your revenue expectations or seasonality.

Be careful not to blindly pay what your software tells you to pay. Review your projections for Q1 and Q2. You might have a lower tax liability if you’re pivoting your business model or investing heavily in R&D. On the other hand, if a new product line is taking off, you should start setting aside more money now. Ultimately, you want “precision,” not just “compliance.”

4. The “Subscription Scavenger Hunt”

You likely noticed a line item for “Dues and Subscriptions” on your Schedule C or corporate tax return. Usually, it’s higher than you expected. The reason? You can thank “subscription creep.”

Often, we sign up for services we never use. By the end of 2025, SaaS costs hit approximately $9,100 per employee, yet 52.7% of software licenses go unused over any 30-day period, costing the average company roughly $21 million per year.

As soon as tax season is over, you should audit your credit card statements and ruthlessly cancel any services that failed to generate a clear return on investment. If you’re not quite ready to discontinue a “ghost” subscription, consider switching to a monthly plan; removing the convenience of an annual billing cycle forces you to justify the expense manually each month.

5. Audit Your “Lifestyle Creep” vs. Business Reinvestment

When you get a tax refund or realize you had a more profitable year than expected, you may feel tempted to upgrade your lifestyle. You might want to spend more money on a new car, a bigger house, or a more expensive vacation.

The best entrepreneurs, however, treat tax clarity as an opportunity to reinvest. Is your “owner’s draw” increasing at the same rate as your revenue? If so, you may be experiencing lifestyle creep.

Right now, you should allocate a portion of your savings to an “Opportunity Fund” rather than investing in a personal upgrade. It’s not an emergency fund; it’s a war chest in case your competitor goes under, a key hire is available, or you discover a new marketing channel.

6. Update Your Estate and Succession Plan

We are often reminded of our mortality during tax season, at least financially. Many entrepreneurs, however, fail to take the next step to ensure that their business can survive without them.

What would happen if you disappeared tomorrow? Would your spouse or business partner have access to your Treasury Direct account? Can they find the operating agreement? Is your will in line with your company’s current valuation?

Take advantage of the momentum of having gathered all your financial documents to schedule a meeting with an estate attorney — and while you have that planning mindset, review these 7 things to think about this time of year. To ensure a seamless transition of your empire, make sure you’re titling your assets correctly (usually in a Revocable Living Trust).

The Bottom Line

Big wins or exits don’t determine an entrepreneur’s financial freedom; it’s determined by boring, tactical moves during the off-season.

Tax day is a look backward. Today is about looking forward. So dedicate 48 hours to becoming a “wealth builder” for yourself and your bank account.

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