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You shouldn’t have to be a tax expert to keep your hard-earned money. You need a small set of rules that work every week—clear enough to trust, simple enough to use, and strong enough to prevent surprises. This book gives you that system.
Built for first-time founders and independent professionals, it explains what income really is, which expenses pass the “ordinary, necessary, demonstrable” test, and how to avoid penalties with a practical weekly and quarterly routine. You’ll learn how **small business taxes** actually work, how to handle **VAT and GST basics**, and how to plan **quarterly estimated taxes** without wrecking cash flow. It clarifies **tax deductions for self employed**, from **home office deduction rules** to vehicles and mixed-use tools, and shows how to spot **audit triggers for small business** before they cost you sleep. A **simple tax calendar** and lightweight bookkeeping habits—designed for real life—tie everything together.
Read this if you invoice clients, sell online, or juggle platforms and subscriptions. It’s for solo operators who want clean books, sane pricing, and a calm filing season. By the end, you’ll know how to pay yourself, set money aside, and file with confidence—using plain language and steps you can repeat. If you’ve ever typed “**bookkeeping for freelancers**” or wondered “**how to pay yourself as a business owner**,” this is the clear, preventative playbook you’ve been looking for.
- Make decisions faster with a portable mental model
- Keep more cash by timing income, deductions, and payments
- Replace panic with a steady, proven routine that just works

Tax Smart

SKU: 9789374121221
$24.99 Regular Price
$19.51Sale Price
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  • Nicolette Sharma writes for people who build their own safety net. Raised between a shop floor and a kitchen table where bills were tallied by hand, she learned early that money is a story of rhythms, not windfalls. Her work blends plainspoken arithmetic with a historian’s eye for why our systems look the way they do—from Kautilya’s Arthashastra to the birth of VAT and pay-as-you-go. She believes good tax habits are civic, not just clever: separate the accounts, tell the truth in your records, and keep a small, steady calendar. When she’s not simplifying rules for first-time founders and freelancers, she’s walking city markets, noticing how prices, receipts, and human trust still fit together.

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