Agents Online Real Estate Forums, Discussion, Realtors Marketing Tips

Follow AgentsOnline on Twitter

Click Here to display our logo on your site and link to us!
AgentsOnline Real Estate Discussion Forums Logo

Good Ideas
Nusetlock.com




REO Prep Foreclosure Listings




BPO REO Secret System




How To Advertise Here

More Good Ideas!
real estate newsletters


Real Estate Websites for Realtors




Build your brand on a Real Estate Site





Facebook
Topic Options
Rate This Topic
#81564 - 03/28/06 09:21 AM Home Office Tax Tips
Xenogenetic Offline
Member

Registered: 09/24/04
Posts: 255
Loc: Hartford, Connecticut area.
Here's an excerpt from Bob Bruss's 2006 Tax Tips on home office deductions. 'Tis the tax time season and thought some people here might find it interesting:

WORK AT HOME, SAVE A BUNDLE ON TAXES


2006 Realty Tax Tips-Part 7: Home business tax deductions


Whether you are a renter or a homeowner and you use part of your residence for your full- or part-time business, you probably qualify for the special home business tax deduction to save on your income taxes. It doesn't matter if you are self-employed or if you are an employee whose employer doesn't provide suitable workspace and expects you to work at home.


However, if you bring work home from the office because you prefer working at home, then you won't qualify for the generous tax savings offered by the home business tax deduction.


For example, if you are a teacher who prefers grading student papers at home while watching television, but your school provides suitable workspace, you don't qualify for this deduction. However, if the school is unsafe after work hours, then your home office deduction is justified.


EMPLOYEES WORKING AT HOME HAVE A SPECIAL TEST. The Internal Revenue Service imposes a special test for employees who work at home. It is called the "convenience of the employer" test.


If your employer doesn't provide suitable workspace, then you probably meet this test. Examples include outside salespeople, computer entry clerks, and telephone order takers working from home.


SELF-EMPLOYEDS MUST PASS THE PRIMARY BUSINESS LOCATION TEST. To qualify for the Internal Revenue Code 280A home business tax deductions, whether you run a full- or part-time business from home, your residence must either (1) be used to meet with patients, clients or customers, or (2) used for administrative activity if you have no other fixed business location.


This tax law change was primarily caused by the 1993 U.S. Supreme Court decision denying Dr. Nader Soliman, an anesthesiologist, any home business deduction although he spent many hours on administrative work and reading professional medical journals in his condominium. Because Soliman spent the majority of his work time at various hospitals, the court denied his home business deductions. Today, thanks to a tax law charge, Soliman is allowed to deduct his applicable home office expenses.


In 1999, Congress changed the tax law to allow self-employeds, such as Soliman, to deduct their home business expenses if the residence is their "primary business location."


Other examples include a self-employed handyman, plumber and bookkeeper whose residences are their "primary business location," even if they spend most of their working hours at other job locations.


EVEN A PART-TIME BUSINESS CAN QUALIFY. Whether you work full- or part-time from home, if you meet the "primary business location" or "convenience of the employer" test, then part of your home operating costs are tax-deductible as business expenses.


For example, if you sell Amway, Mary Kay, or Avon products from your home, and you store inventory and supplies in your home business area, you may qualify if your residence is your primary business location.


However, the home use must be a business, not a hobby or investment. To illustrate, in the tax case of Joseph Moller, 553 Fed.2d 1071, Moller earned 98 percent of his income from his investment business, operated from his home. But the U.S. Court of Appeals denied his home business deductions because Moller was a passive investor in stocks and bonds. However, if he was an active "day trader" with frequent transactions, his home office deductions probably could have qualified.


The leading U.S. Tax Court decision on this issue is Dr. Edwin Curphey, 73 T.C. 61. Although Curphey was a full-time dermatologist at a hospital, he managed his rental properties on a part-time basis from his home office. The Tax Court ruled he was entitled to deduct applicable home office expenses for his part-time property management business.


"EXCLUSIVE BUSINESS AREA" IS REQUIRED. Whether full- or part-time home business use is involved, there must be an "exclusive business area," which is not also used for personal or family purposes.


However, the exclusive business area need not be a full room. The part of a room where you keep your business supplies and equipment can qualify. However, it cannot be shared use.


To illustrate, entertaining business clients at home clearly doesn't qualify. Neither does using your kitchen table for your part-time bookkeeping business if the family also eats meals there.


HOME BUSINESS DEDUCTIONS ARE BASED ON SQUARE FOOTAGE. The percentage of your home business deductions depends on the square footage of your residence set aside for exclusive business use. Time spent on your business doesn't matter.


To illustrate, suppose you rent or own a 2,000-square-foot house or apartment. You use one bedroom for your home office. It is 400 square feet. Therefore, 20 percent of applicable household expenses are deductible as business expenses. The same rule applies if your business area is in a separate building on your premises, such as a detached garage.


The tax result is 20 percent of your applicable home expenses such as insurance, utilities, repairs, mortgage interest, property taxes and rent become deductible business expenses.


But 100 percent of some home business costs are fully deductible. Examples include your business telephone line (if you also have a personal telephone line), business computer DSL or broadband fees, and painting or improvement costs for the business area.


BUSINESS EQUIPMENT MAY BE FULLY DEDUCTIBLE. For qualifying business equipment bought and placed in service in 2005, such as a home business computer, the business owner can elect to deduct (rather than depreciate) up to $105,000 of the cost. But business equipment costs exceeding $105,000 must be depreciated over their useful life.


However, for a business automobile placed in service in 2005, the maximum expensing deduction is $2,960, although qualifying sport utility vehicles used in a business may be deductible up to $25,000.


HOME BUSINESS AREA IS DEPRECIABLE. Homeowners can depreciate the exclusive business area of their house or condominium. Using the example above, if your home office occupies 20 percent of your home's square footage, then you can depreciate 20 percent of the house's cost (excluding non-depreciable land value) on the 39-year commercial property straight-line basis.


However, IRS Regulation 2002-142 says although business use of your home won't affect entitlement to the Internal Revenue Code 121 principal residence sale $250,000 or $500,000 exemption, the total depreciation deducted must be "recaptured" and taxed at a special 25 percent federal tax rate.


SPECIAL TAX BREAK FOR AUTO EXPENSES STARTING AT HOME. If you begin your workday from your home business location, and you use your automobile or truck to visit customers or work locations, your business mileage expense becomes tax-deductible when you drive away from your residence.


For 2005, the deduction is 40.5 cents per mile from Jan. 1 to Aug. 31, 2005, and 48.5 cents per mile from Sept. 1 to Dec. 31, 2005. But you must keep a daily mileage record.


LIMIT ON HOME BUSINESS EXPENSES. However, home business expenses are limited. When subtracted from the income of your home business, home office costs cannot create a tax loss to shelter your other ordinary taxable income.


SUMMARY: Whether full- or part-time, home business use can produce substantial tax savings. Employees and self-employeds, as well as renters and homeowners, can qualify if they meet the tests explained. For full details, please consult your tax adviser.

Top
#81565 - 03/28/06 02:13 PM Re: Home Office Tax Tips
Jim Lee Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 07/01/99
Posts: 4785
Loc: Knoxville, Tennessee, Knox Cou...
I've talked about taking a home office deduction with my accountant.

We decided we didn't want to take any of those "SPECIAL TEST"s the IRS is fond of giving for home office deductors. :p
_________________________
Jim Lee, REALTORŪ, CRS, ABR, e-PRO
[url=www.KnoxvilleHomeCenter.com]www.KnoxvilleHomeCenter.com[/url]
[url=www.KnoxvilleTennesseeRealEstateBlog.com]www.KnoxvilleTennesseeRealEstateBlog.com[/url]
I am not an attorney & I am not giving you any legal advice.

Top
#81566 - 03/28/06 02:48 PM Re: Home Office Tax Tips
Prodigy Offline
Veteran Member

Registered: 11/15/05
Posts: 724
Loc: Riverside County, California
I was also told that using a home office as a deduction is one of the fastest ways to get audited, I have decided not to.
_________________________
Adam Clarke
Commercial and Residential Lending Specialist
access commercial finance
Direct: (951) 318-1162
Small Business Success

Top
#81567 - 03/28/06 03:57 PM Re: Home Office Tax Tips
super realtor Offline
Major Contributor

Registered: 05/01/05
Posts: 8479
Loc: georgia
EXCACTLY

Top






Google Custom Forum Search

This Google Custom search may do a better job of searching the forums for some keywords than the old forum search does. The results do not include threads from the Asset Managers Forum however. To search that forum you will need to be actually in the Asset Managers Forum and you will need to use the old forum search below.
Search

Good Ideas!
real estate newsletters




How To Advertise Here

Sponsors

Newest Members
JakeRoberts, JaneLee, CourtneyFields19, toorgeman123, D best Realtor
21441 Registered Users
Who's Online
8 registered (jbt4re, JakeRoberts, csl, HONEY, CandyMan, LVNV REO GAL, 2 invisible), 144 Guests and 1 Spider online.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Shout Box

Top Posters (30 Days)
Vermont 79
KingofBPOs 56
Brit16 51
DueDiligence 36
super realtor 36
Bigtoe 35
Averis 34
johnnyloans 33
SoldWithVideo 32
Kjmendy 29
RIzwan 29
Scintillion 25
75Corvette 24
Doin' bpose 24
Brad - W4BJM 22
(Views)Popular Topics
No new orders today 4758874
I MAKE 100 COLD CALLS EVERY DAY & LOVE IT! 2709035
Stupid MLS comments. 959200
EML 458010
Evalonline 299690
What do you know about Froy Candelario, top agent in USA 291128
Land America 285007
New HUD Listing Brokers---Any Update? 269853
Mainstreet 261768
Pay it Forward - BPO/REO Tips & Tricks I & II 239470
Stupid QC comments and BPO requirements. 230919
Is there religious content in Buffini class? 225927
FARVV 177251
REOTRANS 160826
Let's talk about our cars 147926
USRES / RES.NET 147658
asset val seminar in colorado 144141
AVM Bpos 139643
FARVV 126764
PAS 118332
Featured Member
Registered: 09/16/05
Posts: 431


This site presented by RNC Internet Services