|
Understanding
the Home Office Deduction
Can
Lower Your Tax Bill
One
of the many benefits of working from home is the home
office deduction. Home-based workers who qualify can
deduct a portion of their expenses related to operating
an office in their home. However, the rules covering
the home office deduction are complex.
To
qualify for the home office deduction, there are two
major requirements you must meet:
Regular
and Exclusive Use
The first requirement is that you use your office regularly
and exclusively for business. Regularly means you use
it often - not necessarily every day, but occasional
or incidental use doesn't qualify, even if the room
is used solely for business.
Exclusively
means that you must use the space you designate as your
home office for work only - any non-business usage of
the room will disqualify the home office deduction.
The only exception to the exclusivity rule applies to
running a daycare center in your home or using a part
of your home to store inventory or product samples.
Principal
Place of Business
The second requirement is that your home office be used
either as a place of business to meet with clients,
customers or patients in the normal course of business
or your principal place of business. Your office will
qualify if you spend most of your working hours there
and most of your business income is attributable to
your functions there.
The
home office will qualify as your principal place of
business if:
1)
it is used regularly and exclusively for business,
administrative or management activities, and
2)
you have no other fixed location where you can do
a substantial amount of administrative work. Examples
include calling customers and clients to set up appointments,
billing of customers and clients, keeping books and
records and calling vendors to purchase supplies.
Special
Rules for Employees
If you're an employee who works from a home office some
or all of the time, you also must meet certain requirements.
To qualify for the deduction, the use of a home office
must be for the convenience of the employer. An example
of this scenario would be the employer who does not
have or provide office space for the employee. Employees
who work from home a few days a week to take advantage
of the company's flexible workplace option are not eligible
to take the home office deduction.
Determining
What's Deductible
When you work from a qualified home office, you can
fully deduct expenses that are exclusively for your
home office, such as equipment, decorating and supplies.
You may also deduct a percentage of indirect expenses
that relate to your residence, including mortgage interest,
property taxes, utilities, homeowners insurance, general
maintenance and repairs, and depreciation.
Generally,
the amount you can deduct depends on the percentage
of your home that you use for business. The safest method
is to divide the total square footage of the house (not
counting an unfinished basement or a patio) by the square
footage allocated to the business. If your house is
2,500 square feet and your office takes up 250 square
feet of that space, then 10 percent of your indirect
expenses would be deductible. The amount of your home
office deduction cannot exceed the net income from the
business.
Claiming
the Home Office Deduction
If you are self-employed, use Form 8829, Expenses for
Business Use of Your Home, to compute your home office
deductions then report the deduction on Schedule C.
Qualifying employees must treat their home office deductions,
calculated on Form 8829, as miscellaneous itemized deductions,
which are deductible only to the extent that they exceed
2 percent of adjusted gross income.
A
Toscano & Ardito CPA Can Help
Establishing proof of your home office can help in the
event you are audited. You can do that by using your
home office address on your business cards and stationery,
taking photos of your office and installing a phone
line. Working with your CPA at Toscano & Ardito
can help in establishing a home office that meets IRS
qualifications and claiming the deductions you deserve.
Toscano & Ardito,
P.C.
40 Bayfield Drive
North Andover, MA 01845
Tel. 978-688-2880
Fax 978-688-2759
Contact Us:
info@tandacpa.com
Disclaimer
|