C Tech Solutions Group LLC
Search for:
Email Address

contact@ctsg.work

CTSG-Support

680-201-8119

Office Mailing Address

1078 Summit Ave, Jersey City NJ 07307

Our Missions

Creative Technologies Solutions Group, bringing back America's customer service professional careers one agent at a time; transparent, integrity, and professionalism for every agent. Creative Technologies Solutions Group provides highly imaginative creative services for your digital content and real-world projects.

A Few Winning Points!

A Few Winning Points!
CTech Solutions Group LLC

1-Excellent work opportunity for stay at home parents. 2-Excellent work for retired individuals. 3-Change from a job to a career; gain real experience. 4-Freedom to work when you want. 5-Freedom to choose what client works best with your schedule.

A Few Winning Points!

A Few Winning Points!
CTech Solutions Group LLC

6-100% free training/certification. 7-Earn while you learn. 8-Guaranteed part-time/full-time work after training. 9-You are paid an HOURLY RATE, NOT per call per minute.

A Few Winning Points!

A Few Winning Points!
CTech Solutions Group LLC

10-Ongoing servicing agent support to optimize your career success. 11-Save thousands yearly on commuting expenses.

image
image
image
image
image
image

Our Features

100% Agent Support

CTSG gives personal support to agents from registration to client scheduling; and ongoing.

Sustainability

CTSG is contracted with one of the leaders in the BPO industry in the United States; with developed proprietary technologies to support clients professionally and effectively.

Performance

CTSG agent support site servers have 99.9% uptime and 24/7 auto backup, delivering speed and reliability. Agent portal to service clients is powered by an industry leader in BPO technologies.

Organization

Creative Technologies Solutions Group LLC brings over 15 years of direct experience delivering client and business support. CTSG has over 20 years of delivering creative solutions in various industries.

Quality Agents...

CTSG works with quality talent, via interviews, testing, and assessments; providing clients with agents delivering empathy and understanding to give every customer a positive experience.

image

1st Step! contact CTech Solutions Group LLC

contact@ctsg.work

Interesting Agent Information & Tips

1099 vs W2 Employee

The primary difference between 1099 vs W2 employees is the different tax forms they each fill out. But there are other important differences between the two as well. Reference official IRS.gov website for more information.

Tax Forms

The terms W2 and 1099 refer to two different kinds of tax forms that workers and employers use each year. Employers have to fill out tax forms each year for income tax and any other taxes that apply to their workers or their business. People who work for themselves have to handle these taxes on their own with a 1099 tax form. 

Employees who need a W2 tax form are employees of the company. They work directly for a specific business. The company they work under puts together their W2 tax forms and sends the IRS the appropriate tax funds each year. 

Workers who need a 1099 tax form, work for themselves instead of working for a company. This means they have to do their own income 

19 Tax Deductions for the Self-Employed (Contract 1099 Workers)

1. Start-up costs

Did you start your new small business or side hustle last year? If so, you may be eligible to deduct certain expenses on your tax return. Start-up costs are expenses incurred before your business opens. For example, if you incurred expenses related to hiring and training employees before opening, advertising your new venture to prospective customers, consulting fees, or similar costs, you may be able to deduct up to $5,000 from your gross income. You may also be able to deduct up to $5,000 in expenses related to getting your business entity formed, such as by establishing a corporation or Limited Liability Company (LLC). You can keep track of these expenses and more using a Small Business Tax Worksheet.

2. Professional service fees

Fees paid to attorneys, tax professionals, accountants, and consultants (such as legal fees or tax preparation fees) are also typically deductible business expenses, as long as the underlying reason you incurred the expense was related to your self-employment.

3. Retirement plans

If you worked for an employer that offered an employee retirement plan, you would be able to save money on a tax-deferred basis for retirement. Self-employed people can also take advantage of retirement plan tax breaks. One option is to establish a Solo 401(k), designed for self-employed persons who do not have employees. Review the IRS contribution limits, which are updated annually, to determine how much you can contribute and deduct for the most recent tax year. Your IRA contributions may also be deductible.

4. Business meals

For 2022, self-employed persons and small business owners can deduct 100 percent of business-related meals (food and beverages) purchased at restaurants when there was a legitimate business purpose for the meal. So, if you are having business meals with prospective or current customers, potential investors or employees, or service providers, keep your receipts to substantiate your tax write-offs.

5. Advertising and marketing costs

Advertising your business can be expensive. Fortunately, you may be able to deduct the advertising and marketing dollars you spent on trying to attract and retain customers as long as the expenses are ordinary and necessary. Some limitations apply, however, most regular marketing expenses are deductible.

6. Business loan and credit card interest

If you are paying off a business loan or have a credit card you use exclusively for business purchases, you can deduct the interest accrued on the loan or credit card purchases.

7. Office supplies

Most self-employed individuals and small business owners purchase office supplies from time-to-time. If you purchase things like paper, envelopes, postage, pens, and ink, be sure to keep your receipts as these items are generally tax-deductible expenses.

8. Home office expenses

Do you have a separate home office or use a dedicated space in your home to work on your business? If so, deducting qualified home office expenses could help lower your tax bill. You may be able to deduct a portion of your mortgage payment (including principal and mortgage interest paid) or rent, property taxes, utilities, maintenance costs, and more.

There are two options for claiming this itemized deduction. The simplified version provides a fixed deduction of $5 per square foot of your home used regularly and exclusively for business purposes, up to 300 square feet. The other option requires you to determine what percentage of your overall home’s square footage is used exclusively and regularly for your self-employment. For example, if you use 7 percent of your home for your business, then you may be able to deduct 7 percent of the expenses identified above. This option requires greater record-keeping and work at tax time but may provide a higher tax deduction.

9. Office rent

If you lease office space, warehouse space, or maintain off-site storage for your small business, you can generally deduct the full amount of reasonable rent paid to someone else as a business expense.

10. Business phone and internet

If you have a cell phone (or landline) that you use exclusively for business purposes, you can deduct the full amount of your phone bill. Similarly, if you own or lease dedicated office space and pay for internet connectivity, you can deduct your internet expenses. If your phone and internet expenses cover both personal and business uses, you may still be able to deduct a portion of your bills for work-related use.

11. Vehicle expenses

Many self-employed people use their own personal vehicles for business. For example, they might drive to meet with clients or vendors, or use their vehicle to make deliveries.

As with the home office deduction, you have two options for deducting car expenses on your taxes. First, you could take the simplified method, which involves tracking your business mileage and then claiming the IRS standard mileage rate ($0.585/mile for the first half of 2022 and $0.625/mile for the second half of 2022).

The other option is to use the actual expense method. This option, which is more involved but may provide a higher deduction, offers a tax deduction based on your actual vehicle expenses, including maintenance, gas, oil, tolls, insurance, lease payments, registration fees, garage fees, depreciation, and more. If your vehicle is used exclusively for business, it is far easier to determine your deductible vehicle expenses than if you use a vehicle for both personal and business travel.

With either approach, be sure to keep detailed documentation to support your calculation. In the event your taxes are audited, you may be required to provide these records to substantiate your deductions.

12. Business travel expenses

If you travel for your small business, you may be able to deduct any incurred expenses. Generally, self-employed persons can deduct legitimate business travel expenses, including airfare, hotels, food, and ground transportation. Keep all receipts and documents that show the business purpose for your travel to support your tax records in the event of an audit.

13. Business insurance

You may have a variety of business insurance policies in place to protect yourself financially. Business insurance premiums, including things like errors and omissions (E&O) coverage, employee health policies, worker’s compensation premiums, coverage for leased office space, business auto insurance, and more, may be deductible on Schedule C to form 1040.

14. Health insurance premiums

If you purchased medical or dental insurance for you (and your spouse and dependents under age 27, if applicable) because you are self-employed and do not have access to employer-sponsored plans, you may be able to deduct the amount you paid in premiums during the year. You may also be able to deduct long-term care insurance premiums.

15. Memberships and subscriptions

If you pay membership fees to a professional organization related to your business, such as a trade association, chamber of commerce, business league, or professional organization, you can likely deduct the amount paid in dues. However, you cannot deduct membership costs for country clubs or similar organizations where the purpose is to provide access to entertainment or recreation.

You can generally also deduct the cost of subscriptions to industry or trade-related publications.

16. Continuing education

Certain expenses paid to further your education or improve your skills related to your current business may be deductible on your federal tax return. Qualified expenses typically include tuition, fees, books, supplies, the cost of transportation to and from your classes, and related expenses. Note that this deduction is limited to expenses related to your present work.

While taking classes to learn a new skill or to qualify for a different type of work may help you financially in the future, you cannot deduct those educational expenses on your current tax return.

17. Depreciation for large business purchases

If you purchased items for your business that are expected to last for more than one year, you can depreciate their cost over a period of years (based on an IRS determination of the item’s useful life). This may include things like business vehicles, computer equipment, and commercial real estate.

18. Self-employment taxes

Self-employment taxes, which represent both the employer’s share and the employee’s portion of Medicare and Social Security taxes, can be a significant expense for many self-employed people. The good news is that you can deduct one-half of the amount paid when you file your income tax return.

19. Qualified business income (QBI)

Finally, the qualified business income (QBI) deduction offers substantial tax savings for some self-employed taxpayers. If you have pass-through business income from a sole proprietorship, LLC, partnership, or S-corporation, and if your income was under the applicable threshold amounts ($170,050 for single taxpayers or $340,100 for joint filers in 2022), you may qualify to deduct 20 percent of your otherwise-taxable business income. Note that this deduction is scheduled to end on December 31, 2025, unless it is extended by Congressional action.

Small business taxes can be complex. Working with a qualified tax professional to prepare and file your tax return can help ensure you have leveraged all of the tax deductions and tax credits you are entitled to claim for your self-employment income. If you have questions about a particular deduction or tax credit, or other questions about your self-employment, reach out to a Rocket Lawyer network attorney for affordable legal advice.

This article contains general legal information and does not contain legal advice. Rocket Lawyer is not a law firm or a substitute for an attorney or law firm. The law is complex and changes often. For legal advice, please ask a lawyer.

Interesting Agent Information & Tips

1099 vs W2 Employee

The primary difference between 1099 vs W2 employees is the different tax forms they each fill out. But there are other important differences between the two as well. Reference official IRS.gov website for more information.

Tax Forms

The terms W2 and 1099 refer to two different kinds of tax forms that workers and employers use each year. Employers have to fill out tax forms each year for income tax and any other taxes that apply to their workers or their business. People who work for themselves have to handle these taxes on their own with a 1099 tax form. 

Employees who need a W2 tax form are employees of the company. They work directly for a specific business. The company they work under puts together their W2 tax forms and sends the IRS the appropriate tax funds each year. 

Workers who need a 1099 tax form, work for themselves instead of working for a company. This means they have to do their own income 

19 Tax Deductions for the Self-Employed (Contract 1099 Workers)

1. Start-up costs

Did you start your new small business or side hustle last year? If so, you may be eligible to deduct certain expenses on your tax return. Start-up costs are expenses incurred before your business opens. For example, if you incurred expenses related to hiring and training employees before opening, advertising your new venture to prospective customers, consulting fees, or similar costs, you may be able to deduct up to $5,000 from your gross income. You may also be able to deduct up to $5,000 in expenses related to getting your business entity formed, such as by establishing a corporation or Limited Liability Company (LLC). You can keep track of these expenses and more using a Small Business Tax Worksheet.

2. Professional service fees

Fees paid to attorneys, tax professionals, accountants, and consultants (such as legal fees or tax preparation fees) are also typically deductible business expenses, as long as the underlying reason you incurred the expense was related to your self-employment.

3. Retirement plans

If you worked for an employer that offered an employee retirement plan, you would be able to save money on a tax-deferred basis for retirement. Self-employed people can also take advantage of retirement plan tax breaks. One option is to establish a Solo 401(k), designed for self-employed persons who do not have employees. Review the IRS contribution limits, which are updated annually, to determine how much you can contribute and deduct for the most recent tax year. Your IRA contributions may also be deductible.

4. Business meals

For 2022, self-employed persons and small business owners can deduct 100 percent of business-related meals (food and beverages) purchased at restaurants when there was a legitimate business purpose for the meal. So, if you are having business meals with prospective or current customers, potential investors or employees, or service providers, keep your receipts to substantiate your tax write-offs.

5. Advertising and marketing costs

Advertising your business can be expensive. Fortunately, you may be able to deduct the advertising and marketing dollars you spent on trying to attract and retain customers as long as the expenses are ordinary and necessary. Some limitations apply, however, most regular marketing expenses are deductible.

6. Business loan and credit card interest

If you are paying off a business loan or have a credit card you use exclusively for business purchases, you can deduct the interest accrued on the loan or credit card purchases.

7. Office supplies

Most self-employed individuals and small business owners purchase office supplies from time-to-time. If you purchase things like paper, envelopes, postage, pens, and ink, be sure to keep your receipts as these items are generally tax-deductible expenses.

8. Home office expenses

Do you have a separate home office or use a dedicated space in your home to work on your business? If so, deducting qualified home office expenses could help lower your tax bill. You may be able to deduct a portion of your mortgage payment (including principal and mortgage interest paid) or rent, property taxes, utilities, maintenance costs, and more.

There are two options for claiming this itemized deduction. The simplified version provides a fixed deduction of $5 per square foot of your home used regularly and exclusively for business purposes, up to 300 square feet. The other option requires you to determine what percentage of your overall home’s square footage is used exclusively and regularly for your self-employment. For example, if you use 7 percent of your home for your business, then you may be able to deduct 7 percent of the expenses identified above. This option requires greater record-keeping and work at tax time but may provide a higher tax deduction.

9. Office rent

If you lease office space, warehouse space, or maintain off-site storage for your small business, you can generally deduct the full amount of reasonable rent paid to someone else as a business expense.

10. Business phone and internet

If you have a cell phone (or landline) that you use exclusively for business purposes, you can deduct the full amount of your phone bill. Similarly, if you own or lease dedicated office space and pay for internet connectivity, you can deduct your internet expenses. If your phone and internet expenses cover both personal and business uses, you may still be able to deduct a portion of your bills for work-related use.

11. Vehicle expenses

Many self-employed people use their own personal vehicles for business. For example, they might drive to meet with clients or vendors, or use their vehicle to make deliveries.

As with the home office deduction, you have two options for deducting car expenses on your taxes. First, you could take the simplified method, which involves tracking your business mileage and then claiming the IRS standard mileage rate ($0.585/mile for the first half of 2022 and $0.625/mile for the second half of 2022).

The other option is to use the actual expense method. This option, which is more involved but may provide a higher deduction, offers a tax deduction based on your actual vehicle expenses, including maintenance, gas, oil, tolls, insurance, lease payments, registration fees, garage fees, depreciation, and more. If your vehicle is used exclusively for business, it is far easier to determine your deductible vehicle expenses than if you use a vehicle for both personal and business travel.

With either approach, be sure to keep detailed documentation to support your calculation. In the event your taxes are audited, you may be required to provide these records to substantiate your deductions.

12. Business travel expenses

If you travel for your small business, you may be able to deduct any incurred expenses. Generally, self-employed persons can deduct legitimate business travel expenses, including airfare, hotels, food, and ground transportation. Keep all receipts and documents that show the business purpose for your travel to support your tax records in the event of an audit.

13. Business insurance

You may have a variety of business insurance policies in place to protect yourself financially. Business insurance premiums, including things like errors and omissions (E&O) coverage, employee health policies, worker’s compensation premiums, coverage for leased office space, business auto insurance, and more, may be deductible on Schedule C to form 1040.

14. Health insurance premiums

If you purchased medical or dental insurance for you (and your spouse and dependents under age 27, if applicable) because you are self-employed and do not have access to employer-sponsored plans, you may be able to deduct the amount you paid in premiums during the year. You may also be able to deduct long-term care insurance premiums.

15. Memberships and subscriptions

If you pay membership fees to a professional organization related to your business, such as a trade association, chamber of commerce, business league, or professional organization, you can likely deduct the amount paid in dues. However, you cannot deduct membership costs for country clubs or similar organizations where the purpose is to provide access to entertainment or recreation.

You can generally also deduct the cost of subscriptions to industry or trade-related publications.

16. Continuing education

Certain expenses paid to further your education or improve your skills related to your current business may be deductible on your federal tax return. Qualified expenses typically include tuition, fees, books, supplies, the cost of transportation to and from your classes, and related expenses. Note that this deduction is limited to expenses related to your present work.

While taking classes to learn a new skill or to qualify for a different type of work may help you financially in the future, you cannot deduct those educational expenses on your current tax return.

17. Depreciation for large business purchases

If you purchased items for your business that are expected to last for more than one year, you can depreciate their cost over a period of years (based on an IRS determination of the item’s useful life). This may include things like business vehicles, computer equipment, and commercial real estate.

18. Self-employment taxes

Self-employment taxes, which represent both the employer’s share and the employee’s portion of Medicare and Social Security taxes, can be a significant expense for many self-employed people. The good news is that you can deduct one-half of the amount paid when you file your income tax return.

19. Qualified business income (QBI)

Finally, the qualified business income (QBI) deduction offers substantial tax savings for some self-employed taxpayers. If you have pass-through business income from a sole proprietorship, LLC, partnership, or S-corporation, and if your income was under the applicable threshold amounts ($170,050 for single taxpayers or $340,100 for joint filers in 2022), you may qualify to deduct 20 percent of your otherwise-taxable business income. Note that this deduction is scheduled to end on December 31, 2025, unless it is extended by Congressional action.

Small business taxes can be complex. Working with a qualified tax professional to prepare and file your tax return can help ensure you have leveraged all of the tax deductions and tax credits you are entitled to claim for your self-employment income. If you have questions about a particular deduction or tax credit, or other questions about your self-employment, reach out to a Rocket Lawyer network attorney for affordable legal advice.

This article contains general legal information and does not contain legal advice. Rocket Lawyer is not a law firm or a substitute for an attorney or law firm. The law is complex and changes often. For legal advice, please ask a lawyer.

image