The IRS allows a home office deduction if you use part of your home regularly and exclusively for business. This applies to:
Two calculation methods:
| Method | How It Works | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Simplified Method | $5 per sq ft, up to 300 sq ft = max $1,500 | Small offices, easy filing |
| Regular Method | % of home used × actual home expenses | Larger offices, higher deductions |
Step 1 — Measured the Home Office
James used a dedicated 280 sq ft office. Linda used a separate 200 sq ft studio. Combined: 480 sq ft out of a 2,400 sq ft home = 20% business use.
Step 2 — Calculated Actual Home Expenses
| Expense | Annual Amount | Business % | Deductible |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mortgage Interest | $18,400 | 20% | $3,680 |
| Property Taxes | $6,200 | 20% | $1,240 |
| Homeowner’s Insurance | $2,100 | 20% | $420 |
| Utilities (electric, gas, internet) | $4,800 | 20% | $960 |
| Home Repairs & Maintenance | $3,500 | 20% | $700 |
| Total Home Office Deduction | $7,000 |
Step 3 — Additional Deductions Identified
Step 4 — Retirement Contributions
We set up a Solo 401(k) for James and a SEP-IRA for Linda, contributing $38,000 combined — reducing their taxable income significantly.
| Before Alpha CPA LLC | After Alpha CPA LLC | |
|---|---|---|
| Taxable Income | $198,000 | $144,960 |
| Total Deductions Added | $0 | $53,040 |
| Federal Tax Savings (24% bracket) | — | $12,730 |
| Self-Employment Tax Savings | — | $2,860 |
| Total Annual Savings | — | $15,590 |
James and Linda were working from home full-time but had never claimed a home office deduction. They assumed it was "too risky" or "not worth it." After a consultation with Alpha CPA LLC, they discovered they were leaving thousands of dollars on the table every year.
Challenge • Couple believed home office deductions were an "audit red flag" — a common myth • Neither had tracked or documented their home expenses throughout the year • No retirement accounts were set up — missing major tax-deferred savings • Business equipment (desks, monitors, computers) had never been deducted • Internet and phone costs were not being allocated to the business • Combined income of $198,000 placed them in the 24% bracket — every deduction mattered