『18 Common Tax Mistakes Physicians Make (Part 1): The Quiet Errors That Create Massive Tax Bills, Ep #048』のカバーアート

18 Common Tax Mistakes Physicians Make (Part 1): The Quiet Errors That Create Massive Tax Bills, Ep #048

18 Common Tax Mistakes Physicians Make (Part 1): The Quiet Errors That Create Massive Tax Bills, Ep #048

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概要

Physicians are some of the highest earners in the country—and often some of the biggest overpayers in taxes. Not because they lack intelligence or discipline, but because the tax code punishes complexity. Multiple income streams, inconsistent withholding, overlooked deductions, and misunderstood retirement strategies quietly create five-figure mistakes that compound over time. This episode kicks off a three-part series based on Tyler Olson's widely shared thread outlining 18 of the most common tax mistakes physicians make each year. Part 1 tackles five of the most frequent and costly errors—many of which stem from coordination problems rather than aggressive tax planning. Looking for help with Disability Insurance, Physician Banking, Student Loan Refinancing, Physician Mortgages, Contract Reviews, and more? Check out our "Best of the Best" sponsors page to find a list of the professionals Chad & Tyler team up with for their clients. You will want to hear this episode if you are interested in... [05:00] Not planning for multiple income types (W2 + 1099 + bonuses) [12:45] When an S-Corp election makes sense—and when it doesn't [19:30] Missing easy 1099 deductions like CME, licenses, and travel [27:10] Quarterly payments and how underpayment penalties really work [36:20] The Pro Rata rule and why it ruins so many Backdoor Roth IRAs Multi-Income Physicians: Where Withholding Breaks Down One of the most common physician tax mistakes is assuming payroll withholding is "handling it." Each income source calculates withholding independently. A university paycheck does not account for income from a physician group. Neither accounts for 1099 consulting. And 1099 income itself has no withholding at all. Bonuses create an additional trap. Productivity bonuses are often withheld at a flat 22%, which may be significantly lower than a physician's actual marginal rate. The result is a surprise balance due—even when it feels like plenty has already been paid throughout the year. The solution is coordination: projecting income early, reviewing pay stubs, and adjusting W4 elections or adding additional withholding before year-end. Without proactive adjustments, physicians can face large balances due along with unnecessary penalties. S-Corps: A Strategy That Requires Math, Not Hype The S-Corp conversation has become increasingly popular online, often framed as a guaranteed tax win once 1099 income reaches a certain threshold. The reality is more nuanced. Yes, S-Corps can reduce self-employment taxes under the right circumstances. But those savings must exceed the added costs of payroll services, separate business tax filings, and ongoing administrative work. In some states, additional business taxes materially reduce the benefit. This is not a default move—it is a numbers-driven decision. Physicians should evaluate projected tax savings against professional fees and state-level implications before electing S-Corp status. Without that analysis, complexity can increase without meaningful benefit. Quarterly Taxes and the Backdoor Roth Trap Physicians earning locums or moonlighting income frequently miss quarterly estimated payments. The IRS expects taxes to be paid throughout the year, not in a single lump sum at filing. Even if the full balance is eventually paid, penalties can apply if payments were not made on time. Quarterly estimated payments—due in April, June, September, and January—help prevent underpayment penalties. In some cases, increasing W2 withholding can simplify the process and reduce the need to manage separate payments. The final major mistake covered in Part 1 involves the Backdoor Roth IRA. High-income physicians often attempt this strategy while holding pre-tax balances in traditional IRAs, rollover IRAs, SEP IRAs, or SIMPLE IRAs. When those balances exist, the Pro Rata rule applies, causing part of the Roth conversion to become taxable. Before executing a Backdoor Roth, pre-tax IRA balances should typically be moved into a 401(k), 403(b), or Solo 401(k) if eligible. Skipping that step can create unnecessary taxes and undermine the intended benefit of the strategy. These five mistakes share a common theme: the fundamentals matter. When income streams are coordinated, elections are evaluated carefully, and compliance is respected, physicians retain more of what they earn. Resources Mentioned IRS Direct Pay – https://www.irs.gov/payments/direct-pay Connect with Tyler and Chad WealthKeel LLCOlson Consulting LLCTyler Olson on XChad Chubb X Subscribe to Physician Cents Apple Podcasts Audio Production and Show Notes by - PODCAST FAST TRACK
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