Your Child Booked⦠Now Donāt Blow It
Hereās the truth nobody says out loud: The moment your child starts making money, youāre not just a parent anymoreāyouāre managing a business. And most families lose money not because their child isnāt talentedā¦but because there was no financial structure when the money showed up. Weāre not doing that. When your child starts to book, lock in these 3 power moves early so the money actually builds something. š° 1. Run It Like a BusinessāNot a Piggy Bank The biggest mistake? Treating checks like random income. No. This is earned income in the entertainment industry. Set up 3 simple lanes immediately: - Taxes (25ā30%) ā Put it aside every time. No exceptions. This is providing you set up an LLC. If you allow the production company to use your child's name only as a work for hire/contractor on all paperwork, the IRS will take 40% of income and your child gets 60%. Yes, you can get some money back when you files taxes, but why do that and have to wait. - Savings (Future Wealth) ā This is your childās long-term win - Operating (Spending) ā Classes, travel, reinvestment If all the money goes into one account, it will get spent like one account. Structure creates discipline. Discipline protects the money. š 2. Know Your Numbers or Youāre Guessing If you donāt track it, you donāt control it. Keep it simple: - Log every job and payment - Track every expense tied to your childās career Why this matters: - Youāll know if your child is actually profitable - You can legally write off expenses (less taxes, more kept) - Youāre prepared if the IRS asks questions Most families āfeelā like theyāre doing well⦠until they look at the numbers. š”ļø 3. Protect the Money (This Is Where Most People Mess Up) When income starts getting serious, this is your next level move: Set up a Coogan Account (also called a blocked trust account) Hereās what that means in plain English: - A portion of your childās earnings is legally protected - The money is locked away for them until adulthood - In some states, itās required by law for child performers