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For most high earners, the tax changes this year will feel like a stress test of how well their financial life is organized.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), passed over the summer, made several changes to the tax code that could affect the taxes you pay for 2026.
If you want flexibility for your 2026 taxes, the work starts now — not with trying to predict what Congress will do with the tax code in the future and not with trying to outguess headlines.
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It starts with building a system that makes the right options available as early as possible in the year before you have to file.
Preparation matters more than new rules
To set yourself up for success, make sure key elements of your financial structure are in place at the beginning of the year.
That may include having operating or partnership agreements signed that define how income will be allocated, confirming entity structures such as S corp elections and establishing recordkeeping systems that capture activity as it happens.
Verification systems can be simple, but consistent tools such as mileage trackers, time logs for real estate activities or accounting software that records transactions and receipts in real time.
The goal is to create a reliable record from day one rather than trying to reconstruct it months later.
When you zero in on your tracking early in the year, you’re securing your eligibility for strategies and optimization tools for the rest of the year.
This allows you to pivot quickly as tax rules change, without burning time trying to backfill proof after the window has closed.
A lot of the most valuable tax outcomes depend on what you can substantiate across an entire year, and you don’t want to be rebuilding your year in December.
The IRS gives more weight to records kept at or near the time of your activity, meaning logs maintained as the work occurs or shortly after, rather than reconstructed months later.
If you’re aiming for outcomes such as real estate professional status or similar time-based tax strategies, tracking earlier in the year is far easier to defend.
The cost of procrastination isn’t always penalties, but missed opportunities. People often qualify for strategies on paper, but then they can’t use them because the documentation was either not clean or not there, or planning wasn’t set up early enough to support a claim.
When sophisticated planning still breaks down
High earners rarely have simple tax situations, but the issue is often not complexity — it’s having the right context. Problems arise when information is scattered, making it harder to see how decisions made throughout the year affect the final outcome.
In those cases, planning often relies on assumptions and not entirely on a clear view of the facts.
Most high earners work with capable advisers. Where planning breaks down is when those advisers are forced to work with incomplete information. Small gaps can quietly change eligibility, timing or deductions, even when the overall strategy appears sound.
This is where the right tax tools start to matter. Programs such as Quicken or QuickBooks that pull information together help reduce guesswork and surface issues early, before they turn into costly surprises.
They don’t replace your financial adviser, but they make it easier for everyone to work from the same complete picture.
That clarity becomes even more important at the beginning of the year. As tax provisions change, there is less room to adjust after the fact and fewer opportunities to correct mistakes.
Clean records reduce surprises and audit risk
Your tax return is only as good as your books, and that’s still the most common failure point I see among business owners. Messy or unreconciled books create problems that go far beyond tax time.
When transactions are missing, overstated or miscategorized, you can operate with a false sense of your financial position.
That distortion affects whether you invest, hire, buy property or take distributions.
These “small” errors can get expensive fast. I’ve seen an investment loss of $60,000 reported on a tax return without the minus sign. Instead of reducing taxable income by $60,000, the number was entered as positive income. That mistake turned what should have been a $60,000 deduction into an additional $60,000 of income, effectively creating a $120,000 swing in taxable income.
I’ve also seen people sell their personal home and assume it’s not a taxable event, but while that is often true, it works only if the transaction is reported properly and accurately.
If you leave it unreported, the IRS will assume the entire transaction is taxable, and a six-figure tax notice might be triggered.
Even if you don’t owe the money, receiving that notice is stressful. Some people might pay out of fear without realizing they can dispute it.
Audit risk works the same way. Nothing guarantees an audit, but Schedule C returns draw more attention when income and deductions look mismatched.
Certain reportable transactions, including syndicated conservation easements, get higher scrutiny because the IRS looks at them as listed transactions and often requires disclosure.
On a different note, an audit is not automatically bad. If you have a clear justification for your position and the paperwork to back it up, you should have nothing to worry about.
While receipts are important, the clincher is whether the expense is properly supported and recorded in the right context.
For most business costs, you generally don’t need a receipt for anything under $75, but you still need to capture the “who, what, where and why” to justify the business purpose.
The best way to prepare for your 2026 taxes is to start early. Clean books, unified data, consistent tracking and documenting decisions early are what will give you the most flexibility and opportunities to optimize.

