By March, many business owners assume tax planning is over. The year has closed, the numbers feel locked, and the focus shifts to writing a check to the IRS instead of shaping the outcome.
That mindset leads to missed opportunities, not because options no longer exist, but because no one explains what still matters at this stage.
March is about understanding which levers are still available, which strategies affect the prior tax year, and which ones shape the current year. But the biggest mistake business owners make is treating tax planning as a single event instead of part of a coordinated legal, financial, and tax system.
In this blog article, you’ll learn what you can still do this month, how these strategies actually work, and why each one must be evaluated through a LIFT - Legal, Insurance, Financial & Tax (“LIFT”) lens to avoid unintended consequences.
RESET EXPECTATIONS BEFORE YOU TAKE ACTION
Before looking at specific strategies, it’s important to be clear about what March planning really is. Some moves reduce last year’s tax bill directly. Others don’t change the prior year at all, but materially improve their position going forward. Both matter.
Problems arise when business owners lump these strategies together without understanding timing, eligibility, or compliance requirements. A deduction that saves taxes today can create audit exposure tomorrow. A strategy that works for one entity type may be disastrous for another.
March planning works best when decisions are intentional, documented, and coordinated - not rushed.
With that context, here’s what you can still do this month.
01 | MAKE QUALIFIED CHARITABLE CONTRIBUTIONS THE RIGHT WAY
Charitable giving remains a viable planning tool in March, but only if it’s structured properly. Cash contributions made now may still be deductible depending on entity type, accounting method, and documentation. For some business owners, donating appreciated assets or making qualified charitable distributions through retirement accounts may offer better results than simple cash gifts.
What often gets overlooked is how charitable contributions interact with income, owner compensation, and future planning. Giving for tax reasons alone, without confirming eligibility and substantiation, is how deductions get disallowed.
Charitable planning should support both your values and your financial structure, not undermine either.
02 | SET UP AND FUND RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS THAT ARE STILL AVAILABLE
March is still a powerful month for retirement planning, if you know which plans remain open.
Certain retirement accounts can still be established and funded for the prior tax year, while others only allow funding if the plan already existed. SEP IRAs, for example, remain one of the most flexible tools available to business owners at this stage. Depending on your filing status, you may still be able to open and fund a SEP before the tax filing deadline.
Other plans, such as 401(k)s, may still allow employer contributions even if employee deferrals are off the table. The distinction matters because retirement contributions affect cash flow, compensation planning, and long-term exit strategies.
Choosing the wrong plan in March can limit future flexibility, so this decision should never be made in isolation. Need support? Reach out, schedule a call, and let’s talk about how we can support you ongoing, proactively to make great decisions all year long, not just reactively after the fact based on conflicts or problems we could have helped you avoid.
03 | PUSH OFF INCOME WHEN TIMING ALLOWS
In some cases, income deferral is still available in March, particularly for businesses using cash accounting. Delaying invoicing, postponing collections, or restructuring payment timing may legitimately push income into the next tax year.
However, income deferral must be handled carefully. Artificial delays, inconsistent practices, or undocumented changes can raise red flags. What works for a sole proprietor may not work for an S corporation or partnership.
The goal is consistency and defensibility, not creative accounting. Income timing should align with how your business operates and how agreements are structured.
04 | ACCELERATE EXPENSES THAT SUPPORT REAL BUSINESS NEEDS
Accelerating expenses is one of the most commonly misunderstood strategies in tax planning. Buying things simply to “get a deduction” is rarely smart. But accelerating legitimate expenses - such as professional services, software, supplies, or prepaid costs - can be effective when aligned with real business activity.
March is often when business owners realize that upcoming expenses were inevitable anyway. Paying them sooner may create deductions now without changing long-term cash outflows.
The key is documentation and purpose. Expenses must be ordinary, necessary, and connected to business operations. Accelerating expenses should support growth, compliance, or efficiency - not clutter your books.
05 | RENT YOUR HOME TO YOUR BUSINESS
Renting your home to your business can be a legitimate strategy when structured properly. When used for qualifying business purposes - such as meetings or retreats - this approach may allow income shifting and deductions without triggering personal income tax.
However, this strategy is highly technical. The rental must be documented, fairly priced, and tied to real business use. Casual or unsupported arrangements are easily challenged.
This is one of those strategies that works beautifully when done right and backfires quickly when done casually. If your business used your home last year, let’s look at how to document it properly so you can write off the rent.
WHY THESE STRATEGIES FAIL WITHOUT COORDINATION
Each of these strategies can be effective on its own. Problems arise when they’re implemented without regard to entity structure, legal agreements, insurance coverage, or long-term goals.
Tax planning that ignores legal structure creates disputes. Financial planning that ignores tax timing wastes money. Legal planning that ignores cash flow becomes impractical. A deduction that saves money today but limits flexibility tomorrow is not a win. This is why March planning must be evaluated through a LIFT framework, with an experienced attorney who’s also your trusted advisor.
YOUR NEXT STEP: USE MARCH INTENTIONALLY
If you’re a business owner who assumes March is “too late,” you may be missing opportunities that still exist - and creating problems that don’t need to.
As a LIFTed Business Advisor and attorney, we help business owners evaluate what can still be done this month while ensuring every move supports the full legal, financial, insurance, and tax picture. During a LIFT™ Business Planning Session, we identify which strategies still apply, which ones don’t, and how to implement them without unintended consequences.
If you want clarity instead of scrambling, now is the time.
Schedule a 15-minute complimentary call and make the rest of this year work smarter for your business.
Like what you're learning?
Level up your legal knowledge by signing up to our free newsletter
Notes from the Chief Counsel's Desk
and get more legal insights and actionable legal advice sent directly to your inbox.
Want to go over your project or situation at length?
We'll answer any questions you may have and ultimately help you decide what's right for you.
We love talking about the details of your project and giving you an idea of what's possible. We'll walk you through every step of the process, from planning to designing your plan to help you achieve your goals.
Start your business right with a Legal Strategic Planning Session.
This session will give you the opportunity to discuss with counsel a particular legal issue and perform a review of legal, insurance, finance & tax systems to ensure a solid foundation for growth.
Get the confidence you need to accelerate your business’s growth!
Discover your business’s blind spots!
The Session is designed to help us understand where your business is now, where you want it to go in the future and the gaps in between that are holding you back from getting there.
We’ll guide you throughout the process and provide you with a LIFT Foundation Audit™ that reviews your business' legal, insurance, finance and tax foundations. By the end of the Session, you'll know exactly what needs to be done to fill any holes we discover so that your time, energy and money stop leaking out.
This article is a service of Sky Unlimited Legal Advisory PC, Personal Family Lawyer® . We're not your traditional law firm, we stand apart from the rest by helping you make informed and empowered decisions on how to deal with your business throughout life and in the event of an emergency. We offer a complete spectrum of legal services, including a New Business Planning Session or an Existing Business Review Session, which includes a review of all the legal, insurance, financial, and tax systems you need for your business. You can begin by calling our office at (650) 761-0992 today or book online to schedule a Business Planning Session and mention this article to find out how to get this $950 session at no charge.
Having a will simply is not enough. It doesn't guarantee the care of your children if the unthinkable happens! See how we do it differently...
The strategies that are appropriate for protecting your assets are different for every family. Check out our proven process that gives you peace of mind...
Our unique legacy process gives your loved ones a precious gift - a lasting expression of your love. Find out what we offer with every plan...
