Forecasting Cash Flow for Your Business With Tiller

Here's a Tiller-based workflow for successfully forecasting and managing cash flow, one of the most challenging yet essential tasks for growing a business.
Resources, tips, and free spreadsheet templates for tracking your freelance and small business income, taxes, and cash flow.
Here's a Tiller-based workflow for successfully forecasting and managing cash flow, one of the most challenging yet essential tasks for growing a business.
As a self-employed individual, business owner, or freelancer, here is how to know if you owe quarterly estimated taxes based on your total tax liability.
A comprehensive list of IRS business expense categories to help track efficiently and claim all available tax deductions. Includes 3 free spreadsheets.
Useful tips for tracking Airbnb expenses to help maximize income tax deductions and make filing easier.
How to get your self-employed tax return spreadsheet ready in as little as 45 minutes with Google Sheets and Tiller Money.
If you earn money and taxes are not withheld when you’re paid, you’ll probably have to pay quarterly estimated taxes to the IRS in 2020.
Before you launch a side hustle you should first evaluate if the opportunity cost of hustling is less than the profit you’d actually reap.
From dealing with taxes to budgeting to evaluating retirement plans, here are 7 proven money management strategies for freelancers →
As you file your taxes, be sure to check on these commonly overlooked self-employed tax deductions. They’ll help you lower your tax burden whether you did well with your withholding or not.
If you earn money that doesn’t have taxes withheld when you’re paid, you’ll probably have to pay quarterly estimated taxes to the IRS (and most likely to your state’s department of revenue) in 2019.
Here's a simple Google Spreadsheet of the new 2019 tax brackets announced by the IRS.
Thinking about our dream house has been exciting, but the process of saving for a down payment hasn’t been all sunshine and roses. We’ve had to make sacrifices and come to terms with what we can realistically afford.