5 tips for SMBs to help take on tax season

Unlike large companies, small business founders and HR leaders are navigating six major tax code changes, new retirement plan credits and reporting rules, multi-state payroll compliance and shifting trade costs largely on their own. The cumulative burden can amount to 33 lost workdays per year spent managing tax and financial stress.

See also: Are SMBs the “perfect testing grounds” for real-world AI solutions?

Here are 5 tips for SMBs to prepare for tax season:

1. Don’t wait for a problem to start preparing.

The businesses that navigate tax season well are the ones that build simple, consistent habits year-round: keeping payroll records clean, tracking expenses as they happen and not leaving documentation to memory. It sounds basic, but the basics matter. A small business that gets audited or hit with a penalty usually isn’t doing something egregious; they’re often just disorganized. That’s the kind of risk that’s entirely avoidable.

2. Know what’s actually changed, and take it seriously.

The regulatory environment is always shifting, and 2026 is no exception. Tax law changes, updated IRS guidance, new filing requirements; these things don’t get communicated with a lot of fanfare, and small businesses are often the last to hear about them. It’s worth carving out the time to understand what’s new, or finding a partner who will surface that information for you. Ignorance of the rules is rarely a valid defense, and the cost of getting it wrong usually far exceeds the cost of staying informed.

3. Make sure you’re not leaving credits on the table.

One of the most consistent things I see when working with small businesses is that they’re not taking full advantage of the tax credits available to them. R&D credits, credits tied to qualified benefits and employee programs, and other incentives exist specifically to support the kind of growth small businesses are trying to achieve. The paperwork can feel daunting, but the upside is real. If you’re not sure where to start, that’s a reasonable place to ask your accountant or HR partner for help.

4. Get your worker classification right.

This one comes up every year, and every year it catches people off guard. Misclassifying employees as independent contractors, or getting payroll tax obligations wrong, is among the most common and costly compliance mistake small businesses make. The IRS takes classification seriously, and the penalties can be significant. Before you file, it’s worth doing a quick review of anyone whose status might be ambiguous. When in doubt, get a second opinion.

5. Surround yourself with the right expertise.

Running a small business means wearing a lot of hats. Tax compliance doesn’t have to be one of them, at least not alone. A good accountant, a PEO partner or both can make a meaningful difference in how much time and stress tax season actually costs you. The goal isn’t to outsource your judgment; it’s to make sure you have people in your corner who know this space and can flag issues before they become expensive ones.

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