| You could save money
if you do — but perhaps not as much as you hope.
Here are some pros and cons to ponder, when
deciding whether to take the home office deduction.
Some reasons in favor of taking the home office
deduction:
Some reasons to be cautious:
Reducing
Self-Employment Taxes
If you own your home, you can deduct your home
mortgage interest and taxes as itemized deductions
in most cases. Claiming a home office effectively
shifts some deductions from regular itemized
deductions into business deductions. When you are
self-employed, the deductions reduce your net
business profit and your self-employment income,
meaning that you’ll pay lower self-employment taxes.
Getting a
Deduction for Rent
If you rent your home, you can deduct the portion
of your rent that’s attributable to the business use
of your home. This deduction means that at least
part of your otherwise nondeductible rent is a
deductible expense.
Deducting
Part of Your Home Expenses
With a home office you can deduct a portion of
many expenses that aren’t normally deductible, such
as utilities, trash and snow removal, and
depreciation. You can also deduct a portion of
repair, maintenance, and homeowner’s insurance
costs. When you are self-employed, deducting these
expenses lowers your profit, income taxes, and the
self-employment tax.
If Your Home Office
is Tiny
Taking the home office deduction will most likely
save you money, but how much? If you use a very
small percentage of your home as an office, such as
10%, you need to use that percentage to compute your
deduction for utilities, trash removal, mortgage
interest, real estate taxes, and rent. The
deduction, then, may not amount to as much as you
anticipated.
Paying Taxes on
the Home Office Share When You Sell Your Home
When you sell your home, the home office may be
considered business property, and that portion of
your gain on the sale may be taxed, because business
property does not qualify for exclusion from income
tax, as a personal residence gain. This situation
can occur if you use your home for business in the
year of the sale, or if you don’t meet the “two-year
test” (in which 100% of the residence was used as
your main home for an aggregate of 730 days in the
last five years). If this applies to you, you must
treat the sale of your home as two transactions: one
as the sale of business property and the other as
the sale of your personal residence. The sale of
business property is a taxable transaction that you
must report, and unfortunately, any gain that
results isn’t eligible for the $250,000 home sale
gain exclusion.
If you own your home, any depreciation taken
after May 6, 1997 must be “recaptured” at the time
you sell your residence for a profit, which means
that the depreciation must be taxed at a special 25%
rate. The rest of any gain that you have from the
sale of the business portion of your home will
generally be taxed at 20% (assuming you owned the
home for more than a year).
The Home Office
Deduction Cannot Trigger a Net Loss
Finally, you can’t claim the home office
deduction in the current year if it creates or
increases a net loss for your business. The only
exception to this rule is when you’re deducting
expenses that would otherwise be deductible on
Schedule A as itemized deductions, such as mortgage
interest and real estate taxes attributed to the
business portion of your home.
However, you can carry forward the Home Office
Deduction to future years until you have enough
income to take the deduction
|