Give a Gift

Making Your Money Last

Save on Taxes If You Are Self-Employed

Take deductions for equipment, travel and your home office if you work for yourself.

By Kathryn A. Walson, Staff Writer, Kiplinger's Retirement Report

June 3, 2009
Text Size T T
  • Comments
  • Print This Article
  • Order a Reprint
  • Advertisement

EDITOR'S NOTE: This article was originally published in the April 2009 issue of Kiplinger's Retirement Report. To subscribe, click here.

Related Links


If you've moved into the ranks of the self-employed, you can shift some of your new expenses over to Uncle Sam. But watch out for the red flags that can catch the IRS's attention.

Generally, you can deduct business supplies, such as a computer, printer, fax machine, copier, software and a cell phone, as well as training sessions and advertising. "If it's essential for the business, it's probably going to be deductible," says Tom Ochsenschlager, vice-president of taxation for the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.

When it comes to business meals and travel, be careful. Fifty percent of the cost of meals and entertainment for clients is deductible. For travel, your deductions depend on the major purpose of your trip. If the trip is primarily for business, you can deduct the airfare, food, lodging, dry cleaning, fees for Internet connections and other work-related expenses.

"If you travel to Florida primarily for business, and you tack on a day with the family at Disneyland, you could deduct your flight and other expenses -- except that day at Disneyland," says Bob Scharin, senior tax analyst with Thomson Reuters, a provider of tax information. "If you're on a family vacation at Disneyland and you spend one day doing business with a client in Orlando, you could deduct the costs incurred only for that one day."

You can write off 100% of medical-insurance premiums for yourself and your spouse, as long as you aren't eligible for health insurance from an employer or your spouse's employer. For example, if a wife is employed by a company that provides health coverage to employees and spouses, the self-employed husband can't deduct medical expenses.

Self-employed people with a home office can deduct a portion of utilities, homeowners insurance, maintenance costs and housecleaning. If you have to replace your roof, you could deduct a portion of the cost. You can write off entire expenses that affect only your office, such as installing new carpet.

To qualify, the office must be a room, or section of a room, that's used regularly and exclusively for work purposes, such as meeting with customers, keeping records and ordering supplies. You will need to figure out what proportion of your house is occupied by your home office. For example, if the room takes up 250 square feet of a 2,500-square-foot house, you can deduct 10% of your home's expenses.

Make sure you're serious about your business before taking write-offs. Deductions won't fly if you're more of a hobbyist than a businessperson working to make money. Also, says Scharin, "your deductions for your home office cannot exceed your income from the business you're running out of your home."

Self-employed people can also reduce a tax bill by making tax-deductible contributions to a retirement plan such as a SEP IRA and an individual 401(k). For both, you can contribute 25% of your compensation up to $49,000. Plus you can contribute an extra $5,500 to a solo 401(k) if you're 50 or older.

You can deduct transportation costs for travel between your home office and business sites. Record the date, destination address and the number of miles for each trip. The standard rate for business travel is 55 cents a mile.

To track your expenses, file away receipts. "You have to be able to provide documentation on whatever you deduct for up to three years," says Abraham Schneier, senior manager of the tax division at the accountants' institute. Use Form 8829, "Expenses for Business Use of Your Home," to compute home-office deductions, and report deductions on Schedule C. Visit the "Self-Employed Individuals Tax Center" at www.irs.gov.

You'll pay a 15.3% self-employment tax, for Social Security and Medicare, on the first $106,800 in net earnings, and pay 2.9% for Medicare on net earnings above $106,800. But you can deduct half of your self-employment tax. Also, file estimated tax payments quarterly.

For more authoritative guidance on retirement investing, slashing taxes and getting the best health care, click here for a FREE sample issue of Kiplinger's Retirement Report.


DISCUSS

Permission to post your comment is assumed when you submit it. The name you provide will be used to identify your post, and NOT your e-mail address. We reserve the right to excerpt or edit any posted comments for clarity, appropriateness, civility, and relevance to the topic.
View our full privacy policy

Reader Comments (6)

Posted by: Natalie at 07/25/2009 02:24:39 PM

If I no longer work outside the home and make money by investing in the stock market, researching, trading and working at it on a daily basis, would it be legal (and worthwhile) to set this up as a business?

Posted by: R Wood at 08/21/2009 10:31:24 AM

This article has good pointers, but misses a huge deduction if you are able to sock money away. Both the SEP IRA and I401k offer serious savings opportunities....SEP let's you shave 20% off your tax bill up to about $40k. The I401k is superior as it allows for first $15k off the bat sheltered + the SEP benefit. The paperwork for the I401k is initially daunting in appearance but is not so bad. Any self-serve company (Schwab, Fidelity, etc.) would be happy to advise for free in this environment to get the business. I set one up independently through Schwab myself. So personal example, my spouse makes about $20k, we get that down to $15k with various deductions noted above, then we can shelter the remaining $15k from Federal, state and half of SE tax. At end of day, we pay half of SE tax (less than $2k) on $20k of income (vs. having to pay $8k).

Posted by: Thom at 08/21/2009 11:08:46 PM

Hi,Natalie: In order to be legally defined as a business, you must be selling something. In your brief description of what you intend to do, I can't find any hint as to what you would be selling. If you're simply managing your own assets, then you have no "business". If you manage other people's assets, for a fee, then you do have a business.

Posted by: SK at 08/24/2009 02:12:35 PM

Something I learned the hard way: I am independent contractor and work on a contract for a client in a different town. However, I only have one client and my contract gets renewed every year. Since my contract is for one year, my travel expenses (mileage/hotel etc.) are NOT deductible.

Posted by: D. Stombaugh at 09/04/2009 08:57:27 AM

R. Wood, you can put a lot of money into qualified plans. The question is are your current deductions worth paying potentially more in taxes when you withdrawl your funds at retirement. Many assume they will be in a lower tax bracket at retirement. That is not necessarily the case and with the way the economy is going will probably not be the case at retirement. One may be better off to forgo the deductions and grow money in a tax derred Roth IRA or a good cash value life policy. Both can provide tax free withdrawls at retirement.

Posted by: Kelli Garner at 09/29/2009 06:28:12 PM

Really nice posts. I will be checking back here regularly.



Featured Videos From Kiplinger





Connect With Kiplinger

E-mail Updates: Select the Kiplinger columns and topics to be delivered to your inbox.

email-sign-up

facebook
twitter
RSS