In addition to my main job, I have registered a trade and have to fill out the tax registration accordingly. I have questions about that. Maybe someone can help me there.
1. Since I already have a tax number. Do I have to apply for a second one or do I just enter my current one in the registration?
2. When recording the income, it says trade, self-employed work and non-self-employed work. Do I enter the estimated income for business or self-employed work and, in the case of non-self-employed work, my annual gross wage from the last income tax certificate?
3. Below is also special editions. What does that mean? Do the expenses mean, for example, items that I need, for example a laptop, office items?
4. Because of the income tax, I'm confused about what to enter as estimated sales, because if I enter too much I have to make an advance payment immediately afterwards. Can you advise me what amount I should enter so that the tax office leaves me alone for the time being, or that they don't charge high input tax directly?
To 1 here you enter your current one… You will get a different one later…
to 2 your income from self-employment in the case of "self-employed work", the rest in the case of non-self-employed work
to 3 larger issues that are already foreseeable… One machine…
to 4 enter 12,000 euro for the first year and 17,000 euro for the next year, then you do not need to charge VAT…
Thank you
To 3. Machines do not count as special editions
to 4. What does the form ask for? Based on expected income, not sales, right?
You enter your current tax number there.
Commercial income and income from self-employment are two different things. In your question you explicitly stated that you registered a business.
Business expenses are not special expenses. Rather, special expenses are insurance contributions, donations, etc., i.e. Expenses that do not play a role in determining income.
You shouldn't mix up income tax and sales. When asked about the expected income, you state the expected income, when asked about the expected sales, the expected sales. You should be realistic about this information. Nobody will tear your head off if the estimate in retrospect turns out to be incorrect.