Services
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Specialization is the key to success when it comes to delivering results for our customers and clients. We focus exclusively on Bookkeeping/Accounting and Business Development. Through our accounting and Business Research divisions, you'll work with a professional accountant that specializes in all aspects of bookkeeping and accounting.
KNH FINANCIALS LLC services are designed to help all types of businesses save money on their taxes and to help make businesses successfully achieve their dreams and vision.
Other Services Include:
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Notary Service
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Payroll/HR
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F/C Bookkeeping
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Financial Statements
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Medical Billing
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Account Payables
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Business Incorporation
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Individual/ Business Taxes
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Business Research
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Operating Agreement (LLC)
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Business Financial Plans
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Business Consulting (FREE)
KNH FINANCIALS LLC, Professionals @ What We Do.
We do our best to make sure that our services help your business to grow.
Manage the cash flow of your business quickly, easily, and accurately with Advance Bookkeepers LLC. Track receivables, plan cash flow, and analyze advanced reporting to help you plan for the future. Use the powerful invoicing function to prepare invoices and billings from within the system, and prepare customer statements on demand. Accounts Receivable is efficient, intuitive, and totally customizable to the way you do business.
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Understand the flow of revenue between departments by assigning separate accounts receivable accounts to each department or division.
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Increase productivity with powerful invoicing functionality that allows you to prepare invoices and customer statements in the system.
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Save time and money by establishing automatic processing for repetitive billing, such as membership fees, maintenance contracts, and rent.
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Gain valuable insight into your receivables cash flow with advanced reporting capabilities.
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Gain valuable insight into your financial position with customizable financial statements and advanced reporting options.
The limited liability company (LLC) is a business entity that offers limited liability protection and pass-through taxation. An LLC is a hybrid type of business structure. It contains elements of both a traditional partnership and a corporation. LLC can be managed by either by the members or by managers.
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The members/owners in such a business enjoy a limited liability, similar to shareholders in a corporation. However, a tax return for the LLC must be completed. Any income or loss of the LLC as shown on this return will pass through to the owner(s). The owners, also called members, must then report the income or loss on their personal tax returns and pay any necessary tax.
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As with a corporation, the LLC legally exists as a separate entity from its owners. Therefore, the owners cannot typically be held personally responsible for the debts and liabilities of the LLC.
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Advantages of an LLC:
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Members will share in potential profits and in the tax deduction with fewer financial risks
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LLC's generally have no ownership restrictions
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LLC offers a relatively flexible management structure.
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An LLC does not require as much annual paperwork, or have as many formalities, as a corporation.
To create an LLC the proper formation documents, typically called the articles of incorporation or certificate of incorporation, must be filed with the appropriate state agency and the necessary state filing fees paid.
The federal government of the United States imposes a progressive tax on the taxable income of individuals, partnerships, companies, corporations, trusts, decedents' estates, and certain bankrupt-cy estates.
Some state and municipal governments also impose income taxes. The first Federal income tax was imposed (under Article I, section 8, clause 1 of the U.S. Constitution) during the Civil War, then again in the 1890s, and again after the Sixteenth Amendment was ratified in 1913. Current income taxes are imposed under these constitutional provisions and various sections of Subtitle A of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, including 26 U.S.C. § 1 (imposing income tax on the taxable income of individuals, estates and trusts) and 26 U.S.C. § 11 (imposing income tax on the taxable income of corporations).
Congress has typically shown a preference for long-term investment by having a capital gains tax rate lower than the ordinary income rate. However, only long-term capital gains get preferential treatment; short-term capital gains (from property held for one year or less) are taxed at the same rate as ordinary income. Added complications come from various distinctions within each category. For instance, qualified dividends, which were previously taxed at ordinary income rates (as non-qualified dividends currently are), are currently taxed at long-term capital gain rates until 2011 under the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003, and within long-term capital gains, gains on certain real estate, collectibles, and small business stock each have their own tax rates.