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    Home»Business»5 Tax Strategies Smart Founders Use to Protect Their Profits
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    5 Tax Strategies Smart Founders Use to Protect Their Profits

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteMay 13, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    When you’re building an e-commerce brand, your mind is usually focused on marketing funnels, customer acquisition costs and the next product launch. Taxes are often the last thing you want to think about.

    But the most successful e-commerce founders understand something important: tax strategy isn’t a once-a-year scramble in April. It’s part of running the business year-round. The goal isn’t just to grow revenue — it’s to protect profits. After all, it’s not about what you make; it’s about what you keep.

    As a CPA who works extensively with online sellers, I’ve seen both ends of the spectrum: entrepreneurs who used smart tax planning to save enough for a dream home, and others blindsided by six-figure IRS bills they couldn’t afford to pay. If you want to keep more of your profits in your pocket, here are five IRS-aligned strategies every e-commerce founder should understand.

    Sales tax: The silent growth killer

    Many founders assume they only need to collect sales tax in their home state. That may have been true years ago, but not anymore.

    If you store inventory in an Amazon FBA warehouse in Texas, for example, you likely have “nexus” there and must comply with Texas sales tax rules. I once worked with a client who exceeded $100,000 in sales in New York without realizing he had triggered economic nexus. He eventually received a notice for three years of back taxes and penalties — a costly mess to untangle.

    To avoid this, understand where your business has a tax footprint, whether through physical presence (like inventory) or economic thresholds. Register before you begin collecting sales tax, stay on top of filing deadlines, and don’t rely entirely on software automation. Sales tax compliance still requires active oversight.

    Tax deadlines aren’t just April 15

    This catches new business owners off guard every year. While April 15 is typically your personal tax deadline, your business return may be due weeks earlier.

    Every spring, I get calls from LLC owners who receive penalty notices for filings they didn’t even know existed.

    The solution is simple: work with your CPA to create a calendar of all filing deadlines, including quarterly estimated tax payments. If you expect to owe more than $1,000 in taxes for the year, the IRS generally requires you to pay throughout the year rather than all at once in April. Missing those payments can lead to unnecessary penalties and interest.

    Your entity structure matters more than you think

    Your business structure is your tax blueprint.

    Many entrepreneurs begin as sole proprietors or single-member LLCs because they’re simple to set up. But simplicity can come at a cost: you may owe the full 15.3% self-employment tax on all net profits.

    One Shopify seller we worked with was earning about $80,000 in annual profit as a sole proprietor. By electing S corporation status, she paid herself a reasonable salary of $50,000 subject to payroll taxes, while the remaining $30,000 passed through without additional self-employment tax. That one change saved her more than $4,500 in the first year alone.

    For higher-earning businesses, the savings can be significantly larger.

    On the flip side, many e-commerce founders default to forming Delaware C corporations because they’ve heard it’s “the best” setup. That may make sense for startups pursuing venture capital, but for many profitable, privately held brands, a C corporation can create double taxation — once at the corporate level and again when profits are distributed as dividends. In many cases, an S corporation in your home state is the more tax-efficient option.

    Beware the 1099-K trap

    Platforms like Shopify Payments, PayPal and Stripe now report your gross sales directly to the IRS through Form 1099-K.

    The IRS uses automated systems to compare those figures against the revenue reported on your tax return — and discrepancies can trigger notices quickly.

    One client, an excellent marketer but disorganized bookkeeper, received a notice after his return showed $400,000 in sales while his 1099-Ks reflected $500,000. The difference came from poor recordkeeping around refunds and processing fees, but the IRS assumed the missing $100,000 was unreported income.

    We ultimately resolved the issue, but only after a stressful and expensive reconstruction of his books.

    The takeaway: reconcile your accounting records to your 1099-Ks regularly, and make sure payment processor fees are properly tracked as deductible business expenses.

    Your biggest tax opportunities happen before year-end

    The fourth quarter is often your final opportunity to reduce your tax bill through strategic planning.

    One client was projected to finish the year with $120,000 in profit. Before year-end, we helped him prepay $15,000 in marketing expenses for upcoming campaigns, purchase $8,000 in equipment eligible for immediate write-offs, and maximize SEP IRA contributions with another $25,000.

    Those decisions reduced his taxable income by nearly $50,000 and saved him more than $15,000 in taxes — capital he could reinvest directly back into the business.

    The most successful founders treat tax planning the same way they treat marketing or operations: as an ongoing strategic function of the business. Clean books, proactive planning, and the right advisory team can make the difference between scaling confidently and getting blindsided by avoidable tax problems.

    Don’t wait for an IRS notice to become your wake-up call.

    When you’re building an e-commerce brand, your mind is usually focused on marketing funnels, customer acquisition costs and the next product launch. Taxes are often the last thing you want to think about.

    But the most successful e-commerce founders understand something important: tax strategy isn’t a once-a-year scramble in April. It’s part of running the business year-round. The goal isn’t just to grow revenue — it’s to protect profits. After all, it’s not about what you make; it’s about what you keep.

    As a CPA who works extensively with online sellers, I’ve seen both ends of the spectrum: entrepreneurs who used smart tax planning to save enough for a dream home, and others blindsided by six-figure IRS bills they couldn’t afford to pay. If you want to keep more of your profits in your pocket, here are five IRS-aligned strategies every e-commerce founder should understand.



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