Publication 502
taxmap/pubs/p502-011.htm#en_us_publink1000179150If you were self-employed and had a net profit for the year,
you may be able to deduct, as an adjustment to income, amounts paid for medical
and qualified long-term care insurance on behalf of yourself, your spouse, your
dependents, and effective March 30, 2010, your children who were under age 27 at
the end of 2010. For this purpose, you were self-employed if you were a general
partner (or a limited partner receiving guaranteed payments) or you received
wages from an S corporation in which you were more than a 2% shareholder. The
insurance plan must be established under your trade or business and the
deduction cannot be more than your earned income from that trade or business.
You cannot deduct payments for medical insurance for any month
in which you were eligible to participate in a health plan subsidized by your
employer, your spouse's employer or, effective March 30, 2010, an employer of
your dependent or your child under age 27 at the end of 2010. You cannot deduct
payments for a qualified long-term care insurance contract for any month in
which you were eligible to participate in a long-term care insurance plan
subsidized by your employer or your spouse's employer.
If you qualify to take the deduction, use the Self-Employed Health
Insurance Deduction Worksheet in the Form 1040 instructions to figure the amount
you can deduct. But if any of the following applies, do not use that worksheet.
- You had more than one source of income subject to self-employment
tax.
- You file Form 2555, Foreign Earned Income, or Form 2555-EZ,
Foreign Earned Income Exclusion.
- You are using amounts paid for qualified long-term care insurance
to figure the deduction.
If you cannot use the worksheet in the Form 1040 instructions,
use the worksheet in Publication 535, Business Expenses, to figure your
deduction.
Note.When figuring the amount you can deduct for insurance premiums,
do not include any advance payments shown in box 1 of Form 1099-H. Also, if you
are claiming the health coverage tax credit, subtract the amount shown on Form
8885, line 4 from the total insurance premiums you paid.
Also, do not include amounts paid for health insurance coverage
with retirement plan distributions that were tax-free because you are a retired
public safety officer.
taxmap/pubs/p502-011.htm#en_us_publink1000179152You take this deduction on Form 1040, line 29. For 2010, you
can deduct your self-employed health insurance deduction in determining your net
earnings from self-employment only for purposes of figuring your self-employment
tax. If you itemize your deductions and do not claim 100% of your self-employed
health insurance on line 29, include any remaining premiums with all other
medical care expenses on Schedule A (Form 1040), subject to the 7.5% limit.