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Steve Windhaus Ask the Small Biz Adviser

Tax planning for a home-based business

Dear Small Biz Adviser:
I have enough money to start a home-based business, but want to know what deductions I can take. I recently purchased a laptop, another cellular plan, Internet service, an additional telephone line, a vehicle to meet with clients and other items essential to a startup. Can all of these items be claimed? Would this be on a percentage basis or a total deduction? I just want to get a general idea of what I can claim next year at tax time.
Jan

Dear Jan:
You are doing very well to plan the startup of your business. In addition to your recent office preparations, I assume you are researching your markets and, in turn, deciding the operational needs and associated investment required to handle the anticipated market.

The nature of your inquiry indicates you also are doing your financial homework, including the financial projections that evolve from that planning.

As for your specific tax question, you want to consider two distinct categories of expenses:

  • Operating expenses: those costs associated with the operation of the business venture, regardless of whether or not sales are being generated.

  • Home office expenses: most, if not all, are associated with operating expenses, including many that home-office entrepreneurs often overlook.

Another category of expenses includes those line items directly associated with the cost of sales, but we leave those for another column.

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Operating expenses
Let us first consider your operating expenses. These line items are rather common to many business operations. They generally include office supplies, wages, salaries, benefits, advertising, association and chamber membership fees, magazine and other subscriptions, and the items listed in your inquiry. The new economy produces costs for Internet access, computer maintenance, upgrades, cell phones and the like that are now found on income and cash-flow statements.

However, allow me to comment on a couple of your expense items:

1. Automotive expenses: These need to be carefully noted, including mileage, reason for use of the vehicle, gasoline receipts and more. These substantiating receipts and notations are even more imperative if the vehicle is used for personal as well as business use. Purchase a ledger book that allows a sufficient number of columns in which to itemize the various automotive expenses. It becomes a permanent record for your income taxes.

2. Telecommunications: Your second phone line and cell phone that are specifically for the business. If there are any children in the house, you want to keep them away from both phones. Likewise, you do not want the kids or other family members using those phones for personal calls. Exclusive business use means all expenses on the itemized bills are directed to the business and deductions from gross profit before taxable income.

Home-office rules
Now let's turn our attention to the home-office side of deductible expenses. Definitely set aside a specific area of your home for business use only. Ideally, you want to designate a walled-in room. Otherwise, partition that portion of the room that will be used for business use only. If clients visit you at home, conduct that activity in the office.

In the case of a partitioned office, I strongly suggest the office space be sufficient to allow for the seating of and attendance to visiting clients. The only alternative would be dealing with clients in a dining room, den or some other acceptable space. However, do not count such shared-use space as part of your home office. Tax rules require the area to be exclusively for business use before it can be deducted. Once a dedicated home office is established, then a percentage of expenses associated with your mortgage, utilities, home improvement, and real estate taxes can potentially be deducted from business income

For details on business and home-office expenses read IRS Publication 535 and Publication 587.

I wish you well.

-- Posted: April 9, 2002

Read more Small Biz Adviser stories here.
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See Also
The ins-and-outs of the home-office deduction
Good record keeping can increase small business deductions

12 small-business tax deductions

More Small Biz stories

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