Anomaly CPA
Anomaly tailors tax & accounting services for businesses & real estate investors to grow.
06/05/2026
Your LLC might be costing you five figures a year. And the frustrating part is you'd never know — because on the surface, everything looks fine.
Entity structure isn't a one-time decision. It's a living tax strategy that needs to evolve as your revenue grows. The structure that made sense at $80K in net profit is not the same one that makes sense at $400K.
At $80K+ in net profit, an S Corp election is often worth running the numbers. Planning to raise venture capital or sell equity down the road? A C Corp with QSBS positioning could mean a tax-free exit worth millions. These aren't options you can retroactively apply when you're ready. The windows close — and missing a tax election deadline can cost you an entire year of savings. Sometimes more.
Messy restructuring after the fact is expensive. Getting it right before the revenue grows is not.
When did you last review your entity structure? If it's been over a year and your revenue has changed, that's the answer.
DM us STRUCTURE and we'll do a quick review and tell you exactly where you stand.
"I'm an entrepreneur. I don't want to deal with my books."
Heard. And you're not alone.
But here's the reality: if your books aren't in order, you don't actually know the financial health of your business.
You can't execute a tax strategy. And when the time comes to exit — and it will — messy books don't just slow the deal down. They kill it.
You don't have to love bookkeeping. You just have to stop putting it off.
Because doing it later costs significantly more than doing it now.
DM us BOOKS and we'll show you what clean financials actually look like — and what they unlock for your business.
No money. No clients. No list. Just a plan.
Greg went to the Massachusetts Secretary of State website — the one that publishes every new business registration — reverse engineered their contact info, and started cold emailing founders directly.
No fancy tools. No paid ads. No network to lean on. Just clarity on who he wanted to work with and the willingness to go find them manually.
Young businesses. Startups. Entrepreneurs in their late 20s building something real. The same stage he was at. The same energy he wanted around him.
That's how Anomaly started. One cold email at a time.
The founders who build something don't wait for the perfect conditions. They work with what's in front of them.
Comment STORY and we'll tell you more about how Anomaly went from zero to where it is today.
06/04/2026
Most business owners are giving the IRS an interest-free loan every year. On purpose — just without realizing it.
Overpaid estimates. Refunded 12 months later. Zero interest paid back. That's your cash sitting with the government for a year doing nothing for you.
The problem starts with using last year's income to estimate this year. If revenue is growing, you're overpaying. If it's dipping, you might owe penalties. Neither outcome is the goal.
Quarterly estimates should be built on actual projected income — factoring in deductions and credits that haven't hit yet, adjusted every quarter as the picture gets clearer. Dynamic, not static.
And if you're above $150K AGI, paying 110% of last year's tax keeps you penalty-free regardless of what this year looks like. Knowing that changes how you manage cash flow every single month.
Your quarterly payments should be a strategy. Not a guess.
DM us ESTIMATES and we'll show you exactly what you're overfunding right now.
06/04/2026
Your home is already an asset.
Most S-Corp owners don't realize they can rent it to their own business — tax-free — and have the business deduct the full amount.
That's the Augusta Rule. IRC §280A(g). In the tax code since 1976.
Your CPA probably never mentioned it.
Comment AUGUSTA and we'll reach out to walk you through your numbers.
06/04/2026
Your home is already an asset.
Most S-Corp owners don't realize they can rent it to their own business — tax-free — and have the business deduct the full amount.
That's the Augusta Rule. IRC §280A(g). In the tax code since 1976.
Your CPA probably never mentioned it.
Comment AUGUSTA and we'll reach out to walk you through your numbers.
LLC or S Corp? You might still qualify for QSBS. But the details matter more than most people realize.
A proper conversion from LLC to C Corp can open the door — but the clock starts at the date of conversion, not when the company was founded. Everything before that date doesn't count.
Here's where it gets interesting: starting as an LLC isn't always the wrong move. There's a strategy called basis packing where the IP of your company gets valued at the time of conversion.
Instead of being capped at the standard $10M QSBS exclusion, you're working with the 10X basis rule — which on a high-value IP conversion can mean a $30M, $40M, even $50M tax-free exit.
We've had clients use exactly this. The structure was intentional from day one.
Comment QSBS and we'll walk through whether your current entity setup is leaving this opportunity on the table.
You made a million dollars. But how much did you actually keep?
Most founders scaling past seven figures are so focused on revenue that they ignore the two biggest expenses quietly eating their growth — taxes and interest. The money hits the account. Then it leaves just as fast.
Entity structure. Tax strategy. These aren't things you figure out later. By the time you notice the problem, you've already paid for it.
At Anomaly, we work with founders scaling past $1M who are serious about keeping more of what they build.
Comment STRATEGY and we'll show you exactly where the money is going — and how to stop it.
A $50,000 idea in 30 seconds. And it's not what most people want to hear.
No gimmicks. No quick hits. Just the foundation most founders ignore while chasing everything else.
Entity structure.
It's not exciting. But overpaying $15,000–$30,000 a year because yours is wrong? Over a decade that's $100,000+ gone. Not to bad luck. Not to a down market. To a fixable structural decision that nobody flagged.
The unsexy stuff is always where the real money is.
DM us STRUCTURE and we'll take a look at what your setup is actually costing you.
06/02/2026
A $60,000 SUV used for business. Most owners take the standard mileage rate and move on. That's almost never the right call.
The actual expense method captures depreciation, insurance, gas, and repairs. For heavy business use, it wins almost every time. And if that SUV is over 6,000 lbs, the full purchase price can be written off in year one — not depreciated over five years. All of it. Immediately.
The catch is documentation. No mileage log means no deduction if the IRS comes knocking. Date, destination, purpose, miles — every trip. Apps make this a two-second habit. Skipping it is an expensive mistake.
Your vehicle deduction should be bigger than it is.
DM us VEHICLE and we'll tell you which method wins for your situation and exactly how to document it.
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
Category
Contact the business
Telephone
Website
Address
22 Boston Wharf Road
Boston, MA
02210
Opening Hours
| Monday | 8am - 5pm |
| Tuesday | 8am - 5pm |
| Wednesday | 8am - 5pm |
| Thursday | 8am - 5pm |
| Friday | 8am - 5pm |