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April 15, 2025 · 6 min read

5 Tax Things Course Creators Often Overlook

Most course creators are overlooking the same tax areas — and it adds up faster than you'd expect.

After working with dozens of course creators and reviewing their financials, I've noticed a pattern. The gaps aren't exotic or complicated. They're the same five areas, over and over — partly because no one pointed them out.

1. Not Setting Aside Tax Money

This comes up more often than not. When you get a payment from your platform — the full amount hits your account. Nothing was withheld. So you spend it.

Then April comes, and you're looking at 25–40% of your profit owed to the IRS and your state, with nothing set aside.

A good approach: Move 25–30% of every payment to a separate savings account the moment it arrives. Call it your tax reserve. Keep it there until you're ready to pay.

2. Running Everything Through a Personal Account

You launched on the side. You didn't set up a business account. So your course platform payouts go to your personal checking, your ad expenses come from your personal card.

The result: it's hard to tell what the business earned, what it spent, or what it owes.

A good approach: Open a separate business checking account. Even a basic one. Route all future business income through it.

3. Not Understanding Platform Tax Responsibility

Some platforms — Etsy, Amazon, and certain others — collect and remit sales tax on your behalf under marketplace facilitator laws. Others don't.

If you're selling on a platform that doesn't handle sales tax and you have economic nexus in certain states, you could be carrying sales tax obligations without realizing it.

A good approach: Look up whether each platform you sell on handles sales tax. Write down the answer.

4. Treating Course Income Like a Hobby

The IRS looks at whether you're operating like a business or a hobby. If you can show business intent — a separate bank account, consistent income tracking, a formal entity — you're positioned as a business.

A good approach: Basic structure — separate account, income tracking, and an LLC if you've been making money. These are your signals.

5. Waiting Until Tax Season to Figure It Out

Most course creators don't look at their numbers until tax filing is due. That's a common pattern — and it makes a stressful situation worse.

A good approach: Set a recurring monthly date to review your income and expenses. Even 30 minutes. You'll catch problems early and have real numbers when you talk to a CPA.


None of these are irreversible. But they compound. The longer you let them run, the more complicated the cleanup. The good news is that the fixes are straightforward — and none of them require expensive software or complex systems.

Start with the two things that matter most: a separate account and a tax reserve. Everything else builds from there.


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