1. Home Office Deduction
If you use part of your home exclusively and regularly for your business, you may deduct:
Two methods:
*Tip: Keep photos or layout of your space for documentation.
2. Business Mileage or Vehicle Use
You can deduct mileage for:
2025 mileage rate:
.67 cents per mile (IRS standard rate)
Alternatively, deduct actual costs:
Track mileage using apps like MileIQ, Everlance, or a physical logbook.
3. Technology & Equipment
Deduct computers, phones, printers, and software used for business. You can:
Examples:
4. Supplies & Materials
Write off items used directly in your business, like:
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Packaging and shipping materials
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Office supplies
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Craft or product materials
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Business cards or promotional items
If it helps you produce, sell, or promote your service/product, it’s likely deductible.
5. Advertising & Marketing
Did you run Facebook or Google ads? Build a website? Hire a designer?
You can deduct:
6. Self-Employed Health Insurance
If you pay for your own health insurance, you can deduct:
This deduction reduces your AGI, even if you take the standard deduction.
7. Education & Training
Professional development is deductible if it improves your skills or business knowledge:
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Online courses
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Certifications
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Workshops or webinars
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Trade publications
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Business books
*Tip: Keep receipts and course descriptions in case of audit.
8. Business Travel
Trips away from home for business purposes are deductible:
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Airfare, bus, or train fare
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Hotel stays
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Rental cars or Uber/Lyft
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50% of meals while traveling
The trip must have a legitimate business purpose, and personal time must be clearly separated.
9. Phone & Internet
You can deduct a portion of your:
Only the business-use portion qualifies, so track usage or estimate based on percentage.
10. Contractor or Freelancer Payments
Did you hire anyone to help with your business?
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Virtual assistants
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Subcontractors
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Web designers
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Accountants
You can deduct their fees. If you paid someone $600 or more, you must issue a 1099-NEC.