Many business owners believe that once revenue and profits look strong, the hard work is done. But high income does not always mean high wealth — especially when tax planning is ignored.
December is often the busiest month of the year — real estate closings, the holiday rush, and planning for the new year. But this is exactly why a year-end profit review is one of the most important financial steps you can take as a realtor or business owner.
Most professionals push this task to tax season… and that’s where the problems begin.
A Real Case: High Commissions, Low Profit
Last week, I met with a realtor who had an outstanding year.
Her commissions were up, deals were flowing, and on paper, everything looked perfect.
But once we reviewed her financials, the reality was very different.
Her profit was nowhere near what it should’ve been.
Why?
Because the true numbers told a story she couldn’t see on the surface:
Individually, these seem small. But added together, they quietly drained her income — and she didn’t realize it until we dug into the details.
Why Realtors Lose Money Without Realizing It
Most realtors only analyze their earnings when it’s time to file taxes. But by then:
A simple one-hour review in December can prevent all of this.
What a Year-End Profit Review Includes
For realtors, expats, freelancers, and small business owners, a detailed financial review at year-end provides clarity you won’t get at tax time.
Here’s what we break down:
✔ Total Commissions Earned
Not the projected numbers — the actual income.
✔ Business Expenses
Marketing, subscriptions, photography, staging, broker fees, mileage, travel, and every deductible expense that affects your taxable income.
✔ Tax Liability Forecast
How much you’ll owe before the year closes, giving you time to plan, adjust, and save thousands.
The Result: More Profit, Fewer Surprises
Clients who prioritize year-end reviews consistently:
Instead of crossing fingers in April, they enter 2026 confident and prepared.
If You’re a Realtor or Business Owner, This Is Your Reminder
Take one hour this month.
Sit down with your numbers — or with a tax professional who understands real estate and small business finance.
Your profit doesn’t disappear in one big event.
It slips away little by little… unless you catch it early.
Don’t wait until tax season to figure out where your money went. Your financial clarity starts now.