Home Up  Highbaugh Tax

WMBE Certified

Home Office Factors to Consider
 

 

Home
Up
Tax Changes for Individuals
Tax Changes For Business Owners
Tax Checklist
Overlooked Deductions
Standard Deduction
Child Tax Credit
Misc Deduction Checklist
Self-Employment Tax
Real Estate Tax & Property Rental
Business Tax Preparation
Home Ownership
Work Related Expenses
Investor Tax Checklist

Factors to Consider Before Taking the Home Office Deduction
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

Effective in 1999, it became much easier to qualify for the home office deduction. Both homeowners and renters can now qualify, but there are still a number of rules you have to follow in order to claim the deduction and save money on your taxes. Our articles discuss the rules for taking the home office deduction first, then discuss whether taking the home office deduction will actually save you money, and, if so, how to calculate it.

If you own and operate a business from your home, these articles are for you. If you are not self-employed but work at home as an employee for a company, the rules are even more stringent: investigate them carefully before taking a home office deduction.

Rules for Taking the Home Office Deduction
You have to pass several tough tests to qualify for the home office deduction.

1. You Must Use Your Home Office Both Regularly and Exclusively.

You must use a certain area of your home both regularly and exclusively for business. In most circumstances, the area should be a separate room in your home. However, a common area in your home that is not in a separate room can also qualify—as long as you use it exclusively for business.

If you have a desk located in a family room, for example, mixing your business correspondence with your personal mail could cause the deduction to be disallowed. The IRS takes this point very seriously. They once disallowed a home office deduction because they saw a dog’s bowl under the desk in a picture brought in by the taxpayer.

If you have an additional business with another location, you can’t perform any work for that business in your home office. For example, if you’re a teacher with a real estate business that you run from your home office, grading papers in your home office would invalidate your use of the home office for the real estate business. This may sound extreme, but it is just one of many true-to-life reasons why the IRS disallows home office deductions in audits.

Example: In a Tax Court case in 2001, a psychologist was not permitted to take a deduction for a home office in her small apartment because the size was so small that no part of it could be used exclusively for business. She did not meet with patients there but rather used rented office space for that purpose. The only business activities she performed in her apartment were scheduling private-practice appointments by phone and storing records and reading material.

And exclusive use means that your children cannot use your office computer to do research for school, or to play computer games. You can only shade this exclusivity if:

  • You run a daycare center, and let the kids use the computer for games and applications
  • You use part of your home to store inventory or product samples for wholesale or retail sales.

Regular use does not necessarily mean that you must use the office daily or even weekly—just that you use it on a continuing basis. Occasional or incidental use does not qualify, even if you use the office exclusively for business.

Can you prove regular use? Do you have a log of phone calls made from the office? Do you have invoices on a computer that show you used the office? Keep all records that can prove you use the office on a regular basis.

2. Your Home Office Must be Your Principal Place of Business.

To qualify as the principal place of business, your home office must be where you perform the most important part of your work, or you must use the office for administrative or management activities of a trade or business, and you can’t perform a substantial portion of these administrative or management activities at any another location, such as another office off-site.

Administrative and management activities include, but are not limited to

  • Billing customers
  • Keeping books and records
  • Setting appointments
  • Calling in orders
  • Ordering supplies
  • Writing reports

You may perform some of these activities at another location, but your home office must be the place where you perform “substantial” administrative or management activities.

Example: In a 2001 Circuit Court case, a violinist who regularly worked with recording studios and orchestras used her living room as a home office, in which she spent hours every day practicing. The court held that practicing was in fact necessary to her career and noted that she had no other office or practice location. It was also noted that to maintain her skills, the musician spent more time practicing than she did performing and recording. Therefore, a home office deduction was allowed for her practice space as it was considered her principal place of business.

For More Info

See IRS Publication 587, Business Use of Your Home.

 

Highbaugh Tax - 317.345.4182 - Business Hours 10am - 6pm (EST) Monday thru Friday, limited hours on Saturday. Call for an appointment.


Ready to purchase or sell a home and need some help.  Contact Keya Benberry, 317.270.3311 at Buy with Benberry Realty Group.  Tell her Tami sent you.


Home ] Up ]

Send mail to tami@ariesgraphicdesign.com with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2006 Highbaugh Tax
Last modified: 01/06/08