The Case for a Multi-Year Tax Strategy
Every year around tax time, the calls start coming in:
“What can I do to lower my tax bill this year?”
Fair question.
Nobody wants to pay more than they have to. But for business owners, the single-year mindset around taxes is one of the most common and costly planning mistakes there is.
Minimizing Today Can Cost You Tomorrow
William Bissett and the Portus Wealth Advisors team hear it constantly. Clients looking for ways to reduce their tax liability right now, whether that means maxing out deductions, rushing to purchase equipment before December 31st, or deferring income wherever possible.
None of those moves are inherently wrong. The problem comes when they’re made in isolation, without any view of what the next two or three years are likely to look like.
The 401k illustration makes this clear. If you are in the 10% tax bracket today and contributing to a traditional 401k, you’re deferring taxes at that low rate. But if your income grows substantially by the time you start taking distributions, you may find yourself paying taxes on that money at 25 or 30%. You deferred at 10% and paid at 30%. The tax arbitrage you were counting on has worked against you.
What a Multi-Year Strategy Actually Looks Like
The better approach is to zoom out.
Rather than asking what you can do to minimize taxes this year, the question becomes what does the next two to three years look like for your income, and what tax bracket are you likely to be sitting in?
That shift in perspective opens up conversations that a single-year view never surfaces. It also changes when those conversations need to happen. The Portus team pushes clients to engage their CPA in the summer, not in October or December when time’s already run out. Starting early means there is room to model different scenarios, align on what the business is expected to do over the coming years, and deploy strategies in a way that makes sense across the full picture rather than just the current calendar year.
The Business Adds Another Layer
For business owners specifically, this kind of forward planning matters even more. Business income can shift significantly from one year to the next. A strong year followed by a year of heavy reinvestment can create real opportunities if you see them coming. A reactive year-end scramble rarely captures those.
Understanding where the business is headed, not just where it is today, is what allows a multi-year tax strategy to really work. That means bringing your CPA, your financial advisor, and your business projections into the same conversation, ideally well before the fourth quarter puts everyone on the defensive.
Tax season will come around again next year.
The question is whether you will be reacting to it or ready for it.
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ORIGINAL MEDIA SOURCE(S):
William Bissett: The Case for a Multi-Year Tax Strategy | Portus Perspectives
Originally Recorded: March 30, 2026
Portus Perspectives: Episode 8