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Your Tax Return Feels Expensive (Even When You “Have a CPA”)

Many high earners work with a CPA and still wonder why am I paying so much in taxes. This article explores how business tax planning becomes reactive and why intentional decisions matter.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

    Let’s start off our first article of 2026 with something simple.

    If you’re a business owner, real estate investor, or high earner, you’re probably doing a lot of things right. You’re earning good money. You’re working with a CPA. You’re filing your returns on time.

    And yet, every year, the tax bill still feels… heavy.

    At some point, almost everyone in this position ends up asking the same question: why am I paying so much in taxes?

    When you ask your CPA why, the answers tend to sound familiar:

    “That’s just how the tax code works.”
    “You’re in a higher bracket now.”
    “We’ll look at planning next year.”
    “There’s not much else you can do.”

    None of those answers are technically wrong. But they don’t really explain what’s going on. And they definitely don’t help you feel confident about the decisions you’re making.

    Most of the time, the problem isn’t how much you earn. It’s how your taxes are being handled.
    This is where business tax planning quietly breaks down for a lot of high earners.

    business tax planning

    The Assumption Most People Make (and Why It Breaks Down)

    Most people assume that if they have a CPA, they’re getting tax planning.

    That’s a fair assumption. It’s also usually not true.

    What most CPAs are trained to do is prepare tax returns. The goal is accuracy, compliance, and getting the forms filed correctly. Report what already happened and move on.

    That work matters. You need it.

    But it’s not planning.

    Planning happens earlier. Planning is about decisions. And planning asks very different questions:

    Why did this income show up here?
    Why did it show up this year instead of another?
    Why is it taxed this way?
    What could have been done differently if we had looked ahead?

    Those aren’t software questions. They’re decision questions.

    And once the year is over, those decisions are already locked in.

    That gap is the difference between tax preparation and real business tax planning.

    Why “Tax Strategies” Rarely Fix the Real Problem

    At some point, most high earners start hearing about tax strategies.

    Hire your kids.
    Buy a vehicle.
    Do cost segregation.
    Use the Augusta rule.
    Set up another entity.

    Some of these ideas are legitimate. Some are overused. All of them fall short when they’re applied in isolation.

    The issue usually isn’t the strategy itself. It’s the lack of context.

    A strategy without a system is just a tactic.

    Used randomly, a tactic might save money one year and create problems the next. Or it might make you feel like something smart is happening without actually changing much.

    Without a system, business tax planning turns into disconnected tactics instead of intentional decisions.

    Real tax planning doesn’t start with tactics. It starts with understanding how everything works together within a system one that is designed for your unique life.

    What Your Tax Return Is Really Showing You

    Your tax return isn’t just a report card.

    It’s a snapshot of how your financial life is structured. This is why I kick off every relationship with a review of the prospect’s tax return.

    It shows where your income comes from, how it’s taxed, what you qualify for, and what you don’t. It also shows where pressure is building, often long before it feels urgent.

    The problem is timing.

    Most advisors don’t look closely at the return until after the year ends. At that point, the work becomes an explanation, not a strategy. You’re talking about what already happened instead of what could still be changed.

    Very few people treat the return like a diagnostic tool. Something you review early enough to spot patterns, anticipate issues, and make better decisions going forward.

    For effective business tax planning, the return has to be reviewed early, not explained late.

    That difference matters more than most people realize.

    business tax planning

    Why High Earners Start to Feel Stuck

    As income grows, taxes don’t just go up. They get more complicated.

    ● W-2 income becomes harder to offset.
    ● Capital gains start to matter more.
    ● Entity structure begins to play a bigger role.
    ● Timing mistakes get expensive.

    Eventually, doing the same things a little better stops working.

    That’s usually when people start to feel stuck.

    And most of the time, the ceiling isn’t the tax code. It’s reactive decision-making the enemy of intentional business tax planning.

    What Intentional Tax Planning Actually Looks Like

    Good tax planning isn’t about paying zero tax.

    It’s about paying the right amount, on purpose.

    That means looking ahead instead of backward. Coordinating income, investments, and structure. Understanding tradeoffs instead of chasing deductions. Thinking in years, not filing seasons.

    This is what intentional business tax planning actually looks like in practice.

    Most of all, it means working with someone who’s actually looking at the full picture, not just the forms.

    A Better Question to Ask

    Instead of asking:

    “What strategies should I be using?”

    Try asking:

    “Is anyone actually looking at my situation as a whole?”

    When business tax planning is handled intentionally, taxes stop feeling random. They start to make sense.

    And for most people, that’s the first sign that the question why am I paying so much in taxes is finally being answered with clarity instead of excuses.

    If this sounds like how you’ve been feeling about your taxes, that’s not an accident and it’s probably worth a different conversation.


    Written by Jose Ortiz, CPA, CTC
    Founder, The Scale Collective

    Strategic tax advisor to high-earning business owners and real estate investors who want their tax decisions designed intentionally, not explained after the fact.

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