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left arrowPrevious Page: Publication 587 - Business Use of Your Home (Including Use by Day-Care Providers) - Recordkeeping
right arrowNext Page: Publication 587 - Business Use of Your Home (Including Use by Day-Care Providers) - Schedule C Example
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Where To Deduct


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Deduct expenses for the business use of your home on Form 1040. Where you deduct these expenses on the form depends on whether you are:

If you are a partner, see Partners, later, for information on where to deduct expenses for the business use of your home.


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Self-Employed Persons


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left link arrow Self-Employed Persons right link arrow

If you are self-employed and file Schedule C (Form 1040), complete and attach Form 8829 to your return.

If you file Schedule F (Form 1040), report your entire deduction for business use of the home (line 32 of the worksheet), up to the deduction limit discussed under Figuring the Deduction, earlier, on line 34 of Schedule F. Write "Business Use of Home" on the dotted line beside the entry.


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Deductible mortgage interest.


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If you file Schedule C (Form 1040), enter all your deductible mortgage interest on line 10 of Form 8829. After you have figured the business part of the mortgage interest on lines 12 and 13, subtract that amount from the total mortgage interest on line 10. The remainder is deductible on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 10 or 11. If the interest you deduct on Schedule A for your home mortgage is limited, enter the excess on line 16 of Form 8829.

If you file Schedule F (Form 1040), include the business part of your deductible home mortgage interest with your total business use of the home expenses on line 34. You can use the worksheet on page 24 to figure the deductible part of mortgage interest. Enter the nonbusiness part of the deductible mortgage interest on Schedule A, line 10 or 11.

To determine if the limits on qualified home mortgage interest apply to you, see the instructions for Schedule A or Publication 936.


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Real estate taxes.


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If you file Schedule C (Form 1040), enter all your deductible real estate taxes on Form 8829, line 11. After you have figured the business part of your taxes on lines 12 and 13, subtract that amount from your total real estate taxes on line 11. The remainder is deductible on Schedule A, line 6.

If you file Schedule F (Form 1040), include the business part of real estate taxes with your total business use of the home expenses on line 34. Enter the nonbusiness part of your real estate taxes on line 6 of Schedule A.

If you itemize your deductions, be sure to claim only the personal part of your deductible mortgage interest and real estate taxes on Schedule A (Form 1040). Do not deduct any of the business part on Schedule A. For example, if your business percentage on Form 8829, line 7, or line 3 of the worksheet on page 24 is 30%, you can claim only 70% of your deductible mortgage interest and real estate taxes as personal expenses on Schedule A.


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Casualty losses.


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If you are using Form 8829, refer to the specific instructions for lines 9 and 27 and enter the amount from line 33 on line 27 of Form 4684, Section B. Write "See Form 8829" above line 27.

If you file Schedule F (Form 1040), enter the business part of casualty losses (line 31 of the worksheet) on line 27 of Form 4684, Section B. Write "See attached statement" above line 27.


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Other expenses.


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If you file Schedule C (Form 1040), report the other home expenses that would not be allowable if you did not use your home for business (insurance, maintenance, utilities, depreciation, etc.) on the appropriate lines of your Form 8829. If you rent rather than own your home, include the rent you paid on line 20. If these expenses exceed the deduction limit, carry the excess over to next year. The carryover will be subject to next year's deduction limit.

If you file Schedule F (Form 1040), include your otherwise nondeductible expenses (insurance, maintenance, utilities, depreciation, etc.) with your total business use of the home expenses on Schedule F, line 34. If these expenses exceed the deduction limit, carry the excess over to the next year. The carryover will be subject to next year's deduction limit.


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Business expenses not for the use of your home.


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Deduct in full your business expenses that are not for the use of your home itself (dues, salaries, supplies, certain telephone expenses, etc.) on the appropriate lines of Schedule C (Form 1040) or Schedule F (Form 1040). These expenses are not for the use of your home, so they are not subject to the deduction limit for business use of the home expenses.


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Employees


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left link arrow Employee right link arrow

As an employee, you must itemize deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040) to claim expenses for the business use of your home and any other employee business expenses. This generally applies to all employees, including outside salespersons. If you are a statutory employee, use Schedule C (Form 1040) to claim the expenses. Follow the instructions given earlier under Self-Employed Persons. The statutory employee box within box 13 on your Form W-2 will be checked if you are a statutory employee.

If you have employee expenses for which you were not reimbursed, report them on Schedule A, line 20. You also generally must complete Form 2106 if either of the following apply.

However, you can use the simpler Form 2106-EZ, instead of Form 2106, if you meet the following requirements.

When your employer pays for your expenses using a reimbursement or allowance arrangement, the payments generally should not be on your Form W-2 if all the following rules for an accountable plan are met.

  1. You adequately account to your employer for the expenses within a reasonable period of time.
  2. You return any payments not spent for business expenses (excess reimbursements) within a reasonable period of time.
  3. You must have paid or incurred deductible expenses while performing services as an employee.

If you meet the accountable plan rules and your business expenses equal your reimbursement, do not report the reimbursement as income and do not deduct the expenses.


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Adequately accounting to employer.


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You adequately account to your employer when you give your employer documentary evidence of your travel, mileage, and other employee business expenses, such as receipts, along with an account book, diary, or similar record in which you entered each expense at or near the time you had it.

You also may be treated as adequately accounting to your employer if your employer gives you a per diem or car allowance similar in form to, and not more than, the federal rate and you verify the time, place, and business purpose of each expense. For more information, see the instructions for Form 2106 and Publication 463.


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Rental to employer.


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If you rent part of your home to your employer and you use the rented part in performing services for your employer as an employee, your deduction for the business use of your home is limited. You can deduct mortgage interest, real estate taxes, and personal casualty losses for the rented part, subject to any limitations. However, you cannot deduct otherwise allowable trade or business expenses, business casualty losses, or depreciation related to the use of your home in performing services for your employer.


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Deductible mortgage interest.


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Although you generally deduct expenses for the business use of your home on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 20, do not include any deductible home mortgage interest on that line. Instead, deduct both the business and nonbusiness parts of this interest on line 10 or 11 of Schedule A.

If the home mortgage interest you can deduct on lines 10 or 11 is limited by the home mortgage interest rules, you cannot deduct the excess as an employee business expense on Schedule A, line 20, even though you use part of your home for business. To determine if the limits on home mortgage interest apply to you, see the instructions for Schedule A or Publication 936.


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Real estate taxes.


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Deduct both the business and nonbusiness parts of your real estate taxes on line 6 of Schedule A. For more information on amounts allowable as a deduction for real estate taxes, see Publication 530, Tax Information for First-Time Homeowners.


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Casualty losses.


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Enter the business part of casualty losses (line 31 of the worksheet) on Form 4684, Section B, line 27. Write "See attached statement" above line 27.


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Other expenses.


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If you file Form 2106 or Form 2106-EZ, report on line 4 the following expenses.

Add these to your other employee business expenses and complete the rest of the form. Enter the total from Form 2106, or Form 2106-EZ, on Schedule A, line 20, where it is subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit. If you do not have to file Form 2106 or Form 2106-EZ, enter your total expenses directly on Schedule A, line 20.


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Example.

You are an employee who works at home for the convenience of your employer. You meet all the requirements to deduct expenses for the business use of your home. Your employer does not reimburse you for any of your business expenses and you are not otherwise required to file Form 2106 or Form 2106-EZ.

As an employee, you do not have gross receipts, cost of goods sold, etc. You begin with gross income from the business use of your home, which you determine to be $6,000.

The percentage of expenses due to the business use of your home is 20%. You have the following expenses.
Deductible mortgage interest (20%) $1,500
Real estate taxes (20%) 1,000
Total $2,500
Expenses not related to business use of the home (100%):  
Supplies $500
Advertising 1,300
Telephone 200
Total $2,000
Otherwise nondeductible expenses:  
Maintenance (20%) $200
Utilities (20%) 350
Insurance (20%) 250
Total $800
Depreciation (20%) $1,600

Based on the above expenses, you figure your deduction limit as follows.
Gross income   $6,000
Less:    
Deductible mortgage interest (20%) $1,500  
Real estate taxes (20%) 1,000  
Expenses not related to business use of the home (100%) 2,000 4,500
Deduction limit   $1,500
Your deduction for otherwise nondeductible expenses and depreciation is limited to $1,500. You can deduct all your otherwise nondeductible expenses ($800) and $700 ($1,500 − $800) of your depreciation.

You deduct your expenses for business use of your home on Schedule A (Form 1040) as shown in the following table.
Expense Amount Schedule A
Deductible mortgage interest $1,500 Line 10 or 11*
Real estate taxes $1,000 Line 6*
Expenses not related to the business use of the home $2,000 Line 20**
Otherwise nondeductible expenses $800 Line 20**
Depreciation $700 Line 20**
*In addition to the 80% nonbusiness part of the expense.
**Subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit.

You can carry over the $900 of depreciation that exceeds the deduction limit to next year, subject to the deduction limit for that year.


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Partners


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Partner

You may be allowed to deduct unreimbursed ordinary and necessary expenses you paid on behalf of the partnership (including qualified expenses for the business use of your home) if you were required to pay these expenses under the partnership agreement.

Use the worksheet on page 24 to figure the deduction for the business use of your home.


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Deducting unreimbursed partnership expenses.


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See the following forms and related instructions for information about deducting unreimbursed partnership expenses.


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More information.


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For more information about partners and partnerships, see Publication 541, Partnerships.

left arrowPrevious Page:  Publication 587 - Business Use of Your Home (Including Use by Day-Care Providers) - Recordkeeping
right arrowNext Page:  Publication 587 - Business Use of Your Home (Including Use by Day-Care Providers) - Schedule C Example
Use   left arrowright arrow  to find additional instances of index items.