Tax season hits differently when you've been tracking location data all year.
For everyone else, April is a scramble: chasing employees for calendar exports, reconstructing travel itineraries from memory, and having deeply awkward conversations with Finance about state withholding that probably should have been caught in March of last year.
For you? It's more like a checkout process. The data is there. You just have to use it.
Here's how.
1. Start With the Real Story: Pull Your Location History
Before you look at a single self-reported spreadsheet, pull your Monaeo location history first.
Self-reports are charming. They're also routinely wrong. People round down, forget trips, assume "working from my sister's place in Austin for two weeks" doesn't count, and generally treat compliance like optional homework.
Monaeo tracked it anyway (passively, privately, and automatically) without anyone having to remember a thing.
Start here. Get the real picture of where your people actually worked in 2025, then compare it to what was reported. Look for:
- Employees whose day counts differ significantly from self-reports
- Unreported state hops, extended trips, or surprise international days
- Remote and hybrid workers whose patterns shifted mid-year without anyone flagging it
The gaps are where your tax season lives.
2. Don't Guess on Thresholds, Check Them
December and January are when threshold exposure quietly becomes a tax filing problem. The tricky part is that these lines don't announce themselves. Someone crossed into New York residency territory in November. A business traveler tipped over a withholding threshold in Q3. A remote employee's "temporary" work from California turned into seven months.
Run your threshold summary in Monaeo and look specifically at:
- New York residency and NYC UBT exposure
- California, Texas, and other high-scrutiny state presence
- 183-day triggers (domestic and international)
- Anyone who got close (because close still needs a paper trail)
If something was crossed, you want to know now, not when a notice shows up.
3. Get Your Business Traveler Report Before Payroll Finalizes Anything
Here's the thing about business travelers: they almost never end up exactly where they planned. Trips extend. Meetings move. A two-day Chicago trip becomes four days, plus a detour through New York, and nobody told Payroll about any of it.
Monaeo's traveler reports replace the guesswork with a clean, jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction view of where your travelers actually were. Before anything gets finalized, confirm:
- All traveler day counts are accurate and complete
- Cities, states, or countries where withholding or reporting obligations may have been triggered
- Any trips that quietly became informal assignments without anyone noticing
Retroactive corrections are painful. Doing it right the first time is not.
4. Zoom Out on Your Remote and Hybrid Workers
Individual days rarely look alarming. Patterns do.
- That employee who's "mostly remote"... where were they actually working?
- The person who took a few extended trips home... did any of those states notice
- The hybrid worker whose schedule shifted in Q2... did their tax situation shift with it?
Monaeo lets you look at the full year, not just snapshots. Use it to surface:
- Anyone whose actual work location diverged from their official setup
- Employees who may have unintentionally triggered nexus, residency, or payroll obligations
- "Hybrid" schedules that slowly turned into something else entirely
Flag it before it turns into a surprise filing, a backdated correction, or a very uncomfortable Finance meeting.
5. Export Your Audit Documentation Now, While It's Boring
Audits are stressful for one main reason: the documentation wasn't ready.
When an inquiry comes in, you're not judged on what you meant to track. You're judged on what you can prove, right now, in an organized way that holds up. Scrambling to reconstruct location data from Slack messages and calendar screenshots is not a vibe and not the kind of task anyone wants on their plate.
Monaeo auto-generates audit-ready reports across jurisdictions. Pull them now and file them somewhere sane:
- Day-count summaries by jurisdiction
- Threshold alerts and risk flags from throughout the year
- Presence reports mapped to actual tax and residency rules
- State-by-state and country-level travel summaries
If someone sends the dreaded "we're reviewing your records" email this spring, you want your response to be a PDF attachment, not a prayer.
6. Reconcile Payroll Withholding Before It's Too Late to Fix Cleanly
Multi-state payroll is where things quietly fall apart. A few extra days in the wrong state, withholding that never got updated, a shadow payroll obligation that nobody caught... it adds up fast.
53% of companies have incurred payroll penalties in the last five years because of exactly this kind of thing. Not malice. Just misalignment between where people worked and what Payroll knew about it.
Use Monaeo's clean day counts and location timelines to check:
- Whether state withholding aligns with where work actually happened
- Retroactive corrections tied to misreported or missed days
- Shadow payroll requirements that may have been triggered
- Any presence that should have prompted earlier withholding adjustments
Fix it once, correctly, with data to back it up, instead of fixing it repeatedly, reactively, with apologies.
7. Check International Days Before Someone Else Does
International travel is where "oops" gets expensive.
The rules are strict, country-specific, and not particularly forgiving about whether the work was planned or informal. A working vacation an employee forgot to mention. A trip that extended past a treaty threshold. A pattern of travel that, viewed together, starts to look a lot like Permanent Establishment.
Monaeo maps international days clearly across countries. Run this report and look for:
- Days approaching or crossing 183-day residency thresholds by country
- Countries where Permanent Establishment risk may have been quietly created
- Social security and treaty implications that may apply
- "Working vacation" situations that never made it onto anyone's radar
Better to find it now than to have a foreign tax authority find it for you.
8. Let 2025's Data Fix 2026's Policies
Here's the part most teams skip and then wonder why the same issues show up again next year.
Your Monaeo data from 2025 is basically a policy audit. 60% of companies only discover compliance issues after an audit or internal review (KPMG). The other 40% have something those companies don't: real data they actually looked at.
Before you close the books, ask:
- Where did employees actually work versus where your policies assumed they'd work?
- Where did approvals fail to catch real exposure?
- Do thresholds, restrictions, or guardrails need updating for 2026?
- What patterns kept showing up that your current policies completely missed?
Use what surfaced this year to update thresholds, tighten approvals, and set smarter alerts before January 1st becomes a problem you're cleaning up in April again.
The Bottom Line
Tax season doesn't have to be the annual chaos sprint. With Monaeo, the data was being captured all year; passively, accurately, without anyone having to do anything heroic.
All that's left is using it.
Pull the reports. Check the thresholds. Reconcile payroll. Export the documentation. And for the love of all things compliant, do the policy update before you close the laptop for the year.
You've got the tools. Now go have a boring, uneventful tax season. You've earned it.
If you don't have Monaeo yet, let's change that! Reach out to a representative today to talk through your potential ROI.