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Tax guideSection 162 allows deduction of "ordinary and necessary" business expenses. The tax savings on deductible expenses depend on your marginal tax rate, typically 22-37% federal plus state.
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Tax guide
Small Business Tax Deductions · all 51 jurisdictions

Small business tax deductions. What you can write off, what you cannot.

A deductible business expense reduces taxable income. For an LLC owner in the 24% federal + 5% state bracket, every $1,000 in legitimate deductions saves about $290 in tax. This guide covers the 50+ most common deductions, the documentation required, and the most common audit triggers. The rule from Section 162 of the IRC: expenses must be "ordinary" (common in your industry) and "necessary" (helpful to your business).

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Key facts

Start here.

Key fact
Ordinary and necessary

The legal standard. Not "essential," not "exclusively business" - just common in your industry and helpful to operations.

Key fact
Documentation

Every deduction needs documentation: receipt, date, vendor, amount, business purpose. Without it, the deduction can be disallowed in audit.

Key fact
Personal use

Mixed-use items (vehicle, home office, phone) require allocation between business and personal. Only the business portion is deductible.

Key fact
Capitalization

Items lasting longer than one year are typically capitalized and depreciated (Section 167) or expensed under Section 179 or bonus depreciation. Limits and rules apply.

Key fact
Self-employment health insurance

Self-employed owners can deduct health insurance premiums above the line on Schedule 1. Special rules for S-Corp owner-employees.

In depth

The full explanation.

01

Home office

Two methods: (1) Simplified method: $5/sq ft up to 300 sq ft = $1,500 max. (2) Actual expense method: percentage of home expenses (mortgage interest or rent, utilities, insurance, repairs, depreciation) based on business-use square footage. Home office must be exclusive and regular use for business.

02

Vehicle

Two methods: (1) Standard mileage rate: 67¢ per business mile in 2024 (rate updates annually). (2) Actual expenses: percentage of total vehicle costs (gas, maintenance, insurance, depreciation, lease payments) based on business-use percentage. Mileage log required either way.

03

Equipment and software

Computers, monitors, cameras, software subscriptions, office furniture. Generally deductible under Section 179 (immediate expense up to limits) or bonus depreciation. Limits per year apply.

04

Meals

50% deductible when discussing business with clients or during travel. Restaurant meals are 50% deductible (briefly 100% during COVID; back to 50%). Documentation: receipt + names of attendees + business purpose.

05

Travel

Business travel away from home is fully deductible: airfare, hotel, ground transportation, 50% of meals. Personal-business mixed trips: prorate based on business days vs personal days.

06

Professional services

Accountant fees, attorney fees, consultant fees, bookkeeper fees, contractor 1099 payments. All deductible if related to the business.

07

Insurance

Business liability, professional liability (E&O), workers compensation, commercial auto, cyber liability. Self-employed health insurance has special rules (Schedule 1).

08

Marketing and advertising

Website hosting, paid ads (Google, Meta, LinkedIn), print materials, branded merchandise, business cards, conference sponsorships.

09

Software and subscriptions

Adobe, Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, Notion, CRM tools, project management. All business software is deductible.

10

Education and training

Conferences, courses, books, certifications related to maintaining or improving skills used in the current business. Education for a new line of work is generally not deductible.

11

Retirement contributions

Solo 401(k): up to $69,000/year (2024, including employee + employer). SEP-IRA: up to 25% of compensation, $69,000 max. Reduce current-year tax and build retirement savings.

12

Health insurance

Self-employed health insurance deduction: 100% of premiums for owner + spouse + dependents, above the line on Schedule 1. S-Corp owners with >2% ownership: premiums included in W-2 wages, then deducted on Schedule 1.

13

Bank and merchant fees

Stripe fees, PayPal fees, Square fees, bank account monthly fees, wire transfer fees, ACH fees. All ordinary business expenses.

14

Phone and internet

Business portion of cell phone and home internet. Allocation required if mixed use. A dedicated business line is fully deductible.

15

Startup costs

Up to $5,000 in startup costs (incurred before opening) deductible in first year; remainder amortized over 15 years. Section 195.

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FAQ

Common questions.

What is the home office deduction?
Deduction for the business use of part of your home. Simplified method: $5/sq ft up to 300 sq ft. Actual method: business-use percentage of home expenses. Requires exclusive and regular business use of the space.
Can I deduct my whole car?
Only the business portion. Mileage log determines business-use percentage. Methods: standard mileage (67¢/mile in 2024) or actual expenses × business %.
Are meals 100% deductible?
No. Generally 50% deductible. Brief COVID-era 100% rule has expired.
Can I deduct clothing?
Generally no, unless required by your work and not suitable for everyday wear (e.g., uniforms, safety gear, branded apparel with logo).
What about gifts to clients?
Up to $25 per recipient per year is deductible. Branded promotional items costing $4 or less are excluded from the $25 limit.
Can I deduct entertainment?
Generally no, post-2017. Sports tickets, theater, golf rounds are not deductible. Meals during entertainment are 50% deductible if separately invoiced.
What about my home office if I am also W-2 employed?
You can deduct home office if it is used regularly and exclusively for your LLC/self-employment work. W-2 employees can no longer deduct unreimbursed home office expenses (TCJA changed this).
Can I deduct meals with my spouse if we are co-owners?
Only if meal has a substantive business purpose and the meal is not just personal. Documentation matters: what was discussed.
Documentation needed?
Receipt or digital record showing: vendor, date, amount, business purpose. The IRS does not require original paper receipts; digital records (apps, photos) are acceptable.

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