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Managing the Ups & Downs of Irregular Income

When your income stream is uneven, you must deal with some distinct financial issues.

What do you do when you’re self-employed or commission-reliant?

When your income stream is uneven, you must deal with some distinct financial issues. Besides cash flow, what do you do about your tax strategy? How should you try to save? If you are self-employed, what about health coverage?

Budgeting. One significant financial detail in your life probably won’t fluctuate – the amount of money that you need to live on per month. A detailed monthly budget is essential. Maybe you need (or want) to pay for 17 expenses in your life per month. In some months, you may be able to easily pay for all 17. In other months, you may be able to pay for only 12. The key is to list them in order of priority, from the crucial to the near-frivolous. List every expense you can think of and rank them in order. Arranging automated bill paying may be useful if you are looking at several fixed monthly debts you will have for the long run.

Managing taxes. Sans withholding, you must be disciplined. If you are self-employed and your income is predictable, you can estimate taxes and arrange quarterly payments to the IRS (take a look at Form 1040-ES, Estimated Tax for Individuals.) For the record, the IRS says you don’t have to make quarterly tax payments until you actually have the corresponding income.1

Estimating tax becomes much tougher, however, when your income stream is inconsistent or if you have multiple income streams. If you underestimate your quarterly payments, you must pay interest. Schedule AI of Form 2210 (found in IRS Publication 505) can be a great help here – as complex as it appears, it is a solid way to document and calculate estimated quarterly payments when your income fluctuates. (If you are a self-employed fisherman or farmer, special rules apply.)1,2

Legions of freelancers neglect to set money aside for taxes. It might be wise to set up a savings account dedicated to that purpose, so you don’t have hassles come April.

Managing savings. Saving when your income rises and falls is challenging, but not impossible. After you meet your expenses in a particular month, there may be little or nothing left – but you have to take a little bit of the little and save it, and commit yourself to saving much more in good months.

One radical approach might help you ramp up your savings: austerity. Let’s say you decide not to spend a dime on golf for six months, or eating out. Voila – more money can potentially go into your savings, or into investing.

Another, less radical approaches: take $1,000 (or even $500, if the institution permits) and put it into a short-term CD. Or take $50 a month (or your bonus) and put into investments. Or put extra funds toward your mortgage. If your arrangement is salary + commissions, you could elect to live off your salary and invest or save your commissions if your salary permits that.

You won’t have an employer-sponsored 401(k) or 403(b) plan at your disposal, but you can invest through traditional and Roth IRAs – and if the annual contribution limits seem low, you could look at creating a SEP, Solo(k) or Keogh plan for yourself.

Arranging health insurance. It isn’t 2014 yet, so like many self-employed Americans you may be faced with paying three or four times the premiums for health insurance than you would as a “captive.” According to Gallup, a record 17.1% of self-employed individuals lacked health insurance in 2011 – not surprising.3,4

Still, there ways to sustain and/or arrange health coverage. If you are leaving a salaried position to go solo, COBRA can extend coverage for 18 months. About one-quarter of U.S. firms still offer some level of retiree health benefits, and roughly one-sixth extend group health benefits to part-time workers.3

If you have a pre-existing condition, some states have high-risk pool programs and all states have PCIPs (pre-existing condition insurance plans) for which you might be eligible (see statehealthfacts.org for more).3

You might also be able to get coverage through a family coverage option in your spouse’s plan, or via a professional or trade group you have joined. Hiring an employee might allow you to qualify for a small business group plan (talk with an insurance professional to determine your options).3

Do you work for yourself and pay for your health insurance? In 2012, the IRS will let you deduct 100% of the cost of those health insurance premiums from your taxable income (the deduction is not subject to the 7.5% AGI limitation). You do this on the first page of Form 1040. Notably, the IRS defines sole proprietors, partners, members of LLCs and anyone with more than a 2% share in a S-Corp whose underlying personal service activity represents a material income-producing factor as “self-employed”.3,5

Jeffrey Christakos, CPA, CFP®, CLU, AIF® is President of Westfield Wealth Management and a Registered Principal offering securities through UNITED PLANNERS FINANCIAL SERVICES, a Limited Partnership, Member FINRA, SIPC.  Jeffrey Christakos, CPA, CFP®, CLU, AIF® may be reached at 908-654-4784 and via email at jeff@westfieldwealth.com


This material was prepared by MarketingLibrary.Net Inc., and does not necessarily represent the views of United Planners. Marketing Library.Net Inc. is not affiliated with any broker or brokerage firm that may be providing this information to you. All information is believed to be from reliable sources; however we make no representation as to its completeness or accuracy. Please note - investing involves risk, and past performance is no guarantee of future results. The publisher is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting or other professional services. If assistance is needed, the reader is advised to engage the services of a competent professional. This information should not be construed as investment, tax or legal advice and may not be relied on for the purpose of avoiding any Federal tax penalty. This is not a solicitation or a recommendation to purchase or sell any investment or insurance product or service, and should not be relied upon as such. All indices are unmanaged and are not illustrative of any particular investment.

 

Citations.

1 – www.irs.gov/businesses/small/article/0,,id=110413,00.html/ [2/24/12]

2 - www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f2210.pdf [2011]

3 - www.forbes.com/sites/kerryhannon/2012/01/04/the-best-ways-to-find-health-insurance-if-you-are-self-employed-in-2012/ [1/4/12]

4 - www.hrmorning.com/workers-covered-by-company-health-plans-hits-new-low/ [4/6/12]

5 - www.berrydunn.com/resources-detail/heres-a-tip-on-how-to-deduct-your-health-insurance-premiums [1/11/12]

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Deborah Bell (Editor) June 18, 2013 at 11:48 am
You're welcome! I'm sure you'll enjoy these boards a lot.
CowDung June 18, 2013 at 04:26 pm
The trouble is, that once the 'boards' are off the front page, one can't follow the discussion. TheRead More 'shout stream' has gone away with the redesign of Patch. The 'reply' feature has also gone. Somehow I don't see these boards as being all that useful for public discussion and interaction. The more effective place is on the articles themselves--they get more page space, and they tend to have a more 'discussion friendly' topic for conversation than the random board postings.
Karen Egert June 18, 2013 at 06:06 pm
I agree -- they should have a separate tab for Letters to the Editor
Rob Goldstein June 14, 2013 at 02:53 pm
Karen Egert, were you opposed to the DARE program that was in effect a few years ago? The DARERead More officer (whether it was a uniformed officer or detective) always carried his or her duty firearm in the school and was at each school on a weekly basis.
karen egert June 14, 2013 at 03:01 pm
Apparently Mr. Common Sense you were not at the Board meeting because if you were you would knowRead More that it was clearly outlined that all decisions and reporting of this police officer will be from the police department -- not the school. So are you saying that Lucy Biegler is now the new spokeswoman ? You said she is calling out the position for what it REALLY is ? The discrepancy in outlined roles and the vagueness of this position is reason enough to question it. Ofcourse you have an opinion , but because our children will be directly affected I think our concerns should be heavily weighed . .
karen egert June 14, 2013 at 03:05 pm
Rob -- to answer your question , I was never crazy about the DARE program and yes , I was disturbedRead More that the officer carrying a gun in school . I didn't like it . So I am being consistent. I was new to the school at the time .
Charles Sullivan June 12, 2013 at 05:28 pm
Maddy, Thank you for your comment and I agree that's a lot of money. I just wanted to let you knowRead More that I wanted to give the board some options to consider in case they felt the need to hire a hybrid public safety officer with experience in security operations. Does the town need one, maybe. Can the WPD do more in regards to daily school security, yes I think so but they don't have to assign a cop they already have on the books for this activity. Thank you again for time.
New perspective June 13, 2013 at 02:45 pm
Mr. Sullivan - thank you for your lengthy explanation and detail. I think one of the statements youRead More made should speak volumes to all "Resource officers are proactive, and they can stop something before it starts, Police Officers are re-active and they respond to locations to enforce the law." Do we really want an armed officer in the school who MAY react to let's say someone who has a watergun but the police officer *thinks* it is a real gun at first quick glance? This happens everyday thoughout this country all by accident. Do we really need WHS to be another statistic? Here's another question....why just have an SRO at the High School? Aren't the middle school aged children MORE prone to peer pressure and stress that can cause them to want to harm others as a reaction? In my Non-Professional opinion, middle school aged kids are more of a danger than High School kids.
John Q. Public June 14, 2013 at 11:17 am
Mr. Sullivan, I believe I read that the SRO position had been eliminated for budgetary reasons inRead More the past but that doesn't really address the first issue I mentioned, nor does your comment about having external foot patrols. (As an aside, I believe the crossing guard in the morning at the corner where the auditorium is is a regular sworn police officer). In addition, I see the presence or lack of such external patrols and the lack of coverage if a single SRO has a sick day as logistical issues that can be worked out as opposed to legitimate objections. I don't really see these as evidence going against the SRO concept.
concerned citizen June 11, 2013 at 08:03 pm
Egert is just against guns, that's it. Everything has to fit into this, her small world, and sheRead More tries hard to make it fit, squeezes it, bends it and massages it. She gets help from the elitist billionaire Nanny Bloomberg for the talking points, but he has none regarding this specific topic, so she flounders.
john June 11, 2013 at 10:28 pm
Karen, karen, karen. it is to easy. never mind.
karen egert June 15, 2013 at 10:28 pm
GGG - I have nothing against the Westfield police . On the contrary, on the few occasions I hadRead More interactions with any of them., they were all professional , courteous and very helpful . I am grateful for our Westfield police . I believe that the wonderful job they do as trained police officers is spectacular . I just disagree with the use of a police officer that has only been trained in the duties of an SRO for 7 to 10 days to be the ones counseling our children. . But please don't say I'm against police officers . That's inaccurate and unfair .
karen egert June 11, 2013 at 01:38 am
Thank you Matt for working to represent the third ward . If elected I hope you will work to moveRead More the traffic light on Central Ave that is literally on a resident's driveway . It also flashes as soon as it turns red . As my street is one block from there , I often see residents walking across the crosswalk while the lights are flashing . It doesn't make sense and it's dangerous . Putting that light there is also a terrible thing to do to that resident in our Third Ward . It's wrong and we need it moved .