The Tax Reduction Podcast

In this Tax Reduction Podcast episode, Chris Middleton breaks down three similar terms but delivers completely different results: 

tax preparation, 
tax planning, and 
tax strategy. 

Most business owners think their CPA is covering all three, but the truth is, most are only getting preparation. 

That means they are documenting their overpayment instead of fixing it.

Chris explains why planning is often too little too late, and why proper tax strategy is where the real savings are found. 

Using the CLEAR EDGE Framework, he shows how business owners can legally reduce their taxes by layering proactive strategies into every part of their financial picture.

If you have ever wondered whether your CPA is providing strategy or just paperwork, this episode will clarify the issue and provide a path forward.

Start building your own tax reduction system today at https://maketaxesfair.com
Join the free Tax Strategy Community on Skool at https://www.skool.com/tax-strategy-focus-system/about

Creators and Guests

Host
Chris Middleton
Chris Middleton is the chief tax strategist behind Make Taxes Fair and host of The Tax Reduction Podcast. With a degree in accounting from Sacramento State and years of experience translating complex tax law into actionable strategies, Chris helps business owners stop overpaying the IRS and reclaim more of their earnings. He brings clarity, mission, and a no-nonsense approach to every episode.

What is The Tax Reduction Podcast?

If you paid more than fifty thousand dollars in taxes last year, this podcast is for you. Make Taxes Fair built this show to help business owners stop overpaying the IRS and start keeping more of what they earn. Hosted by tax strategist Chris Middleton, every episode is short, direct, and focused on one legal move you can immediately use to cut your tax bill.

Most accountants and CPAs focus on filing history. That work matters, but it rarely reduces your future taxes. This podcast gives you the strategies, tools, and plain-language insights most accountants never share. Sometimes Chris will break it down solo. Other times, he’ll bring on guests with practical ways to save. Either way, the mission is to make your taxes fair and put more money back into your business and your pocket.

Subscribe now to The Tax Reduction Podcast and learn how to keep more of your earnings.

Intro:

If you paid more than $50,000 in taxes last year, you are in the right place. This is the tax reduction podcast powered by Make Taxes Fair. Hosted by tax strategist Chris Middleton, the show is designed for business owners who want to stop overpaying the IRS and keep more of their hard earned money. Every episode delivers targeted tax advice you can use to cut your tax bill and put more cash back into your business. No fluff, no gimmicks, just proven strategies most accountants never share.

Intro:

Now here's your host, Chris Middleton.

Chris Middleton:

Here's a tough but honest question. Is your CPA actually helping you reduce your taxes, or are they just filing your paperwork? Because if all they're doing is tax preparation and you think you're getting tax strategy, you could be overpaying the IRS by tens of thousands of dollars. And the worst part is you may not even realize it, and it's not your fault. Let me explain why.

Chris Middleton:

Today, we're gonna break down three terms that sound very similar but have totally different meanings. First is tax preparation. The next is tax planning, and the last is tax strategy. If you understand the difference between these three, you can take total control of your tax outcome both legally and ethically. So let's get into it.

Chris Middleton:

First up is tax preparation. This is what most CPAs do. It's the act of collecting your documents, putting the right numbers in the right boxes on the right forms, and filing your return with the government, the IRS, and the state. Preparation or what's called compliance is vitally important. Of course, we wanna do things the right way, but it's also looking in the rearview mirror.

Chris Middleton:

We're looking backwards. Right? It tells a story of what's already happened, but it doesn't necessarily change the ending. You hand your numbers over to your CPA. They organize the information, calculate what you owe, and that's it.

Chris Middleton:

There's usually not much either time to do forward thinking because if you're doing this in the middle of tax season or approaching a tax deadline, there's no time to talk about the future. There's no custom guidance given, and there's certainly no plan to reduce your future tax bill or do better than what we're doing now. The bottom line is tax preparation is about compliance, putting the right numbers in the right boxes to get an accurate result, not savings. If that's all you're relying on, you're documenting your overpayment, not fixing it. End of story.

Chris Middleton:

The next definition is tax planning. Let's talk about that. This is a step above tax preparation, and it's something that some CPAs are able to successfully offer and execute on. Planning involves looking at your current year and saying, okay. Based on how things are going, here's what your tax bill might look like at the end of the year, and here's how to avoid any nasty surprises.

Chris Middleton:

So maybe your CPA suggests a last minute contribution to your IRA or maxing out your retirement plan or some end of your purchases to boost your deductions. Right? Take advantage of bonus depreciation or something like that. That's better than doing nothing, but it's often too little too late. Why?

Chris Middleton:

Most tax planning is reactive and happens in the fourth quarter when more than 75% of the year is gone and likely 100% of your budget is already spent or allocated towards resources for your business. So by the time the fourth quarter rolls around, it's likely too late. And again, this is only focusing on this year. Tax planning helps to avoid panic, but it rarely creates permanent change. This is where tax strategy comes into play.

Chris Middleton:

Tax strategy is forward thinking. It's intentional. It's designed to minimize your tax burden both now and also over a period of time. This is where we like to live in and make taxes fair. This is where most CPAs don't go.

Chris Middleton:

With tax strategy, we use the tax code as a tool, not as a threat. How we use that is through the clear edge framework where we're able to evaluate your business for credits, tax credits you should be taking advantage of, legal structure, evaluating your legal structure for tax impact, employees, which is finding, retaining, and rewarding employees through the tax code accumulation of wealth, building wealth in tax advantage ways retirement planning, planning for retirement in tax advantage ways exit planning, minimizing the tax bite when you exit a business or another highly appreciated asset that you've built. Deduction optimization, confidently making sure that you're optimizing your deductions and ultimately efficiency, implementing tax strategies with systems that yield results year after year after year. Using the ClearEdge framework as our guide, we deliver tax strategy to you by evaluating how is your business structured and are there any changes to your business. This is something that can be done each and every quarter.

Chris Middleton:

Is your business growing? Is there a way that we need to offshoot a segment of your business into a new entity? Are we currently optimized with your legal structure? What fringe benefits should you be using? Maybe we've evaluated your business and said, hey.

Chris Middleton:

Here are some clear edge framework type fringe benefits that you could be using, but your cash flow wasn't quite there, and we opted to implement other strategies. So using the ClearEdge framework to revisit your business and look at how your business has grown gives us the opportunity to say, hey. Was there something that we didn't fully execute in the past that we could now? And are you eligible for credits? Right?

Chris Middleton:

Looking for credits that nobody has mentioned to you before. Yeah. This is where the clear edge framework comes into play. Maybe you're hiring now whereas you weren't in the past. So the workers opportunity tax credit could be a factor for you because you're expanding your team whereas before you weren't.

Chris Middleton:

Vitally important that you examine your situation through that framework that allows us to make sure that you're fully optimized. What is the trajectory of your business growth? Have changes happened since you last had your business run through a framework like the ClearEdge framework. We don't just look at what has happened, we design what happens next. That's tax strategy, and that's the difference between paying what you owe and leaving a tip to the government and overpaying by default.

Chris Middleton:

Let me show you what this looks like in a real world example. Right? A client of ours we had, we call him Mark, had a consulting business that he was running. With the ClearEdge framework, we were able to actively work with his tax situation and cut his tax bill by almost 65%, again using the ClearEdge framework and specifically the pillars of credits. We found tax credits that he wasn't using.

Chris Middleton:

Legal structure, we helped him tune up his legal structure for his business and fully leverage his S corporation. Employees to reward and retain his employees, retirement planning, bringing light to how his current retirement plan situation would help him reduce taxes, and deduction optimization. Right? We found him write offs that he had just flat out been missing. So it's only five of the nine pillars, and we cut his tax bill by almost 65%.

Chris Middleton:

Fast forward almost two years later, his business model had shifted, and he was spending less of his time in his own business. The business was almost running itself and Mark wanted to do other things with his time. So he started another business with his best friend. That's not uncommon for entrepreneurs to have more than one business venture going on. With this new venture, additional tax savings were found using the same five pillars credits, legal structure, employees, retirement planning, and deduction optimization But in addition, we're also able to apply the new pillar of exit planning with a strategy to help him structure the business the right way on the front end to be able to exit the business tax free if certain criteria were met.

Chris Middleton:

Given that they had projected the exit of the business to be between 6 to $10,000,000 in the next five years per partner, they were building up to that kind of valuation and exit. The clear edge framework and thinking proactively about the exit of the business will end up saving Mark in the neighborhood of about 2 and a half million dollars in taxes because we were able to strategize for the future. That's the power of strategy and thinking proactively. Let's address a couple of myths around tax strategy, right? Because these things come up frequently.

Chris Middleton:

Myth number one, my CPA handles everything. Well, if you're not meeting with your accountant more than once a year at tax filings, they cannot be up to date on what's happening in your business nor can they be proactively bringing you tax strategies throughout the year. They just don't know enough about what's going on right now and what's the trajectory. The scope of their activities preparing the tax return, which is, again, vitally important, but that is not tax strategy. Therefore, they can't be giving you tax advice that addresses the future.

Chris Middleton:

Myth number two, I don't make enough money to need tax strategy. So if you're earning 50,000 or more in net profit, you absolutely qualify for tax strategies that will reduce things like self employment tax, income tax, and help you build wealth. In fact, it's this foundational level where if you install tax strategy and the tax strategy mindset, you can actually reap rewards for years to come as you grow your business. There's never a wrong time to talk about tax savings, and the foundation is a great time. It's even a better time, unfortunately, if you've been wasting money on taxes for years, it's always a good time to talk about tax planning and strategy in terms of paying less to the government if you've grown to that point.

Chris Middleton:

But foundationally is a great time to start talking and planning and implementing tax strategies. Myth number three, tax strategies for the rich. Well, the rich become rich by using strategies early and often. You don't have to wait. And paying the ignorance tax overpaying them taxes because you don't know what you could be implementing in your business is wasteful.

Chris Middleton:

You don't have to be spending that money when you can be building your wealth, your family, your business instead of paying the government. Myth number four, tax strategy is too complicated. It can seem overwhelming. I get it. But the answer is no.

Chris Middleton:

It does not have to be overwhelming when you have a system like our ClearEdge framework and our FIRE method to walk you through one pillar at a time what you need to do to optimize your taxes. So let's break this down. Tax preparation is paperwork. Right? Tax planning is really prediction and where we think we're gonna end the year and what can we do to mitigate that.

Chris Middleton:

Tax strategy is an overarching plan that the elements when put in place can benefit you year over year over year. Preparation keeps you compliant. Planning avoids surprises. Strategy builds wealth and protects your profits. If you're serious about growing your business and keeping more of what you earn, you cannot rely on tax prep alone.

Chris Middleton:

You need a proactive system when this ethical, audit proof, and built to win. In our next episode, we're gonna be tackling one of the most common and most expensive tax mistakes that I see and we see in the profession, choosing the wrong legal structure. If you're operating as a sole proprietor or an LLC taxed as a disregarded entity or a partnership, you may be paying way more in self employment tax than you should. We're gonna break down s corporations, LLCs, and c corporations, and show you how to kinda know what is right for your business. So be sure to hit follow or subscribe so you don't miss that.

Chris Middleton:

And if you wanna know right now whether your current setup is costing you money with your relationship with your CPA, go to the taxreductionpodcast.com. Again, the taxreductionpodcast.com, and download our free tax strategy conversation guide that will help you have a conversation with yourself to evaluate. Do you have a proactive tax strategist, or do you have a happy historian who's helping you with your taxes? It's one checklist, a few minutes of your time, real answers. And, hey, if this episode made you think, hey, I need this, do a fellow business owner a favor.

Chris Middleton:

Share this with a friend because friends don't let friends overpay the government. Thank you as always for being here. Goodbye for now.

Intro:

That was today's play on the Tax Reduction Podcast with Chris Middleton. For step by step checklists, examples, and access to the tax savings communities, visit www.thetaxreductionpodcast.com. And remember, if you found this helpful, share this with a friend. Because friends don't let friends overpay the government. Don't give a massive tip to the IRS every year.

Intro:

Keep more of what you earn and join us next time on the Tax Reduction Podcast.