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TAX TIP No. 52
Work from home? Deduct your home office
Whether you are self-employed or an employee, if you use a portion of your home for business, you might be able to deduct the associated costs.
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General requirements |
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Possible break for employees, too |
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Where to claim home-office costs |
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Selling your home and home office |
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A home office
deduction is generally easier
for self-employed individuals
to claim. But even then, the
Internal Revenue Service has
certain requirements a taxpayer
must meet.
General requirements
First, your home office area
must be used regularly and
exclusively for your business
needs. You can't set up a
computer in your den, sporadically
type invoices and claim that
room as your home office.
Secondly,
the business part of your home must be either your principal place of business
or where you meet or deal with patients, clients or customers in the normal course
of your business. A separate, detached structure such as a garage or guesthouse
that is used for business also may qualify as a home office.
A
few years ago, the IRS broadened the business activities that can be considered
in determining whether a home office is a taxpayer's principal place of business.
Now, if a home office is used exclusively and regularly for the administrative
or management activities of your business, it also qualifies.
Such
things as billing operations, keeping your books and records, ordering supplies
or setting up appointments qualify as administrative duties. Be careful here.
The IRS cautions that your home location must be the only place where you can
fulfill these responsibilities.
Recently, a tax court ruling
allowed one work-from-home taxpayer to claim a deduction for proportionate use
of some home space. Some tax watchers think this decision might provide a foundation
for other similar claims, so keep your eyes open and stay in touch with your tax
adviser as to any changes in this regard. For now, though, the exclusive use of
a home's space is the rule when it comes to deducting your home office.
Possible break for employees, too
If you are an employee who
also works at home, you must
meet the same home office
standards as do self-employed
taxpayers. However, as an
employee, your use of a home
office to do your job must
be for your employer's convenience.
There are no hard-and-fast rules
when determining whether your home's business use is for your employer's convenience.
It depends on all the facts and circumstances.
A common case
where this tax-deduction requirement
applies, for example, is if
your company does not provide
you space at its location.
However, having a home office
simply because it makes things
easier for you and your boss
generally won't pass IRS home-office muster.
Where to claim home office costs
If you meet all the requirements to claim
a home office, some of the expenses you can deduct include a portion of your real
estate taxes, deductible mortgage interest, rent, utilities, insurance, depreciation,
painting and repairs. The total amount you can deduct depends on the percentage
of your home used for business. Your deduction will be limited if your income
from your business is less than all your business expenses.
Self-employed
taxpayers need Form
8829 to figure the home-office deduction. They then
must report this amount on Schedule
C.
Employees can
use the work sheet found in IRS
Publication 587, Business
Use of Your Home to calculate
allowable expenses. The costs
then are claimed as itemized
deductions on Schedule
A. The example on Pages
19 and 20 of Publication 587
details how an employee would
claim itemized home-office
deductions.
Selling your home and home office
While the home-office deduction can help lower your tax bills, it does increase your tax-filing and compliance duties. And it could have some tax consequences when you sell your home. The largest tax factor here is depreciation claimed on the home office space.
One home-office issue, however, is no longer a tax problem when you sell
your residence. Previously,
when you claimed a home-based
business deduction, you owed
tax on that percentage of
your home when you sold. A
$100,000 profit on a home
where 20 percent of the space
was dedicated to business
meant taxes due on $20,000.
In December
2002, however, the IRS decided
that taxpayers no longer have
to allocate gain between business
and residential use if the
business was conducted totally
within the residence. So there's
no problem if your office
is in your spare bedroom.
But if it's
in the guesthouse in your
backyard, the portion of
your sale proceeds attributable
to that separate structure
would be taxable, even though
the building was part of your
overall home sale. And you
still must pay tax on the
gain equal to the depreciation
on the home office.
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Updated: March 19, 2009 |
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