Tax Season Organizer

Legal and finance skill, available on Zeplik

Tax Season Organizer is a ready-to-run legal and finance skill on Zeplik. Use for small-business tax season prep -- "what do I owe for quarterly estimated taxes", "how much should I set aside for taxes", "I need to send out 1099s", "build my 1099-NEC list", "get my books ready for my accountant". Ask in plain language and Zeplik applies the skill's method for you inside the conversation, on whichever AI model you prefer.

The Tax Season Organizer skill loads automatically when your request matches it, or you can invoke it directly by typing /tax-prep in any chat. It works with attachments, connectors, and any model that supports the task, so you get the same expert method every time without setting anything up.

What the Tax Season Organizer skill can do

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Pick a prompt to open it in the Zeplik app. If you are not signed in yet, your prompt is waiting for you the moment you do.

How the Tax Season Organizer skill works

Tax Season Organizer

Framing: This skill produces prep material for a CPA, not tax advice. Say so early and state every assumption explicitly so the accountant can adjust.

Quick start

Determine which mode the user needs, pull the relevant data, calculate or compile, and deliver a structured document the accountant can work from directly.

User: "what do I owe for estimated taxes this quarter?"
→ Pull YTD P&L from QuickBooks
→ Calculate estimated federal income tax + SE tax
→ Subtract payments already made this year
→ Show Q-specific amount due with due date and assumptions stated
→ Output: "Estimated Q2 payment due June 16: $X — see full breakdown below"

User: "I need to send out 1099s"
→ Pull all contractor/vendor payments from QuickBooks + PayPal + Stripe
→ Identify contractors paid ≥ $600 YTD
→ Flag records missing W-9 / EIN
→ Output: 1099-NEC candidate list + missing W-9 action list

Determine mode

Read the user's message and context to decide which path applies:

  • Quarterly estimate — keywords: estimated payment, quarterly taxes, how much to set aside, safe harbor, Q1/Q2/Q3/Q4
  • Year-end 1099 prep — keywords: 1099, 1099-NEC, year-end, contractors, W-9, send 1099s, file 1099s
  • Combined — some users will ask "year-end summary" and need both. Run quarterly last; run 1099 prep first since it drives the most action items.

If the intent is ambiguous, ask: "Are you looking at your estimated tax payment for this quarter, or are you preparing 1099s for your contractors — or both?"

Path 1: Quarterly estimated tax

1. Pull YTD financials

Use QuickBooks to pull a Profit & Loss report from January 1 of the current year through the last day of the most recently completed quarter. Capture:

  • Gross revenue (total income)
  • Total expenses (operating expenses, COGS, etc.)
  • Net ordinary income = revenue − expenses

If QuickBooks is not connected, ask the user to upload a P&L as CSV or paste the key numbers. For field names and query approach, see reference/connector-queries.md.

2. Ask about prior estimated payments

Before calculating, ask: "How much have you already paid in estimated taxes so far this year?" If the user doesn't know, note that you'll calculate total liability — they can subtract payments themselves or check with their accountant.

3. Calculate estimated liability

See reference/calculation-assumptions.md for the full math and the assumptions table you must include in output.

Short version:

  1. SE tax = net profit × 0.9235 × 0.153 (then halve it — the deductible half offsets income)
  2. Adjusted net = net profit − (SE tax / 2)
  3. Federal income tax = apply the bracket rate appropriate to the user's business type and estimated annual income (default to 22% unless the user tells you their bracket; note this assumption explicitly)
  4. Total annual liability = federal income tax + SE tax
  5. Quarterly payment = (total annual liability − payments made) ÷ quarters remaining
  6. Safe harbor check — note whether the user should verify against prior-year tax (100% of prior year, or 110% if AGI > $150k)

4. State assumptions and deliver output

Use this output structure:

Structure the output as a document with these sections in order:

  1. Header — H2 with "Estimated tax summary" followed by the quarter and year. Subline: prepared date and "For review by your accountant."

  2. YTD snapshot — Bold lines showing YTD net profit with date range, estimated annual net profit (annualized from YTD), and assumed business type (sole proprietor, S-corp, etc. — flag as assumed, not confirmed).

  3. Self-employment tax — Show the SE tax calculation: net profit times 92.35% times 15.3%, and the deductible SE half.

  4. Federal income tax estimate — Adjusted net income, assumed bracket (default 22%, note to confirm with accountant), and the federal estimate.

  5. Total estimated annual liability — SE tax plus federal income tax.

  6. Quarterly payment — Total liability minus payments already made, divided by quarters remaining, with the specific dollar amount due and the due date.

  7. Safe harbor note — Remind the owner to ensure total payments meet 100% of prior-year tax (or 110% if AGI exceeded $150k).

  8. Assumptions — Bullet list of every assumption: bracket rate, business structure, state taxes excluded, deductible SE half included, and deductions not applied (home office, QBI, depreciation).

Path 2: Year-end 1099 prep

1. Pull contractor payments from all sources

Query each connected source for all payments made to individuals or businesses for services in the tax year. Do not include payments for goods, refunds, or internal transfers.

QuickBooks — try live connector first, fall back to CSV if needed:

  1. Try live connector. Attempt to pull vendor-level payment records via the QuickBooks MCP. If the connector returns individual payee records with name, amount, and account category, use them directly and skip the CSV step.

  2. Detect aggregate-only response. If the MCP returns only category-level totals (e.g. "Contract labor: $7,500" with no payee breakdown), the connector does not yet support vendor-level queries. In this case, prompt the user:

    "QuickBooks returned summary data only — I need payee-level detail to build your 1099 list. Please export a Transaction List by Vendor report (QuickBooks → Reports → Expenses → Transaction List by Vendor, filtered to this tax year) and upload the CSV here. I'll process it automatically."

  3. Process CSV via Desktop connector. Map columns: payee name, amount, date, payment method, EIN/SSN status. Follow the same aggregation and threshold logic below regardless of whether data came from the live connector or CSV.

Note for future connector versions: If the QuickBooks MCP is upgraded to expose vendor payment records directly, step 1 will succeed and the CSV fallback will be skipped automatically. No changes to this skill are needed — the try-first logic handles it.

For field names and query approach, see reference/connector-queries.md.

PayPal: Pull all "Goods & Services" payments sent. Note: PayPal issues its own 1099-K to contractors above the threshold — flag these separately in output so the accountant can determine whether a 1099-NEC is also needed.

Stripe: Pull all transfers/payouts made to external parties. Same 1099-K caveat as PayPal applies.

Desktop/CSV: If the user uploads a CSV directly (without going through QuickBooks export), map columns: payee name, amount, date, payment method, EIN/SSN status.

2. Aggregate by payee

Combine across sources and sum payments by individual or business entity. Deduplicate by name (watch for "John Smith" vs "John A. Smith" — flag likely duplicates for human review rather than auto-merging).

3. Apply the $600 threshold

  • Flag for 1099-NEC: any payee paid ≥ $600 for services (contractors, freelancers, consultants)
  • Flag for 1099-MISC: any payee paid ≥ $600 for rent, attorney fees, prizes/awards
  • Near-threshold alert: flag payees paid $400–$599 — close to the threshold, accountant may want to verify

Corporations (Inc., Corp., LLC taxed as C or S corp) generally do not need a 1099-NEC — note this but flag for accountant confirmation.

4. Check W-9 status

For each flagged payee, note whether a W-9 / EIN is on file in QuickBooks. Mark as:

  • ✅ W-9 on file (EIN/SSN recorded in QuickBooks)
  • ⚠️ Missing — W-9 not on file; must collect before filing
  • ❓ Unknown — cannot determine from available data

5. Deliver the 1099 prep package

Use this structure:

Structure the 1099 prep output as a document with these sections:

  1. Header — H2 with "1099 prep list" and the tax year. Subline: prepared date, "For review by your accountant," and "Not tax advice."

  2. Summary — Bullet counts: total contractors paid, number requiring 1099-NEC (at or above $600 for services), number missing W-9 (with filing deadline note for Jan 31), and number near-threshold flagged for review.

  3. 1099-NEC candidates table — Columns: payee name, total paid, data sources, W-9 status (on file / missing / unknown), and notes. Flag any payee paid via PayPal or Stripe with a note that the platform may issue its own 1099-K.

  4. Missing W-9 action list — Numbered list of contractors who need to provide a W-9 before filing, with amounts paid and a reminder to request the form.

  5. Near-threshold table — Payees paid $400-$599 flagged for accountant review, with a note to verify no additional payments were missed.

  6. Payment processor note — Explain that PayPal and Stripe issue their own 1099-K forms and the accountant should confirm whether a 1099-NEC is also needed for contractors paid exclusively through those platforms.

  7. Next steps checklist — Action items for the accountant: collect missing W-9s, confirm unknowns, review near-threshold payees, verify corporation exemptions, confirm 1099-K overlap handling, file by January 31.

Guardrails

  • Not tax advice. Open every deliverable with this: "Prepared for review by your accountant — not tax advice." Include it in the document header, not just in chat.
  • State every assumption. If you assumed a 22% bracket, say so. If you excluded state taxes, say so. The accountant will adjust; give them the levers.
  • Don't merge payees automatically. Flag likely duplicates for human review.
  • Don't file anything. The output is prep material. Filing is out of scope.
  • Corporation exemption is a judgment call. Note it; don't auto-exclude.

Reference files

How to use the Tax Season Organizer skill

  1. Sign in to Zeplik

    Create a free Zeplik account or sign in. New accounts start with free credits, so you can try the Tax Season Organizer skill right away.

  2. Describe your legal and finance task

    Ask in plain language, or type /tax-prep to invoke the skill directly. Zeplik recognizes the Tax Season Organizer skill and applies its method.

  3. Review and refine the result

    Zeplik returns a clear, structured answer. Ask follow-ups in the same chat to refine it or take the next step.

Source and credit

Author
Anthropic
License
Apache-2.0

Adapted from the open-source anthropics/knowledge-work-plugins project and tuned to run natively on Zeplik. View source on GitHub.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Tax Season Organizer skill?
Tax Season Organizer is a ready-to-run legal and finance skill on Zeplik. Use for small-business tax season prep -- "what do I owe for quarterly estimated taxes", "how much should I set aside for taxes", "I need to send out 1099s", "build my 1099-NEC list", "get my books ready for my accountant". Ask in plain language and Zeplik applies the skill's method for you inside the conversation, on whichever AI model you prefer.
How do I use Tax Season Organizer on Zeplik?
Sign in to Zeplik and ask in plain language, or type /tax-prep in any chat to invoke it directly. The skill applies its method and returns a result you can refine in the same conversation.
Which AI model does the Tax Season Organizer skill use?
Any model you choose. Zeplik works across every model in one chat, so the Tax Season Organizer skill runs on your preferred model for the task.
Where does the Tax Season Organizer skill come from?
The Tax Season Organizer skill is adapted from the open-source anthropics/knowledge-work-plugins project (Apache-2.0) and tuned to run natively on Zeplik. The original source is linked on this page.
How much does the Tax Season Organizer skill cost?
Using the skill is free to start. You only spend Zeplik credits when the assistant runs, and new accounts begin with free credits.

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