98 tagged with "Self-Employment"
Learn about self-employment taxes, LLC owner compensation, and freelancer financial management
Small Business Tax Deductions 2026: The Complete Master List
A category-by-category guide to every major small business tax deduction for 2026, including the $2,560,000 Section 179 cap, 60% bonus depreciation, the 68.5-cent mileage rate, the 50% meals rule, and the documentation needed to defend each one on audit.
Are Tax Preparation Fees Deductible? A 2026 Guide for Business Owners and Self-Employed Filers
Personal tax prep fees are no longer federally deductible after the 2026 One Big Beautiful Bill Act, but business owners and self-employed filers can still deduct the business portion on Schedule C, E, F, 1065, 1120-S, or 1120—if they allocate and document it correctly.
Taxable Income Explained: What Counts, What Doesn't, and How to Pay Less in 2026
A precise 2026 guide to taxable income — which dollars the IRS counts (wages, tips, capital gains, cancelled debt), which are excluded (gifts, inheritances, Roth distributions, muni bond interest), the step-by-step AGI-to-taxable-income calculation, and seven legal strategies to reduce the final number, including new One Big Beautiful Bill Act deductions for tipped, overtime, and senior taxpayers.
Business Travel Tax Deductions in 2026: What You Can (and Can't) Write Off
A 2026 guide to deducting business travel on Schedule C — covering the IRS tax home rule, the $178 CONUS per diem, 50% meal limits, 75% international business-day threshold, and the documentation habits that survive an audit.
How to File a Tax Extension: Complete Guide to Forms 4868 and 7004
A tax extension buys six months to file, not to pay. This guide explains exactly how to file Form 4868 (individuals) and Form 7004 (businesses), how to estimate a good-faith payment, and the state-level traps that cost filers real money.
When the IRS Files Your Return For You: The Substitute for Return (SFR) Explained
A Substitute for Return is a 1040 the IRS files for non-filers using only third-party income data—no deductions, credits, or cost basis. This guide walks through the CP59, CP2566, and 90-day CP3219N sequence and the exact steps to replace an SFR with an accurate original return.
Personal Appearance Tax Deductions: What You Can (and Can't) Write Off
The IRS applies a two-part test to personal appearance expenses: the item must be required by your work and unsuitable for everyday use. Most suits, makeup, haircuts, and gym memberships fail. This guide details what qualifies, with case law including Pevsner v. Commissioner and Hamper v. Commissioner.
Schedule SE: The Self-Employment Tax Form Every Freelancer Needs to Master
Schedule SE calculates the 15.3% self-employment tax (Social Security + Medicare) owed by anyone with $400 or more in net self-employment earnings. This guide walks through the 2026 wage base ($184,500), the 92.35% adjustment, the 50% above-the-line deduction, and the safe-harbor rules that prevent quarterly underpayment penalties.
Work-Related Education Tax Deduction: A 2026 Guide for Self-Employed Professionals
Self-employed professionals can deduct work-related education that maintains or improves current job skills, but classes that qualify you for a new trade fail the IRS test under Topic 513. Here is how to apply the rule, document each expense, and report it correctly on Schedule C in 2026.
Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction: A Complete Guide
Self-employed filers can deduct 100% of qualifying health insurance premiums above-the-line via Form 7206 and Schedule 1 line 17, provided the business is profitable and neither spouse had access to subsidized employer coverage. The guide covers S corporation W-2 requirements, ACA marketplace subsidy circular calculations, age-based long-term care caps, and the five most common errors that trigger IRS disallowance.
Tax Deductions for Real Estate Agents: The 2026 Complete Guide
A 2026 guide to Schedule C deductions for 1099 real estate agents, covering the 72.5-cent mileage rate, home office rules, marketing, dues, the 20% QBI deduction, and the write-offs most agents miss.
Form 8829: The Complete Guide to Home Office Deductions for Self-Employed Individuals
Self-employed workers can deduct home office expenses on Form 8829, but millions miss it each year. Learn the exclusive-use test, how to calculate your business-use percentage, when to claim depreciation, and which method—simplified or regular—yields a larger deduction.