Business expenses are the cost of carrying on a trade or business.
These expenses are usually deductible if the business operates to make a
profit.
What Can I Deduct?
Cost of Goods Sold
Capital Expenses
Personal versus Business Expenses
Business Use of Your Home
Business Use of Your Car
Other Types of Business Expenses
Note:
If you do not carry on the activity to make a profit, you must report
all of the gross income (without deductions) from the activity on Form
1040, line 21. Special limits apply to what expenses for a
not-for-profit activity are deductible; for detailed information, refer
to Publication 535, Business Expenses.
What Can I Deduct?
To
be deductible, a business expense must be both ordinary and necessary.
An ordinary expense is one that is common and accepted in your trade or
business. A necessary expense is one that is helpful and appropriate for
your trade or business. An expense does not have to be indispensable to
be considered necessary.
It is important to separate business expenses from the following expenses:
The expenses used to figure the cost of goods sold,
Capital Expenses, and
Personal Expenses.
Cost of Goods Sold
If
your business manufactures products or purchases them for resale, you
generally must value inventory at the beginning and end of each tax year
to determine your cost of goods sold unless you are a small business
taxpayer (defined below). Some of your expenses may be included in
figuring the cost of goods sold. The cost of goods sold is deducted from
your gross receipts to figure your gross profit for the year. If you
include an expense in the cost of goods sold, you cannot deduct it again
as a business expense.
The following are types of expenses that go into figuring the cost of goods sold.
The cost of products or raw materials, including freight
Storage
Direct labor costs (including contributions to pensions or annuity plans) for workers who produce the products
Factory overhead
Under
the uniform capitalization rules, you must capitalize the direct costs
and part of the indirect costs for certain production or resale
activities unless you are a small business taxpayer (defined below).
Indirect costs include rent, interest, taxes, storage, purchasing,
processing, repackaging, handling, and administrative costs.
Small
business taxpayer. Effective for tax years beginning after 12/31/2017, a
small business taxpayer is a taxpayer that (a) has average annual gross
receipts of $25 million or less for the 3 prior tax years and (b) is
not a tax shelter (as defined in section 448(d)(3)). See section 471(c)
and section 263A(i).
If you are small business
taxpayer, you can adopt or change your accounting method to account for
inventories (i) in the same manner as materials and supplies that are
non-incidental, or (ii) conform to your treatment of inventories in an
applicable financial statement (as defined in section 451(b)(3)), or if
the taxpayer does not have an applicable financial statement, the method
of accounting used in the taxpayers books and records prepared in
accordance with the taxpayer's accounting procedures. See section
471(c)(1).
For additional information, refer to the
chapter on Cost of Goods Sold, Publication 334, Tax Guide for Small
Businesses and the chapter on Inventories, Publication 538, Accounting
Periods and Methods.
Capital Expenses
You must
capitalize, rather than deduct, some costs. These costs are a part of
your investment in your business and are called capital expenses.
Capital expenses are considered assets in your business. In general,
there are three types of costs you capitalize.
Business start-up costs (See the note below)
Business assets
Improvements
Note:
You can elect to deduct or amortize certain business start-up costs.
Refer to chapters 7 and 8 of Publication 535, Business Expenses.
Personal versus Business Expenses
Generally,
you cannot deduct personal, living, or family expenses. However, if you
have an expense for something that is used partly for business and
partly for personal purposes, divide the total cost between the business
and personal parts. You can deduct the business part.
For
example, if you borrow money and use 70% of it for business and the
other 30% for a family vacation, you can deduct 70% of the interest as a
business expense. The remaining 30% is personal interest and is not
deductible. Refer to chapter 4 of Publication 535, Business Expenses,
for information on deducting interest and the allocation rules.
Business Use of Your Home
If
you use part of your home for business, you may be able to deduct
expenses for the business use of your home. These expenses may include
mortgage interest, insurance, utilities, repairs, and depreciation.
Refer to Home Office Deduction and Publication 587, Business Use of Your
Home, for more information.
Business Use of Your Car
If
you use your car in your business, you can deduct car expenses. If you
use your car for both business and personal purposes, you must divide
your expenses based on actual mileage. Refer to Publication 463, Travel,
Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses. For a list of current and prior
year mileage rates see the Standard Mileage Rates.
Other Types of Business Expenses
Employees' Pay - You can generally deduct the pay you give your employees for the services they perform for your business.
Retirement
Plans - Retirement plans are savings plans that offer you tax
advantages to set aside money for your own, and your employees'
retirement.
Rent Expense - Rent is any amount you pay for the use
of property you do not own. In general, you can deduct rent as an
expense only if the rent is for property you use in your trade or
business. If you have or will receive equity in or title to the
property, the rent is not deductible.
Interest - Business interest expense is an amount charged for the use of money you borrowed for business activities.
Taxes
- You can deduct various federal, state, local, and foreign taxes
directly attributable to your trade or business as business expenses.
Insurance
- Generally, you can deduct the ordinary and necessary cost of
insurance as a business expense, if it is for your trade, business, or
profession.
Business expenses are the cost of carrying on a trade or business. These expenses are usually deductible if the business operates to make...
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