Tax season is in full swing, and if you're a small business owner, one question is probably on your mind: should I file an extension?
Maybe you're waiting on a K-1 from a partner. Maybe your books are behind. Maybe you just haven't gotten around to it yet. Whatever the reason, extensions can give you breathing room, but only if you understand exactly what they do and don't cover.
Here's the critical distinction that trips up business owners every single year.
Subscribe to our Youtube Channel for more tips
An extension gives you more time to FILE your tax return. That's it.
It does not give you more time to pay your taxes.
This is not a technicality. It's the difference between a minor inconvenience and a penalty bill from the IRS.
For S corporations and partnerships, your business tax return is due March 15. If you file an extension, that deadline pushes to September 15.
For your personal (individual) return, the deadline is April 15. File an extension and you get until October 15.
Those extra months can be genuinely useful. But they only help if you've already taken care of the payment side.
S corps and partnerships are what the IRS calls flow-through entities. The business itself doesn't pay income tax — the income flows through to the owners, who pay taxes at the personal level. So the deadline that really matters for most small business owners is April 15.
Here's what happens if you don't pay by then:
The IRS starts calculating penalties and interest from April 15 — regardless of whether you filed an extension. Right now, those charges run over 10% annually. On a $20,000 tax bill, that's $2,000 or more per year in avoidable costs.
An extension is not a payment plan. It never has been.
You've probably heard people say they're "making an extension payment." That simply means estimating what they owe and paying it in by April 15, even though they won't file the full return until later.
That's the right move. You estimate. You pay. You file when you're ready.
The problem is when business owners file an extension without making a payment, assuming the filing alone protects them. It doesn't.
The clients who make tax season genuinely stress-free aren't scrambling in April. They've been paying quarterly.
At MireGroup, we work with our clients year-round to track their income, project what they'll owe, and adjust quarterly estimates as needed. By the time April rolls around, most clients already know their number. We may need to top it off slightly, but there's no surprise. There's no panic. Tax season becomes a formality.
This is only possible because the bookkeeping foundation is in place. When your books are current and accurate, we can run projections any time of year. When they're not, you're always flying blind — and extension season is when that catches up with you.
If you want to understand more about why clean books are the starting point for every good tax strategy, read our post on foundation-first bookkeeping.
Sometimes, yes. Extensions are a legitimate tool. If your K-1s are delayed, if there's a complex transaction that needs more time, or if we need additional documentation — filing an extension is the right call.
But it should be a strategic decision, not a way to avoid dealing with your taxes. And it should never happen without understanding what you owe.
Some clients choose not to pay by April 15 because they'd rather keep that money working for them in an investment or the market. That's a valid choice — as long as it's intentional and informed. The key is knowing the number. We always make sure our clients do.
Filing an extension is not the same as getting a break from your tax bill.
Here's the simple framework:
If you're not sure what you owe, or if you've been scrambling at tax time every year, that's a sign it's time to work with an accounting partner who's in your corner year-round.
Learn how MireGroup works with clients on accounting and tax plans at mire.group/accounting-and-tax-plans.