Publication 334
taxmap/pubs/p334-033.htm#en_us_publink100025393To deduct expenses related to the part of your home used for
business, you must meet specific requirements. Even then, your deduction may be
limited.
To qualify to claim expenses for business use of your home, you
must meet the following tests.
- Your use of the business part of your home must be:
- Exclusive (however, see
Exceptions to exclusive use
, later),
- Regular,
- For your business, and
- The business part of your home must be one of the following:
- Your principal place of business (defined later),
- A place where you meet or deal with patients, clients, or
customers in the normal course of your business, or
- A separate structure (not attached to your home) you use
in connection with your business.
taxmap/pubs/p334-033.htm#en_us_publink100025394To qualify under the exclusive use test, you must use a specific
area of your home only for your trade or business. The area used for business
can be a room or other separately identifiable space. The space does not need to
be marked off by a permanent partition.
You do not meet the requirements of the exclusive use test if
you use the area in question both for business and for personal purposes.
taxmap/pubs/p334-033.htm#en_us_publink100025395You are an attorney and use a den in your home to write legal
briefs and prepare clients' tax returns. Your family also uses the den for
recreation. The den is not used exclusively in your profession, so you cannot
claim a business deduction for its use.
taxmap/pubs/p334-033.htm#en_us_publink100025396You do not have to meet the exclusive use test if you use part
of your home in either of the following ways.
- For the storage of inventory or product samples.
- As a daycare facility.
For an explanation of these exceptions, see Publication 587,
Business Use of Your Home (Including Use by Daycare Providers).
taxmap/pubs/p334-033.htm#en_us_publink100025397To qualify under the regular use test, you must use a specific
area of your home for business on a continuing basis. You do not meet the test
if your business use of the area is only occasional or incidental, even if you
do not use that area for any other purpose.
taxmap/pubs/p334-033.htm#en_us_publink100025398You can have more than one business location, including your
home, for a single trade or business. To qualify to deduct the expenses for the
business use of your home under the principal place of business test, your home
must be your principal place of business for that business. To determine your
principal place of business, you must consider all the facts and circumstances.
Your home office will qualify as your principal place of business
for deducting expenses for its use if you meet the following requirements.
- You use it exclusively and regularly for administrative or
management activities of your business.
- You have no other fixed location where you conduct substantial
administrative or management activities of your business.
Alternatively, if you use your home exclusively and regularly
for your business, but your home office does not qualify as your principal place
of business based on the previous rules, you determine your principal place of
business based on the following factors.
- The relative importance of the activities performed at each
location.
- If the relative importance factor does not determine your
principal place of business, you can also consider the time spent at each
location.
If, after considering your business locations, your home cannot
be identified as your principal place of business, you cannot deduct home office
expenses. However, for other ways to qualify to deduct home office expenses, see
Publication 587.
taxmap/pubs/p334-033.htm#en_us_publink100025399If your gross income from the business use of your home equals
or exceeds your total business expenses (including depreciation), you can deduct
all your business expenses related to the use of your home. If your gross income
from the business use is less than your total business expenses, your deduction
for certain expenses for the business use of your home is limited.
Your deduction of otherwise nondeductible expenses, such as insurance,
utilities, and depreciation (with depreciation taken last), allocable to the
business is limited to the gross income from the business use of your home minus
the sum of the following.
- The business part of expenses you could deduct even if you
did not use your home for business (such as mortgage interest, real estate
taxes, and casualty and theft losses that are allowable as itemized deductions
on Schedule A (Form 1040)).
- The business expenses that relate to the business activity
in the home (for example, business phone, supplies, and depreciation on
equipment), but not to the use of the home itself.
Do not include in (2) above your deduction for one-half of your
self-employment tax.
Use
Form 8829, Expenses for Business Use of Your Home, to figure your deduction.
taxmap/pubs/p334-033.htm#en_us_publink100025400For more information on deducting expenses for the business use
of your home, see Publication 587.