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What Records To Keep | ||||||||||||
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What kinds of records
should you be keeping? Supporting Business Documents Purchases, sales, payroll, and other transactions you have in your business will generate supporting documents such as invoices and receipts. Supporting documents include sales slips, paid bills, invoices, receipts, deposit slips, and canceled checks. These documents contain the information you need to record in your books. It is important to keep these documents because they support the entries in your books and on your tax return. You should keep them in an orderly fashion and in a safe place. For instance, organize them by year and type of income or expense. Gross receipts are the income you receive from your business. You should keep supporting documents that show the amounts and sources of your gross receipts like:
Purchases are the items you buy and resell to customers. If you are a manufacturer or producer, this includes the cost of all raw materials or parts purchased for manufacture into finished products. Your supporting documents should show the amount paid and that the amount was for purchases. Documents for purchases include the following:
Expenses are the costs you incur (other than purchases) to carry on your business. Your supporting documents should show the amount paid and that the amount was for a business expense. Documents for expenses include the following:
Travel, Transportation, Entertainment, and Gift ExpensesTaxpayers must show that the gift was ordinary and necessary to their profession. Taxpayers must further show the following elements: Cost, date, and description of the gift. Business purpose or reason for the gift, or nature of business benefit expected to be derived as a result of the gift. Occupation or other information relating to the recipient of the gift, including name, title, or other description sufficient to establish a business relationship to the taxpayer. In addition to the elements to be proved, the law limits the deduction to $25 per person per year. This limit does not apply to any item for general distribution which costs less than $4 and has the giver's name imprinted on it. Special recordkeeping rules apply to these expenses.
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