Most high earners are asking the wrong question.
They’re focused on:
“How do I reduce my taxes this year?”
That’s reactive.
The real question – the one that actually changes outcomes—is:
“How is my entire financial structure designed?”
Because if your structure is wrong, no amount of deductions will fix it.
A New Perspective from Wealthrive’s Tax Strategist
At Wealthrive, our new Tax Strategist, Richard Huynh, J.D., brings more than a decade of experience in tax law, entity structuring, and estate planning.
His work reflects a simple but often overlooked truth:
For many business owners, the biggest tax savings don’t come from deductions. They come from structure.
Why Entity Structuring Is the Foundation of Tax Strategy
After reviewing hundreds of high-income cases, one pattern is clear:
The largest inefficiencies aren’t tactical.
They’re structural.
Income is often:
- Earned in the wrong entity
- Exposed to higher-than-necessary tax rates
- Mixed with liability
- Or locked into inflexible ownership structures
That’s not a tax filing issue.
That’s a design flaw.
Richard Huynh’s Approach: Structure First, Strategy Second
Richard doesn’t start with credits or deductions.
He starts with architecture.
Here’s how that thinking plays out:
1. Income Should Be Directed, Not Just Earned
Most entrepreneurs operate through a single entity and accept whatever tax outcome follows.
Richard challenges that.
Different types of income – operating income, investment income, and long-term gains – can be strategically separated and routed through the right structures.
The result:
- More control over tax treatment
- Greater planning flexibility
- Reduced exposure over time
2. Separate Control, Ownership, and Economics
One of the most common mistakes:
Everything is owned directly.
That creates:
- Concentrated risk
- Limited planning opportunities
- Higher long-term tax exposure
A well-designed structure separates:
- Who controls assets
- Who benefits economically
- And where liabilities sit
That separation is where real leverage begins.
3. Every Entity Should Serve a Purpose
Multiple entities alone don’t create a strategy.
Intent does.
Each entity should have a clearly defined role, such as:
- Operating business activities
- Holding appreciating assets
- Managing risk
- Supporting long-term estate planning
Without that clarity, complexity increases – but outcomes don’t improve.
4. Structure Drives Exit Outcomes
Most business owners think about their exit too late.
But your entity structure determines:
- How a sale is taxed
- What flexibility you have in negotiations
- And how much wealth you ultimately retain
The right structure creates optionality.
The wrong one creates friction – and unnecessary tax.
The Hidden Cost of Poor Structuring
If your structure hasn’t been intentionally designed, you may be:
- Overpaying taxes year after year
- Taking on avoidable liability
- Limiting your ability to scale or exit
- Missing opportunities that only exist at the structural level
And most professionals won’t address this – because they focus on compliance, not design.
The Wealthrive Approach
At Wealthrive, we don’t begin with tax returns.
We begin with structure.
Because when the foundation is right:
- Tax strategies become more effective
- Wealth compounds more efficiently
- And long-term planning becomes more flexible
Richard Huynh’s work reflects that philosophy.
Not more complexity.
Better design.
Final Thought
If you’re a high-income business owner still operating through a basic setup, you don’t have a tax strategy.
You have a tax outcome.
And those are not the same thing.