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Tax Tactics Can I Deduct My Home
Office Expenses? The IRS allows you deductions for the portion of your house that you use to operate your stock photo business. However, if you are a salaried person working at your "main job," and your stock SEPARATE EXPENSES Here's how that works. Let's say your stock photography business, operated out of your home, has a gross income (receipts before expenses) of $12,000. Your business incurs home-office expenses of $1,500 (percent of utilities, mortgage interest, roof repairs, and so on). Your normal business expenses, such as office supplies, postage, travel, film, memory cards, etc. total $11,500. Since your gross income was $12,000, you can use only $500 of your $1,500 office-in-the-home expenses as a deduction. However, you may carry forward the disallowed $1,000 to subsequent tax years; these carried-forward home-office expenses, though, are subject to the same restriction each subsequent year- i.e., they are not allowable if the addition of their total creates a net loss from the business activity. The room(s) in your home where you conduct your photomarketing business must be used exclusively and regularly for your photomarketing operations. The IRS won't approve the room as a deduction if it's also used as a sewing room or a part-time recreation room or if it's part of your living "Business Use of Your Home" is the title of IRS Publication 587. It's a clear explanation of what you can and cannot deduct. Also check out Booklet 529, "Miscellaneous Deductions." Write; log on; or phone the IRS for a free copy at (800) TAX-FORM. Rohn Engh is director of PhotoSource International and publisher of PhotoStockNotes. Pine Lake Farm, 1910 35th Road, Osceola, WI 54020 USA. E-mail: info@photosource.com . Fax: 1 715 248 7394. Web site: www.photosource.com.
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