I am considering getting a different gig soon.
If you become a 1099 employee what would you expect for the following costs of practice? Most of these are already paid for by my employer. I put in some numbers that I had from the past, but don't know how up to date they are, especially with inflation over the last 1-2 years making everything more expensive.
Billing and collections (6-8%)
malpractice insurance ($7000-8000 annually)
+ / - accountant fees: 1-2% ?
market health insurance:
disability, life insurance:
CME, ABPMR fees, licensing fees, AAPMR: 2000 - 10000 per year
Retirement:
Loss from uncollected bills:
Anything else worthy of mentioning besides small expenses?
What tax benefits do you get and are there any changes with upcoming legislation?
Biller fees are very variable (as is competence). I pay 6.5% of collections right now.
Malpractice costs me $4,000, but I'm in CA which has a cap on non-economic damages and results in low malpractice premiums.
I used to have an accountant just for taxes (I'm a sole proprietor). Depending on the accountant costs were $800-$2000. Would obviously be more if you're having them do payroll, etc. I opted to just do my own taxes since, as they're fairly simple to do with my set up.
For a family of 3, one of the top health insurance plans via Obamacare costs me $1600/month. I could've gone with a cheaper plan, but this way I get to deduct the costs and I get less nervous about whether or not we could have a big medical bill (we have a few medical issues).
Disability and life are really variable, and cost more if you're older. I can only tell you we pay almost $500 combined for life for both my wife and I, and a so-so disability policy. I can't really say what others will cost.
CME is free if you use UpToDate
🙂
ABPM&R wants $200/year
My CA license is $920 every two years
AAPMR costs like $800 or $900. I bought the online education module this year (haven't used it...), so my cost was closer to $900.
I subscribe to a few journals as well, for CME
I max out retirement each year. As a 1099 contractor with solo 401k, I can put $61,000 into my 401k for 2022. And you can do another $6k for you and your spouse into a backdoor Roth.
No idea on what the loss is from uncollected bills. It's so common I just know what we collect on average per patient per day. You typically can't write off uncollected bills though, unless you use a non-standard accounting basis. Which is totally legit, but my accountant said it's a lot more complicated and probably costs a fair amount more overall.
Tax benefits are great!
Write of all business expenses. So many things qualify for a deduction. If you work at more than one site you can claim a home office and write off all your miles.
The pass-through deduction is huge. I max out my solo 401k so I can optimize it, as you start to get phased out at a taxable income over ~$326,000. My solo 401k contributions, health insurance costs, business costs, and if I'm not mistaken even personal deductions all factor to that. If you're taxable income is going to be well under $326k, sometimes you're better off putting your 401k money into your roth 401k-- WhiteCoatInvestor had a post about that some time ago. The main reason is because you're lowering your pass-through deduction when you reduce your income further below $326k.
I think the pass-through deduction is supposed to fade away ~2025, but who knows what politicians will do at that time, because letting it expire is the same as giving a lot of people a big tax increase, and no politician wants to be known for that (usually).