CHAPTER 6

Deducting Office-Related Costs

Everyone has to be somewhere, according to a line from an old BBC show. Whether you work in an office building, at a strip mall, at a table in Starbucks, or in your home, you have office-related costs. These costs include expenses related to the physical space, such as rent for an office within a commercial building or a home office deduction if you operate from home. Office costs also include supplies, technology costs for a website and computer backup and maintenance, utilities, and insurance. You may have some or all of these expenses.

Rental Expenses

Whether your office is a retail store, a greenhouse, an artist's studio, a medical office, or an office in a commercial building, it has to work well for you. Check on:

  • Location. Does access to foot traffic matter to you? Do you need adequate parking or access to public transportation?
  • Size. Is the size of the space suitable for your needs?
  • Cost. Rent is usually one of the largest monthly costs for a self-employed person. Can you afford it?

Your monthly rent for commercial space is fully tax deductible. Rent can be a fixed monthly amount or an amount based on a percentage of your gross receipts.

The rent must be reasonable, which is assumed when you and the landlord are not related. However, if the landlord is your brother, ...

Get J.K. Lasser's Guide to Self-Employment: Taxes, Tips, and Money-Saving Strategies for Schedule C Filers now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.