All professional beauty supplies and tools used in your business are fully deductible. This includes hair color and developer, shampoos and conditioners, styling products, scissors, clippers, trimmers, blow dryers, flat irons, curling irons, capes, towels, gloves, and any other supplies used on clients. Product purchased for resale to clients is also deductible as cost of goods sold.
Keep all receipts from beauty supply stores. A dedicated business credit card makes tracking easy and provides an automatic record for tax purposes.
Products purchased for personal use are not deductible — only supplies used on clients or in your professional work qualify.
Gig delivery drivers can deduct all supplies and equipment used in their delivery business. This includes insulated delivery bags, hot bags, cold bags, phone mounts, car chargers, power banks, flashlights, and any other gear used to complete deliveries. These are small but real deductions that add up over a year of full-time delivery work.
A DoorDash driver spending $400/year on insulated bags, phone mounts, and car accessories deducts the full amount, saving $120–$160 in taxes.
Stack this deduction with the mileage deduction, phone deduction, and self-employment tax deduction for maximum savings. Keep all receipts from Amazon or delivery supply stores.
Any supplies you purchase and use in your business are fully deductible in the year purchased. This includes paper, pens, printer ink and toner, folders, binders, postage, envelopes, labels, staples, tape, and any other consumable materials used in your work.
A small business owner spending $1,200/year on office supplies saves $360–$480 in taxes depending on their bracket.
Keep receipts for all supply purchases. For home-based businesses, only supplies used exclusively for business are deductible — personal supplies are not.
Healthcare professionals can deduct the cost of medical supplies and clinical equipment used in their practice. This includes stethoscopes, blood pressure cuffs, otoscopes, diagnostic tools, syringes, gloves, masks, bandages, and any other consumable or durable medical supplies used in patient care. Larger equipment qualifies for Section 179 immediate expensing.
A self-employed nurse practitioner spending $2,000/year on clinical supplies, a new stethoscope, and diagnostic tools deducts the full amount, saving $600–$800.
Major equipment purchases (examination tables, X-ray machines, dental chairs) qualify for 100% Section 179 expensing in Year 1 — do not depreciate over 5-7 years.
Personal trainers and fitness professionals can deduct the cost of equipment and supplies used in their business. This includes resistance bands, foam rollers, kettlebells, dumbbells, mats, stopwatches, heart rate monitors, fitness apps, and any other tools used with clients. Certification renewal fees (NASM, ACE, NSCA, ACSM) and continuing education are also fully deductible.
A personal trainer spending $2,500/year on equipment, certification renewals, and liability insurance deducts the full amount, saving $750–$1,000.
If you train clients at a gym, your gym membership may be partially deductible if it is required for your business. A dedicated home gym used exclusively for client training qualifies for the home office deduction.
Restaurant owners can deduct all costs directly related to producing and selling food and beverages. This includes food and beverage inventory (cost of goods sold), kitchen supplies, smallwares (plates, glasses, utensils), cleaning supplies, disposable containers, napkins, and any other consumable supplies used in food service operations.
A restaurant with $200,000 in annual food costs deducts the full amount as cost of goods sold, reducing taxable income by $200,000.
Food cost (cost of goods sold) is typically 28–35% of restaurant revenue — this is your largest deduction. Track inventory carefully and conduct regular physical counts.
Deduct business vehicle expenses using the standard mileage rate or actual expenses (depreciation, gas, insurance, repairs). Section 179 and 100% bonus depreciation allow full expensing of heavy SUVs and trucks in Year 1.
Driving 20,000 business miles at 72.5¢/mile = $14,500 deduction. A $80,000 SUV over 6,000 lbs can be fully expensed under 100% bonus depreciation, saving $29,600 at 37%.
Must choose standard mileage or actual expenses in the first year — you cannot switch back. Heavy SUVs and trucks are the most powerful vehicle deduction available.
A UNK client drove 28,000 business miles per year showing properties, attending closings, and meeting with clients. She had been deducting nothing because she thought she needed to track every gas receipt. Uncle Kam introduced the standard mileage rate method: 28,000 miles × $0.725/mile (2026 rate) = $20,300 in deductions. At her 24% rate, that was $4,872 in tax savings — from a mileage log she started keeping on her phone.
Drive for business? Every mile you don't track is money you're giving to the IRS. Book a call to set up a proper mileage tracking system.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallYes. If you use your car for business purposes, you can deduct either the standard mileage rate ($0.725/mile in 2026) or your actual vehicle expenses (gas, insurance, repairs, depreciation) multiplied by the business-use percentage. You must keep a mileage log documenting the date, destination, business purpose, and miles driven.
The IRS standard mileage rate for business driving is $0.725 per mile in 2026. This rate covers gas, insurance, maintenance, and depreciation. You can also deduct actual tolls and parking fees separately on top of the mileage rate.
No. Commuting from your home to your regular workplace is not deductible. However, if you have a qualifying home office, all trips from your home to client sites, meetings, or other business locations are deductible business miles.
Yes. The IRS requires contemporaneous records documenting the date, destination, business purpose, and miles driven for each business trip. Apps like MileIQ, Everlance, or even a simple spreadsheet work well. Reconstructed logs created at tax time are a significant audit risk.
Yes. An LLC can deduct vehicle expenses either through an accountable plan (reimbursing the owner for business miles) or by having the LLC own the vehicle directly. For heavy SUVs over 6,000 lbs GVWR, Section 179 and bonus depreciation can generate massive first-year write-offs.
The cost of accounting, bookkeeping, and tax preparation for your business is fully deductible. This includes CPA fees for tax preparation and planning, bookkeeper fees, payroll service costs (Gusto, ADP, Paychex), accounting software (QuickBooks, Xero), and any other professional fees related to managing your business finances.
A self-employed consultant paying $3,500/year for CPA services, bookkeeping, and QuickBooks deducts the full amount, saving $1,050–$1,400 in taxes.
The portion of your CPA fees related to your personal tax return (Schedule A, personal deductions) is not deductible — only the business portion qualifies. Ask your CPA to break out the business vs personal allocation.
Legal fees paid for business purposes are fully deductible. This includes attorney fees for drafting contracts, reviewing leases, employment matters, business disputes, entity formation (LLC, S-Corp), intellectual property protection, and any other legal services directly related to your business operations.
A business owner paying $4,000/year in attorney fees for contracts and business matters deducts the full amount, saving $1,200–$1,600 in taxes.
Legal fees for personal matters (divorce, personal injury) are not deductible. Keep invoices that clearly describe the business purpose of each legal engagement.
Self-employed individuals can deduct 50% of the self-employment tax they pay (the employer-equivalent portion) as an above-the-line deduction, reducing adjusted gross income.
A freelancer with $100,000 in net SE income pays $14,130 in SE tax. The 50% deduction ($7,065) saves $2,614 at a 37% rate.
This deduction is automatic — it appears on Schedule 1 of Form 1040. Ensure your tax software is calculating it correctly.
A UNK client was a freelance software developer earning $120,000 in net self-employment income. He had been filing his own taxes and had missed the SE tax deduction for two years. Uncle Kam identified the issue: the IRS allows self-employed individuals to deduct 50% of their self-employment tax as an above-the-line deduction. On $120,000 in net income, the SE tax was $16,955 — and the deduction was $8,478. At his 24% rate, this saved $2,034/year — and he recovered $4,068 by amending two prior returns.
Self-employed and filing your own taxes? A quick review might reveal deductions you've been missing for years. Book a call.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallSelf-employed individuals pay 15.3% self-employment tax (covering Social Security and Medicare) on net self-employment income. The IRS allows you to deduct 50% of the SE tax paid as an above-the-line deduction on Schedule 1 of your Form 1040. This deduction reduces your adjusted gross income and is available regardless of whether you itemize.
The deduction equals 50% of your total SE tax. For someone with $100,000 in net SE income, the SE tax is approximately $14,130, and the deduction is $7,065. At a 24% marginal rate, this saves $1,696 in income taxes — on top of the SE tax already paid.
No. The SE tax deduction is an above-the-line deduction, meaning it reduces your adjusted gross income (AGI) regardless of whether you take the standard deduction or itemize. It is one of the most straightforward and universally available deductions for self-employed individuals.
The most effective way to reduce SE tax is to elect S-Corp status. As an S-Corp, you pay SE tax (payroll taxes) only on your reasonable salary — not on the full profit. Distributions above the salary are not subject to SE tax. For someone earning $150,000+ net, this can save $10,000–$20,000/year.
No. They are separate deductions. The SE tax deduction (50% of SE tax paid) reduces your AGI. The QBI deduction (up to 23% of qualified business income under the OBBBA) is a separate below-the-line deduction that reduces taxable income. Both are available to self-employed individuals and can be claimed simultaneously.
Tradespeople and contractors can deduct the full cost of tools and equipment used in their business. Small tools (under $2,500) are expensed immediately. Larger equipment qualifies for Section 179 immediate expensing or 100% bonus depreciation. This includes hand tools, power tools, ladders, scaffolding, safety gear, hard hats, work boots, and any other equipment used on the job.
A general contractor spending $5,000/year on tools, safety equipment, and work gear deducts the full amount, saving $1,500–$2,000 in taxes.
Work boots and safety gear required for your trade are deductible as protective clothing. Keep all receipts — tool purchases add up quickly over a year.
If you rent a booth, chair, or suite in a salon or barbershop, your rental fees are fully deductible as a business expense. This is typically the largest deduction for booth renters — most pay $200–$600/week in booth rent, adding up to $10,400–$31,200/year in fully deductible expenses.
A hair stylist paying $350/week in booth rent deducts $18,200/year, saving $5,460–$7,280 in taxes.
Booth renters are self-employed — you also qualify for the QBI deduction (23% of net income), Solo 401(k), health insurance deduction, and all other self-employment deductions on top of booth rent.
Deduct ordinary and necessary travel expenses when traveling away from home for business, including transportation, lodging, and 50% of meals.
A business owner spending $15,000/year on travel (flights, hotels, meals) deducts $13,500 (meals at 50%), saving $4,995 at a 37% rate.
For mixed business/personal trips, deduct only the business portion. International trips with more than 25% personal use require proration. Bring family? Only your costs are deductible.
A UNK client attended four industry conferences and made six client visits across the country, spending $22,000 on flights, hotels, and meals. He had been deducting none of it because he was unsure of the rules. Uncle Kam documented each trip: the business purpose, the conferences attended, the clients met. All $22,000 qualified as ordinary and necessary business expenses under IRC §162. At his 37% rate, the deduction saved $8,140.
Traveling for business and not deducting it? Book a call to set up a proper travel documentation system and claim what you're owed.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallYes. An LLC can deduct ordinary and necessary travel expenses including airfare, hotels, rental cars, taxis, and 50% of meals when the travel is primarily for business purposes. The trip must take you away from your tax home overnight, and the primary purpose must be business.
Yes, with limitations. If the primary purpose of the trip is business, you can deduct all transportation costs (flights, rental car) even if you add personal days. However, hotel and meal costs are only deductible for the business days. Document the business purpose of each day carefully.
Deductible business travel expenses include airfare, train or bus tickets, rental cars, taxis and rideshares, hotel accommodations, 50% of meals, tips, laundry, and business calls. The travel must be away from your tax home overnight and primarily for business purposes.
Cruise ship conventions and seminars have a special $2,000/day limit under IRC §274(h). The ship must be a US-flagged vessel, all ports of call must be in the US or its possessions, and the convention must be directly related to your business. Documentation requirements are strict.
Your tax home is the city or general area where your principal place of business is located — not necessarily where you live. Travel expenses are only deductible when you travel away from your tax home. If you work remotely from a home office, your home is your tax home, making most business travel deductible.
Deduct 50% of the cost of business meals where there is a genuine business discussion. The meal must not be lavish, and the business purpose must be documented.
Spending $20,000/year on business meals = $10,000 deduction, saving $3,700 at a 37% rate.
Entertainment expenses (concerts, sporting events) are 0% deductible since 2018. Meals at entertainment events may still qualify if separately stated on the bill.
A UNK client ran a B2B sales consulting firm and spent $18,000/year entertaining clients at restaurants. He had stopped deducting meals after the 2017 tax law changes confused him. Uncle Kam clarified: business meals with clients where business is discussed are still 50% deductible. With proper documentation (date, attendees, business purpose on every receipt), the client deducted $9,000 — saving $3,330 at his 37% rate.
If you're taking clients to dinner and not deducting it, you're leaving money on the table. Book a call to set up a proper documentation system.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallYes. Business meals where you discuss business with a client, prospect, employee, or business partner are 50% deductible. The meal must have a clear business purpose, and you must document the date, location, attendees, and business topic discussed. Entertainment expenses (sporting events, concerts) are no longer deductible.
In most cases, business meals are limited to 50%. Meals at company-wide events like holiday parties remain 100% deductible. Employer-provided meals on-premises (cafeteria, overtime meals) are 50% deductible in 2026 under current law.
The IRS requires: the amount of the expense, the date, the location, the business purpose, and the names and business relationships of all attendees. Keep the receipt and write the business purpose on the back (or in your expense app) immediately after the meal.
Yes. Meals while traveling away from home for business are 50% deductible. You do not need a client present — solo meals during business travel qualify. You can use the IRS per diem rates instead of tracking actual meal costs if you prefer a simplified approach.
No. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 eliminated deductions for entertainment expenses — tickets to sporting events, concerts, golf rounds, and similar activities are no longer deductible, even if business is discussed. Only the meal portion of a business dinner at a restaurant remains 50% deductible.
Self-employed individuals have access to powerful retirement plans — Solo 401(k), SEP-IRA, SIMPLE IRA — with contribution limits far exceeding W-2 employee options.
Maximizing a Solo 401(k) at ~$70,000 in 2026 saves $25,900 at a 37% rate — the equivalent of a $25,900 tax refund.
Solo 401(k) allows the highest contributions for most self-employed individuals. SEP-IRA is simpler but limited to 25% of net earnings.
A UNK client earned $160,000 as a freelance videographer and had no retirement plan in place. Uncle Kam compared the options side by side: a SEP-IRA would allow $29,535 in contributions; a Solo 401(k) would allow $52,000 (employee deferral plus profit-sharing). The client chose the Solo 401(k), contributed the full $52,000, and saved $19,240 in federal taxes at his 37% marginal rate. He also elected a Roth contribution option within the Solo 401(k) to build tax-free growth alongside the pre-tax bucket.
Self-employed with no retirement plan? Every year without one is money left on the table. Book a call to set up the right plan for your income level.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallSelf-employed individuals can choose from a SEP-IRA (up to 25% of net self-employment income, max $72,000 in 2026), a Solo 401(k) (up to ~$70,000 plus $7,500 catch-up if over 50), a SIMPLE IRA, or a Defined Benefit Plan (which can shelter $100,000+ annually for high earners). The Solo 401(k) is typically the best option for most self-employed individuals because it allows both employee deferrals and employer contributions.
In 2026, a Solo 401(k) allows up to $24,500 as an employee deferral (plus $7,500 catch-up if over 50) plus up to 25% of net self-employment income as an employer contribution, for a combined maximum of approximately $70,000 ($77,500 with catch-up). This is significantly higher than a SEP-IRA for most income levels.
Generally no — you cannot contribute to both a Solo 401(k) and a SEP-IRA for the same self-employment income in the same year. However, you can have a Solo 401(k) for your self-employment income and participate in an employer's 401(k) at a day job, though combined employee deferrals across all plans are capped at $24,500 in 2026.
You must establish a Solo 401(k) by December 31 of the tax year to make employee deferrals for that year. Employer profit-sharing contributions can be made up to the tax filing deadline (including extensions). A SEP-IRA, by contrast, can be established and funded up to the tax filing deadline.
No — retirement contributions reduce income tax but not self-employment tax. SE tax is calculated on net self-employment income before retirement contributions. However, the deduction for half of SE tax reduces your AGI, which in turn reduces the base on which retirement contribution limits are calculated.
Pass-through business owners (sole props, partnerships, S-Corps, LLCs) can deduct up to 23% of qualified business income starting in 2026, permanently under the OBBBA. The deduction reduces effective tax rates significantly.
A consultant earning $200,000 in QBI deducts $46,000 (23%), saving $17,020 at a 37% rate — $2,220 more than under the old 20% rule.
The OBBBA (July 4, 2025) permanently extended and increased the QBI deduction from 20% to 23% starting in 2026. W-2 wage and property limitations still apply above income thresholds. Restructuring into an S-Corp can maximize the W-2 wage limitation.
A UNK client ran a plumbing business generating $180,000 in net income. His previous tax preparer had never mentioned the QBI deduction. Uncle Kam identified that he qualified for the full 23% deduction under the OBBBA — $41,400 off his taxable income. At his 22% marginal rate, this saved $9,108 in federal taxes. The deduction is now permanent, so the client is working with Uncle Kam to stack it with retirement contributions and S-Corp election for maximum benefit.
Own a pass-through business? The QBI deduction is now 23% and permanent. Book a call to confirm you're capturing the full amount.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallThe Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction under Section 199A allows owners of pass-through businesses — sole proprietorships, S-Corps, LLCs, and partnerships — to deduct up to 23% of their qualified business income starting in 2026, permanently extended and enhanced under the OBBBA. The full deduction is available if taxable income is below approximately $197,300 (single) or $394,600 (married filing jointly).
Yes. S-Corp owners can claim the QBI deduction on their share of the S-Corp's qualified business income. However, W-2 wages paid to yourself as an S-Corp employee are not included in QBI — only the pass-through profit qualifies.
It depends on income. Consultants are classified as a "specified service trade or business" (SSTB), which means the QBI deduction phases out above approximately $197,300 (single) or $394,600 (married) in 2026. Below those thresholds, consultants get the full 23% deduction.
Yes — the OBBBA permanently extended and enhanced the QBI deduction, increasing it from 20% to 23% starting in 2026. It no longer faces a sunset date. This is one of the most significant permanent tax changes for self-employed individuals and pass-through business owners.
The basic calculation is 23% of your qualified business income, limited to the lesser of 23% of QBI or 50% of W-2 wages paid by the business (or 25% of W-2 wages plus 2.5% of qualified property). For most small business owners below the income thresholds, the calculation is simply 23% of net business income.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) creates a new deduction allowing workers in tip-based industries to exclude qualifying tip income from federal taxable income. This is one of the most significant new deductions for service industry workers in decades.
A restaurant server earning $20,000/year in tips at a 22% federal rate saves $4,400/year in federal income taxes under the new tip income deduction.
This is a brand-new deduction under the OBBBA — the IRS has not yet issued full guidance. Employers in tip-based industries should update payroll reporting immediately. Self-employed workers who receive tips should consult a tax advisor on how to claim the deduction on Schedule C.
A server at a high-volume restaurant in Miami earned $22,000 in reported tips in 2026. Before the OBBBA, all of that tip income was fully taxable as ordinary income. Under the new tip income deduction, Uncle Kam helped her exclude the qualifying tip income from federal taxable income. At her 22% marginal rate, the $20,000 in qualifying tips generated a $4,400 reduction in federal taxes. Her employer updated payroll reporting to correctly classify tip income, and Uncle Kam ensured the deduction was properly claimed on her return.
Work in a tip-based industry? The new tip income deduction could save you thousands in 2026. Book a call to see how much you qualify for.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallThe One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) creates a new federal income tax deduction for qualifying tip income received by workers in tip-based industries. This means tips received by servers, bartenders, hair stylists, delivery drivers, and other service workers may be excluded from federal taxable income starting in 2026.
Workers in industries where tipping is customary qualify, including restaurant and food service workers, hotel and hospitality staff, hair stylists and barbers, nail technicians, delivery drivers, and similar service workers. Tips must be properly reported to the employer on W-2 or 1099 forms.
Yes — tips must still be reported to your employer and on your tax return. The deduction reduces your taxable income, but the reporting requirement remains. Unreported cash tips do not qualify for the deduction and still carry audit risk.
IRS guidance is still pending on self-employed tip income. Workers who receive tips as independent contractors should consult a tax advisor to determine how the deduction applies to their Schedule C income.
Savings depend on your total tip income and your marginal tax rate. A worker earning $20,000 in tips at a 22% rate saves $4,400/year. A worker in the 24% bracket saves $4,800/year on the same tip income.
Self-employed individuals can deduct 100% of health insurance premiums paid for themselves, their spouse, and dependents as an above-the-line deduction.
Paying $18,000/year in family health insurance premiums deducts the full amount, saving $6,660 at a 37% rate.
S-Corp owners must have the corporation pay or reimburse the premium and include it in W-2 wages to qualify. Deduction is limited to net self-employment income.
A UNK client was paying $22,000/year in family health insurance premiums as a self-employed consultant. He had been deducting them on Schedule A as itemized deductions — subject to the 7.5% AGI floor, which meant only $3,500 was actually deductible. Uncle Kam corrected the filing: as a self-employed individual, the full $22,000 is deductible as an above-the-line deduction on Schedule 1, with no floor. The corrected filing recovered $6,845 from the prior year and saves $8,140/year going forward.
Self-employed and paying health insurance premiums? Make sure you're deducting them correctly. Book a call — one mistake here costs thousands.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallYes. Self-employed individuals can deduct 100% of health insurance premiums paid for themselves, their spouse, and dependents as an above-the-line deduction on Schedule 1. This deduction reduces adjusted gross income and is available regardless of whether you itemize. It includes medical, dental, and qualifying long-term care insurance premiums.
Yes, but the process is different. The S-Corp must pay or reimburse the premiums and include them in the owner-employee's W-2 wages in Box 1 (but not in Boxes 3 and 5). The owner then deducts the premiums as a self-employed health insurance deduction on Schedule 1. Failing to follow this procedure disqualifies the deduction.
The deduction is limited to your net self-employment income (or S-Corp wages). You cannot deduct more in health insurance premiums than you earned from self-employment. Additionally, you cannot deduct premiums for any month in which you were eligible for employer-sponsored health insurance through a spouse's employer.
Yes. The self-employed health insurance deduction covers medical, dental, and vision insurance premiums. It also covers qualifying long-term care insurance premiums (subject to age-based limits). All premiums for coverage of yourself, your spouse, and your dependents are included.
Schedule A (itemized deductions) only allows medical expenses exceeding 7.5% of AGI — meaning most of your premiums may not be deductible. Schedule 1 (self-employed health insurance deduction) allows 100% of premiums as an above-the-line deduction with no floor. Self-employed individuals should always use Schedule 1, not Schedule A, for health insurance premiums.
If you rent a separate studio space for your creative work, the full cost of rent, utilities, and equipment for that space is deductible. If you use a dedicated room in your home exclusively as a studio, it qualifies for the home office deduction. This applies to photography studios, podcast recording studios, video production spaces, and any other dedicated creative workspace.
A photographer renting a studio for $1,500/month deducts $18,000/year in rent, saving $5,400–$7,200 in taxes.
A home studio used exclusively for client work qualifies for the home office deduction even if you also have an office elsewhere — the exclusive use test is what matters.
If you use your cell phone for business, you can deduct the business-use percentage of your monthly bill, data plan, and the cost of the device itself. For most self-employed professionals, this is 80–100% of the total cost.
A freelancer paying $120/month for their phone and using it 90% for business deducts $1,296/year, saving $389–$518 depending on tax bracket.
If the phone is used exclusively for business, 100% is deductible. For mixed use, track the percentage. A second dedicated business line is 100% deductible with no allocation required.
Your home internet bill is deductible to the extent it is used for business. For most self-employed professionals who work from home, this is 50–100% of the monthly cost. A dedicated business internet line is 100% deductible.
A self-employed consultant paying $80/month for internet and using it 80% for business deducts $768/year, saving $230–$307 in taxes.
If you have a home office, the internet deduction stacks on top of the home office deduction — they are separate line items. A dedicated business fiber line is 100% deductible with no allocation.
Deduct a portion of your home expenses (mortgage interest, rent, utilities, insurance, depreciation) based on the percentage of your home used exclusively and regularly for business.
A 200 sq ft office in a 2,000 sq ft home = 10% allocation. $30,000 in home expenses × 10% = $3,000 deduction, saving $1,110 at a 37% rate.
Actual expense method typically beats the simplified $5/sq ft method. S-Corp owners should use an accountable plan reimbursement instead of the home office deduction.
A UNK client worked fully remote as a freelance marketing director from a dedicated home office in her 1,800 sq ft Atlanta home. Her office was 180 sq ft — 10% of the home. Uncle Kam helped her calculate the actual expense method: $18,000 in rent × 10% = $1,800 in rent deduction, plus 10% of utilities ($480), internet ($180), and renter's insurance ($60). Total deduction: $2,520/year. After switching to a larger office space (240 sq ft = 13.3%), the deduction grew to $3,360. Combined with the simplified method comparison, the actual expense method won by $840/year.
Work from home? You may be leaving thousands in home office deductions on the table. Book a call to calculate your exact deduction.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallA home office must be used regularly and exclusively for business — a dedicated room or clearly defined space used only for work. A kitchen table where you occasionally work does not qualify. The space must be your principal place of business or where you meet clients.
No. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 eliminated the home office deduction for W-2 employees through 2025. Only self-employed individuals, freelancers, and business owners can currently claim the home office deduction.
You can deduct the business-use percentage of your internet bill. If your home office is 10% of your home's square footage, you can deduct 10% of your internet costs. If you use the internet exclusively for business (a separate business line), you can deduct 100%.
The simplified method allows you to deduct $5 per square foot of your home office, up to 300 square feet ($1,500 maximum). It is easier to calculate but often produces a smaller deduction than the actual expense method for most homeowners.
The home office deduction is not an automatic audit trigger. The IRS does scrutinize it, but a properly documented, legitimate home office is fully defensible. The key is the "exclusive use" requirement — the space must be used only for business, not as a guest room or general living area.
Self-employed individuals and small business owners can contribute up to 25% of net self-employment income (maximum $72,000 in 2026) to a SEP-IRA with minimal administrative requirements.
A freelancer earning $150,000 contributes $27,500 (25% × $110,000 net SE income) to a SEP-IRA, saving $10,175 in taxes at a 37% rate.
Simpler than a Solo 401(k) but lower contribution limits for high earners. Can be established and funded up to the tax deadline including extensions.
A UNK client was a freelance photographer who had just filed for a tax extension. She had $95,000 in net self-employment income and no retirement plan. Uncle Kam informed her that a SEP-IRA could be opened and funded up to the tax filing deadline — including extensions. She contributed $17,666 (the maximum 25% of net SE income after the SE deduction) in April, reducing her taxable income by $17,666 and saving $4,240 in federal taxes and $2,500 in SE taxes.
Self-employed and haven't set up a retirement plan? A SEP-IRA can be opened and funded up to your tax deadline. Book a call today.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallA Simplified Employee Pension (SEP-IRA) is a retirement account for self-employed individuals and small business owners. It allows contributions of up to 25% of net self-employment income (after the SE tax deduction), with a maximum of $72,000 in 2026. Any self-employed person with net income can open a SEP-IRA.
A SEP-IRA can be opened and funded up to the tax filing deadline, including extensions. For a sole proprietor, this means you can open a SEP-IRA and make a 2026 contribution as late as October 15, 2027 (with an extension). This makes it the most flexible retirement plan for last-minute tax planning.
The SEP-IRA contribution limit is 25% of net self-employment income (after deducting half of self-employment tax), up to a maximum of $72,000 in 2026. For a freelancer with $100,000 in net income, the maximum SEP-IRA contribution is approximately $18,587.
For most self-employed individuals, a Solo 401(k) allows higher contributions because it includes both employee deferrals and employer contributions. A SEP-IRA is simpler to administer and can be opened after year-end. If you want maximum contributions and are willing to manage payroll, the Solo 401(k) wins. If simplicity is the priority, the SEP-IRA is excellent.
Yes. SEP-IRA contributions do not affect your ability to contribute to a Roth IRA (subject to income limits) or use the backdoor Roth strategy. However, having pre-tax SEP-IRA funds can complicate backdoor Roth conversions due to the pro-rata rule. Uncle Kam helps clients navigate this interaction.
If you are required to hold a professional license to practice your trade, the cost of obtaining and renewing that license is fully deductible as a business expense. This includes state bar fees for attorneys, medical license renewals, nursing licenses, contractor licenses, real estate licenses, CPA licenses, and any other required professional credentials.
A physician paying $2,500/year in state medical license fees, DEA registration, and board certification renewals saves $750–$1,000 in taxes.
Voluntary certifications that improve your skills also qualify under the education expense deduction. Required licenses are deductible regardless of whether they also improve skills.
Continuing education required to maintain your professional license or improve skills in your current trade is fully deductible. This includes CME credits for physicians, CLE credits for attorneys, CPE credits for CPAs, CE credits for nurses, real estate CE, and any other mandatory or voluntary professional development directly related to your current work.
A CPA spending $3,000/year on CPE courses, webinars, and AICPA membership saves $900–$1,200 in taxes.
Travel to attend conferences and seminars is also deductible — including airfare, hotel, and 50% of meals. Stack the education deduction with the travel deduction for maximum savings.
All fees associated with your business bank account and payment processing are fully deductible. This includes monthly account maintenance fees, wire transfer fees, Stripe processing fees (typically 2.9% + 30¢), PayPal fees, Square fees, and any other merchant processing costs. For businesses processing significant revenue, these fees add up to thousands per year.
An ecommerce seller processing $200,000/year through Stripe pays approximately $5,830 in fees — fully deductible, saving $1,749–$2,332 in taxes.
Review your bank and payment processor statements annually — most business owners undercount these fees. They are easy to miss but add up significantly at scale.
All costs of advertising and promoting your business are fully deductible. This includes Google Ads, Facebook and Instagram ads, business cards, flyers, brochures, signage, website design and hosting, domain names, email marketing tools (Mailchimp, Klaviyo), and any other promotional expenses.
A real estate agent spending $8,000/year on Facebook ads, business cards, and listing photography deducts the full amount, saving $2,400–$3,200 in taxes.
Website costs (design, hosting, domain) are marketing expenses — deduct them fully. If a website is a major build, it may need to be amortized over 3 years instead of expensed immediately.
Work clothing that is required as a condition of employment and not suitable for everyday wear is fully deductible. For healthcare professionals, this includes scrubs, lab coats, surgical gowns, nursing shoes, compression socks worn for work, and any other required clinical attire. The clothing must be required by your employer or profession and not adaptable to everyday use.
A travel nurse spending $800/year on scrubs, compression socks, and nursing shoes deducts the full amount, saving $240–$320 in taxes.
Dry cleaning and laundry costs for required uniforms are also deductible. Keep receipts for all uniform purchases and cleaning costs throughout the year.
Professional liability insurance (malpractice insurance) premiums are fully deductible as a business expense. This applies to all licensed professionals including physicians, dentists, nurses, attorneys, financial advisors, CPAs, architects, and any other professional who carries liability coverage for their practice.
A physician paying $8,000/year in malpractice insurance premiums deducts the full amount, saving $2,400–$3,200 in taxes.
Tail coverage (extended reporting period coverage) is also deductible in the year paid. If your employer pays for malpractice coverage, you cannot deduct it — only premiums you pay yourself qualify.
Protective clothing and safety equipment required for your trade or job site is fully deductible. This includes steel-toed work boots, hard hats, safety glasses, hearing protection, gloves, high-visibility vests, respirators, and any other OSHA-required or job-required safety gear. The key test: the gear must be required for the job and not suitable for everyday wear.
A contractor spending $600/year on work boots, gloves, safety glasses, and hard hats deducts the full amount, saving $180–$240 in taxes.
Replace worn safety gear regularly and deduct each purchase. If your employer requires specific gear and does not reimburse you, ask about an accountable plan reimbursement.
Photographers, videographers, and content creators can deduct the full cost of cameras, lenses, tripods, lighting equipment, microphones, audio recorders, drones, gimbals, memory cards, hard drives, and any other production equipment used in their business. Under Section 179, the full cost can be expensed in Year 1 instead of depreciated over 5 years.
A photographer purchasing a $3,500 camera body and $1,200 in lenses expenses the full $4,700 under Section 179, saving $1,410–$1,880 in taxes.
For equipment used for both business and personal purposes, only the business-use percentage is deductible. A camera used 80% for client work is 80% deductible.
Owner-operator truck drivers can deduct all costs required to maintain their CDL and comply with DOT regulations. This includes DOT physical exams, CDL renewal fees, FMCSA registration fees, IFTA fuel tax permits, drug testing fees, and any other compliance costs required to operate legally.
An owner-operator spending $1,200/year on DOT physicals, CDL renewal, and FMCSA fees deducts the full amount, saving $360–$480 in taxes.
Stack these deductions with the per diem deduction, vehicle Section 179 expensing, fuel costs, and maintenance deductions for a comprehensive trucking tax strategy.
All ordinary and necessary expenses for managing, conserving, and maintaining rental property are deductible. This includes property management fees (typically 8–12% of rent), repairs and maintenance, landscaping, snow removal, pest control, cleaning between tenants, locksmith fees, and any other costs directly related to keeping the property in rentable condition.
A landlord paying $4,800/year in property management fees on a $4,000/month rental deducts the full amount, saving $1,440–$1,920 in taxes.
Repairs are immediately deductible; improvements must be depreciated. The line between repair and improvement matters — a new roof is an improvement, patching a roof is a repair.
Real estate agents and brokers can deduct all professional membership fees and dues required to practice. This includes MLS access fees, National Association of Realtors (NAR) dues, state and local association dues, errors and omissions (E&O) insurance, and any other professional membership costs directly related to your real estate business.
A real estate agent paying $3,200/year in MLS fees, NAR dues, and E&O insurance deducts the full amount, saving $960–$1,280 in taxes.
Stack MLS and association fees with the mileage deduction, marketing deduction, and home office deduction for a comprehensive real estate agent tax strategy.
Computers, laptops, tablets, monitors, keyboards, mice, external hard drives, and other hardware used in your business are fully deductible. Under Section 179, you can expense the full cost in Year 1 instead of depreciating over 5 years. For mixed business/personal use, only the business-use percentage is deductible.
A freelance software engineer purchasing a $2,500 laptop used 95% for work expenses $2,375 under Section 179, saving $713–$950 in taxes.
A second monitor, external keyboard, and docking station are all deductible as business hardware. Track purchases throughout the year — hardware costs add up.
If you rent a coworking space, shared office, or dedicated office for your business, the full cost is deductible. This includes WeWork, Regus, local coworking memberships, and any other office rental. Monthly membership fees, day passes, and dedicated desk or private office costs all qualify.
A freelancer paying $400/month for a coworking membership deducts $4,800/year, saving $1,440–$1,920 in taxes.
If you use a coworking space and also have a home office, you can only deduct one — choose whichever is larger. The coworking deduction is simpler and requires no home office calculation.
All shipping and packaging costs for your ecommerce or product business are fully deductible. This includes UPS, FedEx, USPS, and DHL shipping fees, boxes, poly mailers, bubble wrap, packing tape, labels, and any other packaging materials. For Amazon FBA sellers, FBA fulfillment fees are also fully deductible.
An Amazon seller spending $12,000/year on shipping and packaging deducts the full amount, saving $3,600–$4,800 in taxes.
FBA fees paid to Amazon are deductible as a cost of doing business — track them monthly from your Amazon seller account. Shipping software subscriptions (ShipStation, Pirateship) are also deductible.
Deduct education expenses that maintain or improve skills required in your current trade or business, including courses, books, subscriptions, and professional conferences.
Spending $5,000 on courses, conferences, and books deducts the full amount, saving $1,850 at a 37% rate.
W-2 employees lost this deduction in 2018. Self-employed individuals still have full access. Includes online courses, coaching, masterminds, and professional subscriptions.
A UNK client — a licensed real estate agent — was paying $700/month for a sales coaching program and $1,800/year for CE courses required to maintain her license. She had been treating these as personal expenses. Uncle Kam documented that both qualified as ordinary and necessary business expenses under IRC Section 162: the coaching directly improved her existing skills as an agent, and the CE courses were required to maintain her professional license. The $8,400 annual deduction saved her $3,108 at her 37% rate.
Paying for courses, coaching, or certifications? These are likely deductible. Book a call to make sure you're capturing every education write-off.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallYes, if the education maintains or improves skills required in your current trade or business, or is required by your employer or by law to keep your current job. You cannot deduct education that qualifies you for a new career or meets the minimum requirements for your current job. For self-employed individuals, qualifying education is deducted on Schedule C as a business expense.
It depends. An MBA is deductible if you are already working in a business management role and the degree improves your existing skills — not if it qualifies you for a new career. The IRS looks at whether the education maintains or improves skills in your current work, not whether it is useful. Many MBA students in management roles can deduct tuition; those switching careers cannot.
The business education deduction (Schedule C) has no dollar limit and reduces both income tax and self-employment tax. The Lifetime Learning Credit is a non-refundable credit worth up to $2,000 per year but phases out at higher incomes. Self-employed individuals with qualifying education expenses almost always benefit more from the Schedule C deduction than the LLC.
Yes, if the course or coaching program maintains or improves skills in your current business. A business coach, sales training program, marketing course, or industry certification all qualify. The key test is whether the education relates to your existing work — not whether it is delivered online or in person.
Yes. Books, trade publications, professional journals, and online subscriptions (such as industry databases, software training platforms, or professional newsletters) that are ordinary and necessary for your business are fully deductible on Schedule C. Keep receipts and document the business purpose for each.
Any software subscription or SaaS tool you pay for and use in your business is fully deductible in the year paid. This includes accounting software (QuickBooks, FreshBooks), design tools (Adobe Creative Cloud, Figma, Canva), communication tools (Zoom, Slack, Microsoft 365), project management tools (Asana, Monday.com), and any other business application.
A freelance designer paying $600/year for Adobe Creative Cloud, $150 for Figma, and $200 for project management tools deducts $950/year, saving $285–$380.
Keep a list of every subscription you pay for and review annually — many professionals forget to deduct tools they use every day. Cancel unused subscriptions to reduce costs.
Self-employed individuals can contribute both as employee ($24,500 in 2026, or $31,000 if 50+) and employer (up to 25% of compensation), for a combined maximum of approximately $70,000.
A self-employed consultant earning $200,000 contributes ~$70,000 to a Solo 401(k), reducing taxable income to $130,000 and saving $25,900 at a 37% rate.
Must establish the plan by December 31 of the tax year (contributions can be made until tax filing deadline). Roth Solo 401(k) allows tax-free growth.
A UNK client earned $180,000 as a freelance UX designer and was paying taxes on nearly all of it. Uncle Kam set up a Solo 401(k) and maximized contributions: $24,500 as the employee deferral plus $43,000 as the employer profit-sharing contribution (25% of net self-employment income) — totaling $67,500 in pre-tax contributions. At her 32% marginal rate, this saved $21,600 in federal taxes while building $67,500 in retirement wealth.
If you're self-employed and not maximizing a Solo 401(k), you're overpaying taxes and under-saving for retirement. Book a call to set one up.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallA Solo 401(k) is a retirement plan for self-employed individuals with no full-time employees other than a spouse. It allows contributions in two capacities: as an employee (up to $24,500 in 2026, plus $7,500 catch-up if 50+) and as an employer (up to 25% of net self-employment income), with a combined limit of approximately $70,000 in 2026.
The total Solo 401(k) contribution limit is approximately $70,000 in 2026 ($77,500 if age 50 or older). This includes up to $24,500 in employee deferrals plus employer profit-sharing contributions of up to 25% of net self-employment income (after the SE tax deduction).
A Solo 401(k) must be established by December 31 of the tax year for which you want to make contributions. Employee deferrals must also be made by December 31. Employer profit-sharing contributions can be made up to the tax filing deadline (including extensions).
Yes, but the employee deferral limit ($24,500 in 2026) applies across all 401(k) plans combined. If you contribute $24,500 to your employer's 401(k), you cannot make additional employee deferrals to your Solo 401(k). However, you can still make employer profit-sharing contributions to the Solo 401(k).
A Solo 401(k) generally allows higher contributions for most self-employed individuals because it includes both employee deferrals and employer contributions. A SEP-IRA is limited to 25% of net self-employment income (no employee deferral component). For someone earning $100,000 net, a Solo 401(k) allows $46,000 vs. $18,587 for a SEP-IRA.
A defined benefit plan allows high-income self-employed individuals and business owners to contribute $200,000–$300,000 per year based on actuarial calculations, far exceeding 401(k) limits.
A physician earning $500,000 contributes $265,000 to a defined benefit plan, saving $98,050 in taxes at a 37% rate — far exceeding the $69,000 Solo 401(k) limit.
Get the complete MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide on a free strategy call.
Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockDonor-Advised Funds allow you to bunch 5 years of charitable giving into one year for maximum deduction.
Qualified Opportunity Zone investments can eliminate capital gains taxes on appreciation entirely.
Installment sales spread capital gains across multiple years, keeping you in lower brackets.
This write-off is commonly used by the following taxpayer profiles. Click to see all strategies for your situation.