Costs qualify as deductions if they’re “ordinary and necessary” in your trade or business. Learn more about which expenses qualify and how to deduct them.

What Business Expenses Can I Deduct?

According to the IRS, “ordinary” means that most others who work in the same business or trade also commonly pay for these things. “Necessary” means that whatever you spent money on assists you in doing business. In fact, you might not be able to do business and earn money if you didn’t make these expenditures. For example, textbooks and teaching supplies would be both ordinary and necessary if you work as a tutor. However, buying a pet guinea pig for your workspace might not be, at least if you can’t convince the IRS that the pet is a teaching tool. Even then, you might run into a problem with the “ordinary” part of the equation, at least without the assistance of a good tax professional.

Commonly Deducted Expenses

The most common fully deductible business expenses include: 

Accounting fees Advertising Bank charges Commissions and sales costs Consultation expenses Continuing professional education costs Contract labor costs Credit and collection fees Delivery charges Dues and subscriptions Employee benefit programs Equipment rentals Factory expenses Insurance Interest paid Internet subscriptions, domain names, and hosting Laundry Legal fees Licenses Maintenance and repairs Office costs and supplies Pension and profit-sharing plans Postage Printing and copying expenses Professional development and training fees Professional fees Promotion Rent Salaries, wages, and other compensation Security Small tools and equipment Software Supplies Telephone Trade discounts Travel Utilities

Gifts to Customers or Clients

Not all expenses are fully deductible, even if they’re ordinary and necessary, and gifts made to your customers or clients fall into this category. You can only claim a percentage of these costs. They’re deductible up to $25 per person. For example, you could only claim a deduction for $25 if you show your appreciation to your best client with a $100 bottle of bourbon. The other $75 is on you and your kind heart. However, you could deduct the whole expense if you give them a $20 bottle of wine instead because this is under the $25 limit. The caveat: Be wise with your gratitude. 

Promotional Gifts

Not all gifts are considered gifts for tax purposes. Some of these costs can be considered promotional. This is typically the case with items that cost $4 or less. They’re fully deductible up to $4 each as long as they bear your business name and you distribute a lot of them, such as pens you might offer to anyone who signs a contract with you.

Meals and Entertainment Expenses 

It used to be that you could deduct up to 50% of entertainment costs that were directly related to conducting business—such as throwing a lavish holiday party and inviting your clients. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) eliminated this tax code provision in 2018, but there are still some deductions for meals. You can deduct 50% of business meals if you take those clients out to dinner individually. You—or at least one of your employees—must be present and must conduct business in some way with a consultant, client, customer, or other business contacts. The meal can’t be over-the-top extravagant. So if you take that same client to dinner and order a $100 bottle of bourbon to enjoy with the meal instead of giving them the bottle as a gift, your deduction doubles from $25 to $50—half the purchase price. And you can deduct half the cost of the meal and the tip, too.

Automobile and Transportation Expenses 

You can deduct the portion of your automobile and transportation expenses equivalent to the miles you drove for business purposes during the tax year. Your business miles must be separated from your personal miles. This can admittedly get complicated, so it’s beneficial to keep a log, either in your smartphone or on a notepad stashed in your glove compartment. Here’s an example. You run your business from home and you drive 20 miles each way to service a client’s computer system. Then you make a side trip of five miles to pick up some dinner on your return trip home. Technically, you must subtract 10 miles—assuming the meal pickup was five miles each way—from the total 50 miles you drove on that outing. So, 40 of your miles are tax-deductible. You can’t add on that other 10.

The Standard Mileage Rate vs. Actual Expenses

Now you have a choice to make. The IRS allows you to either deduct your actual costs incurred in driving those miles, or you can deduct the standard mileage rate of 58.5 cents in 2022 (the rate is adjusted annually). Those 40 miles you drove to service the computer system would shave $23.40 off your business income using the standard mileage rate—40 miles times 58.5 cents for each of them. But you should do a little more math to determine if claiming your actual costs would result in a greater deduction. Your deduction would equal 50% of your actual auto expenses if you drove 30,000 miles during the year overall, and if 15,000 of those miles were business-related—15,000 is half of 30,000. These costs include things such as depreciation, auto loan interest, fuel, maintenance, insurance, and registration. Or you could simply deduct $8,775, or 15,000 miles times 58.5 cents. You’d want to use whichever method works out to more tax savings.

Home Office Expenses

You can also claim a deduction for expenses incurred in maintaining a home office, and the rules are similar to those that apply to auto and transportation costs. You have to separate business and personal use. You can only deduct the portion of the expenses that are associated with the area of your home that you use exclusively for business. For example, you can claim a deduction for the square footage of the space where you actually work, not the entire room, if the room does double duty as your child’s playroom. But if you dedicate an entire extra bedroom to your work and do nothing else in that room, the entire room’s percentage of your home is tax deductible. The space must also be your principal place of business. This doesn’t mean that you can’t leave to make house calls to customers or clients, but you must actually run your business from this home location.

The Home Office Deduction Simplified Method

The home office expense deduction is an either/or decision as well. The IRS also gives you a choice between two options. One is to use the simplified method and simply claim $5 for each square foot of your home that’s devoted to your business. This method caps out at 300 square feet, however, so it might not be beneficial if your work area is larger than this.

Home Office Expenses—Actual Overall Costs

Your other choice is to deduct a percentage of the actual overall costs of maintaining your home. The percentage would be equal to the percentage of your home that you use for business purposes. For example, your entire home might be 2,500 square feet. You’ve converted the garage to an office space, and it comprises 375 square feet. That works out to 15% of your home’s space. You could claim a $6,300 home office deduction if the total costs of maintaining your home for the entire year were $42,000—15% of $42,000. You’d get only a $1,500 deduction, or $5 for 300 square feet, if you used the simplified method, given that you’d have to leave 75 square feet on the table because of the 300-square-foot cap and you have relatively high household expenses. Again, calculate the deduction both ways to determine which works out best based on your personal circumstances. Most taxpayers find that the percentage method is more advantageous.

Nondeductible Business Expenses

Some business costs are never deductible even though they might be directly related to your trade or profession. These include bribes and kickbacks—which are usually illegal to begin with—and contributions to political parties or candidates. Dues and membership fees you might pay for social clubs aren’t deductible, nor are lobbying expenses, penalties, and fines.

How to Deduct Business Expenses

You must complete and file Schedule C with your tax return to itemize your business costs and calculate how much business income is left over after you deduct them. The resulting number from Schedule C is then entered on line 3 of Schedule 1 of Form 1040. This is your taxable income from your business. The total of Schedule 1, which is found on line 9, then transfers to line 8 of Form 1040. Want to read more content like this? Sign up for The Balance’s newsletter for daily insights, analysis, and financial tips, all delivered straight to your inbox every morning!