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Tax Calendar

January 16, 2023 4th Quarter 2022 Estimated Tax Payment Due
If you’re self-employed or have other income without any tax withholding, and you make quarterly estimated tax payments, this is the due date for your final quarterly payment for the 2022 tax year.
January 31, 2023 Due Date for Employers to Send W-2 Forms
To ensure you’re able to complete your tax return on time, the IRS requires all employers to send you a W-2 no later than January 31 following the close of the tax year. Generally, this means W-2s get sent by January 31, but you won’t necessarily receive your form by this date.
January 31, 2023 Certain 1099 Forms Are Sent
Various 1099 forms, and forms 1099-NEC,1099-MISC, and 1099-K are used to report payments that typically don’t come from an employer, such as if you work as an independent contractor, gig worker, or self-employed person or if you receive income such as interest, dividends, prize winnings, rents, royalties, or brokerage account transactions.
April 18, 2023 Tax Day
The tax deadline typically falls on April 15 each year but can be delayed if it falls on a weekend or holiday. Missing the tax deadline can have consequences like penalties and interest.
April 18, 2023 Deadline To File Form 4868 and Request an Extension
The Tax Day deadline is also the last day to file Form 4868 requesting an extension to file your individual income tax return. If you won’t be ready to file your tax return by Tax Day, make sure you instead complete an extension request, granting you the ability to delay filing a completed return until October 16, 2023. But remember, even if you choose to file an extension, you are still required to pay any taxes you may owe by the April deadline.
April 18, 2023 1st Quarter 2023 Estimated Tax Payment Due
If you’re self-employed or have other income without any tax withholding, and you make quarterly estimated tax payments, this is the due date for your first quarterly payment for the 2023 tax year.
April 18, 2023 Business Tax Day
Businesses organized as partnerships, including multi-member LLCs, and S-Corporations need to file Form 1065, or 1120S by March 15, 2023, if they are a calendar year business.
June 15, 2023 2nd Quarter 2023 Estimated Tax Payment Due
If you’re self-employed or have other income without any tax withholding, and you make quarterly estimated tax payments, this is the due date for your second quarterly payment for the 2023 tax year.
September 15, 2023 3rd Quarter 2023 Estimated Tax Payment Due
If you’re self-employed or have other income without any tax withholding, and you make quarterly estimated tax payments, this is the due date for your third quarterly payment for the 2023 tax year.
September 15, 2023 Extended Partnerships and S-Corporations Tax Returns Due
If you got a filing extension on your 2022 tax return, you need to complete it and e-file or have it postmarked by September 15, 2023.
October 16, 2023 Extended Individual and C-Corporations Tax Returns Due
If you got a filing extension on your 2022 tax return, you need to complete it and e-file or have it postmarked by October 16, 2023.
January 15, 2024 4th Quarter 2023 Estimated Tax Payment Due
If you’re self-employed or have other income without any tax withholding, and you make quarterly estimated tax payments, this is the due date for your fourth quarterly payment for the 2023 tax year.
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Form ADV Part 3 – Client Relationship Summary

Date: 03/29/2024

Item 1: Introduction

MOTIV8 INVESTMENTS LLC is an investment adviser registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission offering advisory accounts and services. Brokerage and investment advisory services and fees differ, and it is important that you understand the differences. This document gives you a summary of the types of services and fees we offer. Please visit www.investor.gov/CRS for free, simple tools to research firms and financial professionals, as well as educational materials about broker-dealers, investment advisers, and investing.

Item 2: Relationships and Services

Questions to ask us: Given my financial situation, should I choose an investment advisory service? Why or why not? How will you choose investments to recommend to me? What is your relevant experience, including your licenses, education and other qualifications? What do these qualifications mean?

What investment services and advice can you provide me? Our firm primarily offers the following investment advisory services to retail clients: portfolio management (we review your portfolio, investment strategy, and investments); financial planning (we assess your financial situation and provide advice to meet your goals); solicitor/selection of other advisers (we select a third party adviser for you to use). As part of our standard services, we typically monitor client accounts on a monthly basis. Our firm has discretionary management without any material limitations. We do not limit the types of investments that we recommend. Our minimum account size is $50,000. Please also see our Form ADV Part 2A (“Brochure”), specifically Items 4 & 7.

Item 3: Fees, Costs, Conflicts, and Standard of Conduct

Questions to ask us: Help me understand how these fees and costs might affect my investments. If I give you $10,000 to invest, how much will go to fees and costs, and how much will be invested for me? How might your conflicts of interest affect me, and how will you address them?

What fees will I pay? Our fees vary depending on the services you receive. Additionally, the amount of assets in your account affects our advisory fee; the more assets you have in your advisory account, the more you will pay us and thus we have an incentive to increase those assets in order to increase our fee. For hourly fee arrangements, each additional hour (or portion therefore) we spend working for you would increase the advisory fee. Our fixed fee arrangements are based on the amount of work we expect to perform for you, so material changes in that amount of work will affect the advisory fee we quote you. All fees are paid monthly in advance. Additionally, we have the following compensation structure: Other: THIRD PARTY ADVISER FEES You pay our fees even if you do not have any transactions and the advisory fee paid to us generally does not vary based on the type of investments selected. Please also see Items 4, 5, 6, 7 & 8 of our Brochure.

Some investments (e.g., mutual funds, variable annuities, etc.) impose additional fees (e.g., transactional fees and product-level fees) that reduce the value of your investment over time. The same goes for any additional fees you pay to a custodian. Additionally, you will pay transaction fees, if applicable, when we buy or sell an investment for your account. You will pay fees and costs

whether you make or lose money on your investments. Fees and costs will reduce any amount of money you make on your investments over time. Please make sure you understand what fees and costs you are paying. Please also see our
Brochure for additional details.
What are your legal obligations to me when acting as my investment adviser? How else does your firm make money and what conflicts of interest do you have?: When we act as your investment adviser, we have to act in your best interest and not put our interest ahead of yours. At the same time, the way we make money creates some conflicts with your interests. You should understand and ask us about these conflicts because they can affect the investment advice we provide you. Here are some examples to help you understand what this means (see heading immediately below).

How do your financial professionals make money? Primarily, we and our financial professionals receive cash compensation from the advisory services we provide to you because of the advisory fees we receive from you. This compensation may vary based on different factors, such as those listed above in this Item. Our financial professionals also have the ability to receive commissions from clients and therefore have an incentive to recommend products that provide them or us additional compensation over those that do not. Please also see Item 10 of our Brochure for additional details.

Item 4: Disciplinary History

Questions to ask us: As a financial professional, do you have any disciplinary history? For what type of conduct?

Do you or your financial professionals have legal or disciplinary history? No. Visit https://www.investor.gov/ for a free, simple search tool to research us and our financial professionals.

Item 5: Additional Information

Questions to ask us: Who is my primary contact person? Is he or she a representative of an investment adviser or a broker-dealer? Who can I talk to if I have concerns about how this person is treating me?

For additional information on our advisory services, see our Brochure available at https://adviserinfo.sec.gov/firm/summary/285560 and any individual brochure supplement your representative provides. If you have any questions, need additional information, or want another copy of this Client Relationship Summary, then please contact us at 772-807-4628.