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Industry Ledger Press
Vol. 053
The Restaurant
Tax &
Bookkeeping
Blueprint
For full-service, quick-service, café, bar, and food-truck owners doing $300K–$5M.
Written by a Tax Pro
Annual Edition · 2026
Vol. 053 · Tier III Available Now

The Restaurant
Tax & Bookkeeping
Blueprint

A 240-page guide written by a tax professional, for full-service and quick-service restaurant owners. Tip credits, food cost, sales tax, audit defense — every form, every deduction, every number, in plain English.

$79.00
One-time purchase 240 pages · PDF · Updates free 12 mo.
Instant download Watermarked PDF
30-day refund No questions
Annual update Free for 12 months
Reviewed by CPA Every figure
240
Pages
worth of strategy
12
Chapters
plus appendices
$2,262
Per server, per year
example FICA tip credit
2026
Edition
updated this January
§ I · The Fit

Built for one kind of reader.

Industry Ledger Press writes one volume per industry — narrowly, deeply, on purpose. This is who that volume is for, and who it isn't.

Buy this volume if

It is written for you.
  • You own a full-service restaurant, fast-casual, café, bar, or food truck doing roughly $300K–$5M in revenue.
  • You handle the books yourself — or you have a bookkeeper but you want to know what they should be doing.
  • You have at least one tipped employee on payroll.
  • You suspect your accountant isn't catching everything but you don't know what to ask.
  • You'd rather read for one evening than be sold to for one year.

Skip this volume if

It will under-serve you.
  • You operate a multi-unit chain over $10M (the strategies still apply, but the cost-segregation and entity work needs a CPA, not a book).
  • You're pre-revenue and haven't opened the doors. Read the volume, but the value is in execution.
  • You want your taxes done for you. We are a press, not a firm — though we can refer you.
  • You aren't actually a restaurant. The Café, Bar, and Food Truck volumes are forthcoming for adjacent operators.
§ II · What's Inside

Twelve chapters. Every form. Every number.

The full table of contents. Worked examples on every form (8846, 8941, 8881, Schedule M-1). Chapter-end checklists. Year-by-year worksheets.

Table of Contents
Vol. 053 · 240 pp.
  1. Ch. 01
    The Restaurant Money Reality
    pp. 1–18

    Why the restaurant P&L isn't the small-business P&L. Prime cost, the four numbers a restaurant CPA actually watches, and what your books should look like by week two of operation.

  2. Ch. 02
    Setting Up Day One
    pp. 19–34

    Entity choice (LLC vs. S-corp vs. C-corp), EIN, sales-tax registration, food permits, ABC license interaction with your books, opening chart of accounts.

  3. Ch. 03
    The Daily Money Routine & DSR
    pp. 35–46

    The Daily Sales Report explained. How to reconcile POS to deposits in 12 minutes. Cash variance thresholds. Tipping out and the paperwork the IRS expects.

  4. Ch. 04
    Inventory & Cost of Goods
    pp. 47–66

    Periodic vs. perpetual inventory for restaurants. Theoretical vs. actual food cost. Beverage pour cost. Spoilage, comps, and waste — what's deductible, what's a discount.

  5. Ch. 05
    Payroll, Tips & the FICA Tip Credit
    pp. 67–94

    The flagship chapter. Form 8846, allocated tips, service charges, tipped-wage minimums. A worked example showing $2,262 of credit per server, per year, that most owners never claim. Three years of amended returns recoverable.

  6. Ch. 06
    Sales Tax — Dine-in vs. Takeout
    pp. 95–114

    The thirty-state sales-tax landmines. Heated vs. cold prepared food. Catering vs. delivery. Third-party platform sales tax. The states where coffee is taxed but a bagel isn't, and how to set up your POS to stop bleeding.

  7. Ch. 07
    The Top 30 Deductions
    pp. 115–144

    Every deduction restaurants commonly miss or misclassify, with IRC citations. Smallwares, uniforms, employee meals, business meals, marketing, music licensing, software, professional fees.

  8. Ch. 08
    Depreciation Strategy
    pp. 145–164

    Section 179 vs. bonus depreciation vs. regular MACRS for a $180,000 kitchen build-out. Cost segregation for a build-out over $250K. Qualified Improvement Property after the CARES fix.

  9. Ch. 09
    Industry-Specific Credits
    pp. 165–184

    Beyond the FICA tip credit. WOTC for the workers you already hire. Form 8941 small-employer health credit. Form 8881 retirement plan startup credit. R&D credit when you're inventing menu items? Yes — with caveats.

  10. Ch. 10
    Audit Triggers
    pp. 185–200

    What gets restaurants audited. Cash-intensive business red flags. The three reconciliations the IRS will ask for. Documentation strategy that ends an audit in one meeting.

  11. Ch. 11
    Year-End & Books-to-Tax
    pp. 201–218

    Your December checklist. Schedule M-1 reconciliation. 1099-K vs. POS sales. Owner draws vs. wages for an S-corp. The four documents to hand your CPA before January 15.

  12. Ch. 12
    Buying, Selling & Closing
    pp. 219–236

    Asset sale vs. stock sale. Allocating purchase price across goodwill, equipment, leasehold improvements. The tax difference between closing your doors and selling for a dollar.

  13. App.
    Resources, Forms & Worksheets
    pp. 237–240

    Every form referenced in the book, with direct IRS links. The CPA-ready year-end checklist. Index of every IRC section cited.

§ III · Look Inside

An excerpt from the flagship chapter.

Chapter 5, on the FICA Tip Credit — a $4,000-to-$15,000-a-year credit that most restaurant owners either don't claim or claim incorrectly.

Vol. 053 · The Restaurant Blueprint Chapter Five · The FICA Tip Credit

The single most overlooked credit in a tipped restaurant's tax return.

If you operate a full-service restaurant in the United States and your servers earn tips, the federal government has, for nearly four decades, offered to refund a portion of the payroll tax you paid on those tips. The mechanism is Section 45B of the Internal Revenue Code, and the form is IRS Form 8846. It is not new. It is not obscure. It is, by any reasonable measure, one of the most predictable, most defensible, and most chronically unclaimed credits available to a restaurant owner.

The reason is straightforward: most general-practice tax preparers do not specialize in restaurants. The credit is available only to food and beverage establishments where tipping is customary, and the calculation requires data — total tipped wages, the employee's portion of FICA, the federal minimum wage in effect for the year — that lives in your payroll system, not your tax return. If your CPA does not ask, and your bookkeeping does not surface it, the credit goes unclaimed. Year after year.

Worked Example. A server earns $2.13/hour direct wages plus $11.87/hour in reported tips, working 30 hours per week, 50 weeks a year. The federal minimum wage credit base is $5.15/hour (the 2007 rate, frozen for this purpose). The employer's FICA on the qualifying tip portion calculates to $2,262 of credit per server, per year.
[ ($14.00 actual − $5.15 base) × 30 hrs × 50 wks × 7.65% ] = $1,015 employer-share refund × multiple servers = the line item your CPA may have missed.

The credit flows through Form 8846 to your business return. It is non-refundable but carries forward 20 years. For an LLC taxed as a partnership or S-corporation, it passes through to the owners' personal returns on Schedule K-1. For a sole proprietor, it lands on Form 3800, the General Business Credit summary. None of this is unusual. All of it is recoverable on amended returns going back three years, if you have not been claiming it.

The remainder of this chapter walks through the precise calculation, the documentation the IRS will look for, the interaction with the Work Opportunity Tax Credit, and the strategy for restaurants in states that have raised tipped-wage minimums above the federal floor — a situation that does not eliminate the credit, but does change its math…

Page 67 of 240 · Vol. 053 Buy the volume — $79 →
§ IV · Author & Press

Written by people who actually file these returns.

A general small-business book that pretends to cover restaurants is the reason restaurant owners overpay tax. The remedy is not a longer book. It is a narrower one.

From the imprint statement · Industry Ledger Press

This volume is researched, drafted, and reviewed by a credentialed tax professional — a CPA — paired with a restaurant industry editor who has actually run the kind of business this volume is written for. The author is named on the title page of the printed PDF.

Every dollar figure is checked against the current Internal Revenue Code, the current year's revenue procedures, and the most recent inflation-adjusted thresholds. Form 8846, Form 8941, Form 8881, and Schedule M-1 each have their own worked example.

Industry Ledger Press is a specialist publishing house, not a content farm. We don't run a course, we don't sell software, and we don't sell your email address. We are a press, in the older sense of the word — printing books for people who would rather read for an evening than be sold to for a year.

If after reading the book you'd like to talk through your specific situation, the press maintains a short referral list of credentialed restaurant CPAs in most metro areas. That conversation is yours to have, not ours to monetize.

From the imprint

A bookkeeping book that doesn't know the difference between allocated tips and service charges is not a bookkeeping book for a restaurant. This one knows.

The Editorial Standard · Industry Ledger Press
Reader endorsements will appear here as the volume is read in the wild — beginning summer 2026.
§ V · Companion Tools

Read the book. Then use the worksheets.

Three optional companion tools, each designed to be used alongside the book. Add them at checkout, or buy them with the volume in the bundle below at a substantial discount.

Add-On 01 Spreadsheet

The Restaurant Bookkeeping Toolkit

A pre-built Excel workbook: chart of accounts, daily sales report template, weekly prime-cost calculator, and the year-end CPA package. Keyed to the book's chapter references.

Add-On 02 Calculator

Quarterly Estimated Tax Calculator

A four-quarter Excel model that takes your YTD P&L and produces your safe-harbor 1040-ES voucher amount. Avoids underpayment penalties; tells you what to actually pay April, June, September, January.

Add-On 03 Checklist

Audit-Ready Documents Checklist

The exact 31-document list a restaurant should have organized and dated, by category, for an IRS or state sales-tax audit. The list ends most audits in one meeting.

Best Value · Limited Edition Bundle

The Restaurant Operator's Set

The full Restaurant Blueprint volume plus all three companion tools (Bookkeeping Toolkit, Quarterly Calculator, Audit Checklist) bundled at the founder price. The same set, bought separately, is $125.

$125 separately
$99.00
You save $26
Add the Set →
§ VI · Specifications

The colophon.

A press is its details. These are the ones that matter for this volume.

Catalogue Vol. 053 · Tier III
Edition First Edition · 2026
Length 240 pages · 12 chapters
Format PDF · Designed for screen + print
File Size ≈ 18 MB · Watermarked
Set in Fraunces & Manrope
Updated January 2026
Updates Included 12 months · free to readers
Reading Time ≈ 6–8 hours · 2 evenings
Refund Policy 30 days · no questions
Author Credentialed Tax Pro · CPA
Imprint Industry Ledger Press
§ VII · Common Questions

Plainly answered, this volume.

Restaurant-specific questions about this book. General questions about the press are answered on the imprint page.

01
My restaurant is a single-location, family-owned full-service spot. Will this still apply? +

Yes — that operator is the central reader. The volume is written for $300K–$5M restaurants, with the full-service model as the spine. Quick-service, café, bar, and food-truck readers get dedicated callouts in every chapter where the math diverges.

02
My CPA already does my taxes. Why would I need this? +

Most restaurant owners we talk to discover that their CPA is competent at general tax work and unspecialized in restaurants. The most common single finding from this book is that the FICA tip credit (Form 8846) was either not claimed or claimed incorrectly. That alone has paid for the book several times over for our beta readers. The book is meant to make your CPA better, not to replace them.

03
I don't have any tipped employees — quick-service, kiosk, food truck. Is most of the book wasted on me? +

Chapter 5 won't apply to you, but the other 11 will — and the QSR, food-truck, and counter-service callouts are throughout. If you'd prefer a volume scoped tightly to your model, the dedicated QSR and Food Truck volumes are forthcoming on the imprint schedule. Subscribers are notified when each ships.

04
I just opened. Is this too advanced? +

It is the right book for you — read Chapters 1, 2, 3, and 6 first. The rest will become relevant as you scale. Many of our readers tell us they wish they'd read it the week before they opened the doors.

05
What's actually in the file when I download it? +

A single watermarked PDF, 240 pages, designed for screen reading and clean printing. Watermark contains your order number and email — no DRM, no expiring links, your file forever. The bundle adds three accompanying Excel/PDF tools delivered in the same email.

06
What if tax law changes mid-year? +

All editions are revised every January, after the IRS inflation adjustments and any legislation passed during the prior year. Buyers receive every revision free for twelve months from purchase. After that, the optional Annual Update Pass keeps you current at $19/year.

07
Can I expense the book? +

Yes. A specialist trade publication on the operation of your business is a deductible §162 ordinary and necessary business expense in nearly every case. Receipt is in your order email.

08
What's the refund policy, really? +

Thirty days. No questions. Reply to the order email and the refund processes within one business day. We would rather refund a reader who didn't get what they hoped for than keep a customer who didn't.

Ready to Read

Your accountant will thank you.

The Restaurant Blueprint, instant download, $79. Or the Operator's Set — the book and all three companion tools — for $99. Read it tonight. Save thousands this year.

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