Quantcast
Channel: DailyFinance.com
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 9760

Most-Overlooked Tax Breaks for the Self-Employed

0
0

Filed under: , , ,

Senior Hispanic Woman Working In Home Office Looking At Document
Mark Bowden
By Kevin McCormally

Have you recently gone into business for yourself? Check out these six ways to make tax law work for you.

1. Home-Office Deductions

Whether you are fully self-employed or do some freelancing in addition to your job as an employee, if you work at home, the government might subsidize what are generally considered personal expenses.

The key to the home-office deduction is to use part of your home or apartment regularly and exclusively for your money-making endeavor. Pass that test and part of your utility bills and insurance costs can be deducted against your business income. You can also write off part of your rent or, if you own your home, depreciation.

Many work-at-home taxpayers skip this break, either because they don't know about it, are afraid claiming it will trigger an audit, or are put off by the record-keeping hassle necessary to back up the deduction if challenged. In recent years, though, the IRS has come up with a simplified method that allows taxpayers to deduct $5 for every square foot that qualifies for the deduction. If you have a 300-square-foot home office (the maximum size allowed for this method), your deduction is $1,500. You get this tax-saver every year you have a qualifying home office.

2. Health Insurance Premiums

Although medical expenses are deductible, relatively few taxpayers really get to deduct them. First, you have to itemize to get this break (and most taxpayers do not); second, you get a deduction only to the extent your expenses exceed 10 percent of your adjusted gross income (7.5 percent for those age 65 and older).

But there's a big exception for the self-employed. You can deduct what you pay for medical insurance for yourself and your family whether or not you itemize and without regard to the 10 percent threshold. You don't qualify, though, if you are eligible for employer-sponsored health insurance through your job (if you have one in addition to your business) or a spouse's job.

3. Medicare Premiums

If you continue to run your businesses after qualifying for Medicare, the premiums you pay for Medicare Part B and Part D, plus the cost of supplemental Medicare (medigap) policies or the cost of a Medicare Advantage plan, can be deducted as health insurance premiums for the self-employed. That means you don't have to itemize to claim this deduction and you don't have to worry about the 7.5 percent-of-AGI test that applies to itemized medical expenses for folks age 65 and older.

4. Social Security Taxes You Pay

This doesn't work for employees. They can't deduct the 7.65 percent of pay that's siphoned off for Social Security and Medicare. But if you're self-employed and have to pay the full 15.3 percent tax yourself (instead of splitting it 50/50 with an employer), you get to write off half of what you pay. That deduction comes on the face of Form 1040, so you don't have to itemize to take advantage of it.

5. Retirement Tax Shelters

Once you start working for yourself, the door opens wide to tax-sheltered retirement plans. Unlike employees, whose options are pretty much limited to whatever their employer offers and an IRA, self-employeds can contribute pretax money to a simplified employee pension (SEP) or a solo 401(k), both of which have higher annual limits than regular individual retirement accounts. And you can still have a regular IRA, too.

6. Expensing

When you buy equipment for your business, you have two choices of how to share the cost with Uncle Sam. The first is to depreciate the cost, deducting the expenses over the number of years the IRS figures is the "life" of the equipment. A computer has a life of five years, for example, so you can write off the cost over five years. But it's not as simple as claiming 20 percent of the cost each year. For that computer, for example, you'd deduct 20 percent of the cost in the year you put it into service, 32 percent in year two, 19.2 percent in year three, 11.52 percent in year four, 11.52 percent in year five and the final 5.76 percent in year six. (Don't ask why it takes six years to write off five-year property.)

Expensing (also known as the Section 179 deduction) lets you deduct 100 percent of the qualifying cost in year one. Is there any wonder why it's the choice of many self-employed taxpayers? For 2014, up to $500,000 worth of equipment is eligible for the immediate write-off of expensing. (The limit for 2015 is currently $25,000, but Congress is likely to act to restore it to $500,000.)

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 9760

Latest Images

Trending Articles



Latest Images