Tax Strategy W-2 and LLC

Tax strategy W-2 and LLC

I am gonna be making 500K this year, 300K on W2 and 200K on LLC single member. I have maxed out my 401k and HSA. Is there something that I could do cut down my tax bill. My tax is estimated to be around 150K.  I want to buy a car for business, 50k, 6k pounds. Can I expense 100% of it if I use a bit for my personal purposes? Are there other things that I can do to offset the taxes?

 Your Current Situation

• $300K W-2 income: no ability to deduct business expenses against this. Limited planning here.

• $200K LLC income (Schedule C): this is where all the planning opportunities exist.

• Already maxed 401(k) and HSA → good.

Your estimated tax liability at $500K is roughly $150K—this is normal.

 1. Can You Deduct the $50K SUV (6,000 lbs GVWR)?

Yes, if structured correctly.

✓ You CAN deduct 100% using Section 179 or 100% bonus depreciation IF:

1. The vehicle has > 50% business use, and

2. You track mileage to prove business vs personal use.

Business-use percentage matters

• If business use = 60%, then you can only deduct 60% of cost, even if the law allows 100%.

Example: $50,000 × 60% = $30,000 deduction.

SUV Rules

• Because the car is over 6,000 lbs GVWR, the IRS classifies it as “heavy SUV,” meaning:

• Section 179 allowed (up to $28,900 in 2025 for SUVs — depends on year).

• Bonus depreciation allowed but reduced (40% in 2025).

• Taxpayers usually combine:

• §179 up to limit,

• Bonus depreciation on remaining,

• Regular MACRS on the rest.

Bottom line:

🚗 If you really want a full-year big deduction, the SUV is still one of the easiest moves.

 2. Mega Tax Strategies for High Income (Given Your Profile)

Below are the strategies that actually move the needle for someone making $500K with mixed W-2 + business income.

🔥 2.1. Set Up a Solo 401(k) on the LLC (if not already)

You said your 401(k) is maxed — but:

Question:

Are you maxed as an employee, or as employer?

You can’t double-dip employee contributions between jobs, but you can make additional employer contributions from the LLC.

If your W-2 job only lets you contribute the employee portion:

• Max employee deferral = $23,000 (2025)

• Employer contribution can go up to 20% of net Schedule C income

• Total limit: $69,000 per person

So you may still be able to defer tens of thousands on the LLC side.

This is one of the biggest missed deductions I see.

🔥 2.2. Set Up an S-Corp for the LLC (if net profit > $150K)

With $200K LLC income as a Schedule C single-member LLC, you’re paying:

• 15.3% self-employment tax on most of that.

Switching to an S-Corp allows:

• Pay yourself a reasonable salary (say $100–130K)

• Distribute the rest as profit distributions (not subject to SE tax)

Potential savings:

💰 ~$10,000–25,000 per year.

This is a high-ROI structural change.

🔥 2.3. Augusta Rule (Section 280A)

You can rent your personal residence to your business 14 days/year at FMV rate and:

• It is deductible to the business

• Completely tax-free income to you

Typical deduction: $5,000–$12,000 depending on home value/location.

🔥 2.4. Home Office + Actual Expense Method

If you qualify:

• Depreciation

• Utilities

• Repairs

• Internet %

• HOA dues (if applicable)

• Part of mortgage interest + property taxes

This is usually $3K–$8K in real savings for high-income taxpayers.

🔥 2.5. Medical Expense Reimbursement Plan (MERP / 105-HRA)

If married and spouse works in the business:

• You employ the spouse

• Reimburse all family medical expenses tax-free

• Deductible to the business

Possible deduction: $10K–$20K depending on your healthcare usage.

🔥 2.6. Cost Segregation Study + Bonus Depreciation (If You Own Rental Property)

You didn’t mention rentals, but:

• A $300K–$600K property can often produce $50K–$120K in first-year bonus depreciation.

• If you or spouse qualify as Real Estate Professional (REP) → you can offset W-2 income as well.

Huge opportunity if applicable.

⚠️ What You CANNOT Do

• You cannot write off a vehicle used mostly for personal purposes.

• You cannot deduct business expenses to offset W-2 income (employee ≠ business).

• You cannot “invent” losses without documentation.

• You cannot claim 100% vehicle deduction with <50% business use.

🎯 Your Best Moves (Ranked by Tax Impact)

1. Convert LLC to S-Corp → save $10K–$25K.

2. Add employer contributions to Solo 401(k) → maybe another $20K–$40K.

3. Buy the 6,000+ lb SUV and deduct business-use percentage → $20K–$40K deduction.

4. Use Augusta Rule → $5K–$12K.

5. Set up a MERP / 105 plan → $10K–$20K.

6. Home office actual expense → $3K–$8K.

These combined can often reduce a $150K tax bill by $30K–$80K depending on usage and structure.

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