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Financial Planning Colorado Springs CO

All business owners know that before their business opens they have expenses. You may have incurred expenses in researching your business, preparing your business plan, advanced rent, remodeling or decorating, furniture and equipment, inventory, advertising or marketing, etc.

Steven King
King Financial Planning & Management, LLC

(719) 302-1088
2 N. Cascade Avenue, Suite 1100
Colorado Springs, CO
Deborah Hoskins
Pikes Peak Financial Planning LLC

719.578.3309
102 S. Tejon Street Suite 1100
Colorado Springs, CO
Mary Brooks
Brooks Financial Planning

(719) 492-1833
34 South Sierra Madre Street
Colorado Springs, CO
Jane Young
Pinnacle Financial Concepts, Inc.

(719) 260-9800 Ext: 4
7025 Tall Oak Drive, Suite 210
Colorado Springs, CO
Susan Strasbaugh
Strasbaugh Financial Advisory, Inc.

(719) 265-4600
8580 Scarborough Drive, Suite 145
Colorado Springs, CO
David Forbes
Petra Financial Advisors, Inc.

(719) 636-9000
2 North Cascade, Suite 720
Colorado Springs, CO
Connie Hancock
Petra Financial Advisors, Inc.

(719) 636-9000
2 North Cascade, Suite 720
Colorado Springs, CO
Craig Carnick
Carnick & Company

(719) 579-8000
675 Southpointe Court, Suite 102
Colorado Springs, CO
Linda Leitz
Pinnacle Financial Concepts, Inc.

(719) 260-9800 Ext: 4
7025 Tall Oak Drive, Suite 210
Colorado Springs, CO
Deborah Hoskins
Pikes Peak Financial Planning LLC

(719) 332-4856
2545 Lake Meadow Drive
Monument, CO
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Untangling Your Comingling: How to Separate Personal from Business Finances

All business owners know that before their business opens they have expenses. You may have incurred expenses in researching your business, preparing your business plan, advanced rent, remodeling or decorating, furniture and equipment, inventory, advertising or marketing, etc. Since your business wasn't "officially" open many business owners just use their personal checking account and/or personal credit card to pay for these expenses. This seems natural and easy and the last thing a new business owner wants or needs is something more complicated.

As time goes by the business owner may have established a business checking account and perhaps even a business credit card, but the habit of using their personal checking account and credit card has already been established. The business owners don't think twice about depositing business income into their personal account or picking up some personal items when paying with a business credit card. This bad habit has its own name – it's called commingling.

The main problems with commingling are:

  • Unless you are very well versed in accounting you undoubtedly have a much bigger mess than you think you do. It's not uncommon for me to see people who have expensed their personal car payments as "auto expense" even though the business doesn't own their car. Even more common is multi-level marketers who purchase and expenses their inventory on their company books, but use it personally.
  • Your financial statements

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