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IRS Guidance on Home Office Tax Deduction

PER the IRS: If you use part of your home for business, you may be able to deduct expenses for the business use of your home. The home office deduction is available for homeowners and renters, and applies to all types of homes. 

If you are a contractor / self employed / Partner (K1), then you better pay attention to this important tax deduction.

This year when you go to file your taxes make sure to bring the following information related to your home office.

  • Rents Paid*
  • Mortgage Interest Paid
  • Real Estate Taxes Paid
  • Insurance Paid *
  • Utilities*
  • Repairs*
  • Association Dues*
  • Maintenance*
  • Travel*
  • Legal & Professional*
  • Commissions*
  • Management Fees*
  • Bank Charges*
  • Advertising*
  • Depreciation

*We do not need to see the support documents for most of these items, BUT you must keep for your records in case of audit. PLEASE only provide the summarized annual total spent per category. If you need us to review your support documents there could be additional charges.

The tax preparer will calculate the greater tax benefits between the 2 alllowable methods to calculate your home office deduction.

Method 1 = Simplified option + For tax year after 2012 per the IRS Revenue Procedure 2013-13, certain taxpayers qualify to take a prescribed rate multiplied against square feet to calculate the home office deduction instead of the Regular Method. This simplified method greatly reduces the need for substantiation and record keeping and can be easily calculated.

Method 2 = Regular Method + For tax year 2012 and prior, the regular method allows taxpayers to take a business use % of the total home expenses plus and direct expenses. This method requires a lot more record keeping and substantiation.

Let us know if you have any question on your taxes for your Schedule C sole propreitor business expenses or Schedule E passhtrough partnership unreimbursed expenses.

We’re here to help you along the way; meet your new CPA today.

Are you counting your AIC hours right? This applies to anyone who sits more than 1 hour a day.

As CPA’s we are trained to count everything – we count time, money, frowns, widgets and woowoo’s and then bill it. But one thing we rarely count are AIC hours; time spent sitting at a desk is jokingly coined Ass In Chair “AIC” hours.

I may lose a few readers here, but the focus of this article is not counting AIC hours for billing purposes….

The focus of this article is…sitting.

Im not a medical Dr. (Sorry mom) but in some medical circles, there is data-driven-chatter that “sitting is the new smoking”. I didn’t pen the phrase, but thank you if you read it here first.

There are a slew of health issues related to sitting at a desk and most remedies focus on the chair or the desk and those are all very important. However, one simple solution rarely seen in the US work place has produced great result. I’m calling it “Stand Up”.

Let me explain Stand Up.

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