The home office deduction is legit… and it’s also one of the easiest ways to accidentally step on a rake.
Not because it’s impossible — but because people claim it like the IRS won’t notice the “office” is also where they sleep, eat, watch Netflix, and store the Christmas tree.
If your “home office” has a bed in it, we need to talk.
Let’s break down the rules, the methods, and the documentation that makes this deduction defensible if anyone ever asks.
Basic Requirements for Home Offices
Your home office generally has to be:
- Regularly used for business (not “twice a year when motivation strikes”)
- Exclusively used for business (not “office by day / guest room by night / laundry folding station always”)
- And usually your principal place of business (or where you do admin/management and you don’t have another fixed location)
Exclusive use is the one that causes pain.
If your “office” is also your gaming room / prayer closet / panic room / Peloton shrine… it’s going to be hard to defend.
1) Simplified method vs Actual (allocation) method
You’ve got two ways to claim the deduction.
A) Simplified method (the “I don’t want a spreadsheet” method)
This one is basically:
$5 per square foot of office space, up to 300 sq ft.
So the max deduction is $1,500.
The Benefits are:
- Easy math
- Less documentation headache
- No depreciation tracking
- Less “audit friction” (not audit-proof… just less messy)
Disadvantage – If you have high home costs and a real office setup, you may be leaving money on the table
This is the method I like for people who want the deduction but don’t want to turn their life into Form 8829 cosplay.
B) Actual method (allocation-based) (the “this can save more, but you need receipts” method)
This is the classic method where you allocate actual home expenses based on business use.
Step 1: Figure your business-use percentage
Use square footage: Office sq ft ÷ Total home sq ft = business-use %
So if your office is 120 sq ft and your home is 1,200 sq ft:
120 ÷ 1,200 = 10%
Congrats. You now own 10% of your own utility bill in the eyes of tax logic.
Step 2: Categorize expenses into two buckets:
Direct expenses (100% business) – Office-only stuff.
- painting the office
- replacing office flooring
- repairing office drywall
These are easier to defend because they’re clearly business-related.
Indirect expenses (allocate by %) – Whole-house stuff.
- rent
- mortgage interest
- property taxes
- utilities
- homeowners insurance / renters insurance
- general repairs
These get multiplied by your business-use percentage.
The Benefits and only reason to take this approach is to get a bigger deduction.
Cons:
- More paperwork
- Depreciation comes into play (we’ll get there)
- If your numbers are sloppy, you’re basically inviting questions
2) Documentation: what makes a home office defensible in an audit
If you want this deduction to survive an IRS side-eye, build your file like you’re explaining it to someone who does not know you and does not care.
Here’s what you want:
A) Proof the space qualifies
- Photos of the office (more below)
- Measurements of the office
- Proof of total home square footage (listing, appraisal, closing docs, county record, lease listing, etc.)
- A simple sketch layout (hand-drawn is fine)
B) Proof you actually do business
- invoices
- client emails
- calendar bookings
- a business website
- QuickBooks/Stripe/PayPal reports
- anything that shows “this business exists and is active”
C) Proof of the expenses
- utilities bills
- insurance statements
- rent ledger/lease
- mortgage interest + property tax statements
- repair receipts
D) Proof of how you calculated it
Keep a one-page summary showing:
- office sq ft
- total home sq ft
- % calculation
- expense totals
- what you allocated and why
If you can’t explain it in 2 minutes, it doesn’t mean it’s wrong…
it means it’s annoying, and annoying is not what you want to be in an audit.
3) Depreciation on the business portion (and why it can be a bad idea later)
Here’s the part nobody thinks about until it’s too late.
If you’re a homeowner using the actual method, you may end up depreciating the business-use portion of your home.
That sounds great because depreciation is a deduction.
But depreciation has a long memory.
The problem: when you sell your home
When you sell your personal residence, you might qualify for the normal home sale gain exclusion (the famous “$250k / $500k” thing depending on filing status and facts).
But depreciation for business use usually doesn’t just disappear politely. It can create depreciation recapture (often taxed up to 25% as “unrecaptured Section 1250 gain”).
Translation: Depreciation can save you money now… and then send you a bill later when you sell.
When depreciation might still be worth it
- You expect to keep the home a long time
- Your gain won’t be huge
- Your income is high enough that the deduction matters
- You’re disciplined enough to track everything correctly
When it’s often not worth the hassle
- You might sell in a few years
- Your home value is climbing fast
- You hate recordkeeping and future-you will be stuck cleaning it up
Important note:
If you use the simplified method, depreciation usually isn’t in play for those years. That’s one reason people like it.
4) Documenting expenses + photos of the office (yes, photos)
What expenses do you track? (Actual method)
Shared expenses (allocate by %)
- rent / mortgage interest
- property taxes
- utilities (electric, gas, water, trash)
- insurance
- HOA (sometimes)
- general repairs
Direct office expenses (usually 100%)
- office-only repairs
- office paint
- office-specific improvements
Photos: what the IRS wants (and what you want to avoid)
Take photos once a year and keep them with your tax docs.
Take:
- wide shots of the whole room (multiple angles)
- the desk setup (computer, printer, business materials)
- the entry/doorway (helps show separation)
- any business-only storage
Avoid:
- a bed in the corner
- a TV “for background noise” (sure)
- kids’ toys
- dumbbells
- the “this is obviously a spare bedroom” vibe
Remember: exclusive means exclusive.
Not “mostly exclusive unless my cousin visits.”
5) What a home office audit looks like (and what they’re looking for)
Most people imagine an auditor walking into their home with a clipboard.
In reality, home office issues usually come up as:
- document requests
- correspondence audits
- or as part of a bigger audit
What triggers IRS curiosity
- huge home office deduction compared to your income
- very high office percentage (like you deducted half your house)
- repeated losses year after year
- you claim home office + mileage + meals + “other expenses” like you’re trying to win a deduction speedrun
What the IRS actually checks
- Exclusive use (photos + explanation)
- Math (office sq ft / home sq ft)
- Principal place of business logic (does it actually make sense)
- Expense support (bills, receipts)
- Consistency (your story matches the numbers and the rest of your return)
Your goal is to be boring.
Boring people don’t get follow-up questions.
6) S-corps: Accountable plan reimbursements (the “home office replacement”)
If you’re a sole prop (Schedule C), home office deduction is straightforward.
But if you’re running an S-corp, you generally don’t do the home office deduction the same way—because your business isn’t on Schedule C.
So what do S-corp owners usually do?
The common move: an accountable plan
Instead of you “deducting home office,” the S-corp reimburses you for business expenses you paid personally, including a properly calculated home office portion.
If done right:
- the S-corp gets a deduction
- you generally don’t pick it up as taxable wages
- everyone is happy
- the IRS is slightly less interested in your living room
What makes it “accountable”
3 basic rules:
- business connection
- substantiation (documentation)
- return excess reimbursement (don’t just make up a flat $1,000/month because vibes)
What you should keep for an accountable plan home office reimbursement
- a written policy (can be 1 page)
- monthly/quarterly expense reports showing:
- office sq ft / total home sq ft
- business-use %
- expenses included
- calculation
- proof the S-corp actually reimbursed you (bank record)
if you’re going to run an S-corp, you don’t really get to act like the business is your personal wallet. This is one of those moments where you treat yourself like an actual employee and submit the boring paperwork.
Partnerships: can they take home office deduction or an accountable plan?
Partnerships are their own special flavor of “it depends (but we can still do this right).”
Typically you’ll see one of these:
Option A: Partnership reimburses the partner
Similar concept to accountable reimbursement:
- partnership reimburses properly substantiated business expenses
- partnership deducts it
- partner generally isn’t taxed on the reimbursement (when done properly)
Option B: Unreimbursed Partnership Expenses (UPE)
If the partnership agreement (or consistent policy) effectively requires the partner to pay certain expenses personally, the partner may deduct those as UPE on Schedule E.
This is where people get sloppy and say “yeah yeah I just deduct it.”
No. The “required” part matters. Paper matters.
If you’re in a partnership, this is one of those areas where you want clean agreement language + consistent treatment.
The “Make This Defensible” checklist (copy/paste this)
Space
Measured office sq ft
Verified total home sq ft
Took annual photos (multiple angles)
Wrote a 3-sentence description of how you use the space (exclusive + regular)
Expenses
Saved utilities bills
Saved rent/lease or mortgage interest/property tax docs
Saved insurance statements
Tracked repairs (office-only vs whole-house)
Math
Computed business-use %
Kept a simple allocation worksheet
Picked method (simplified vs actual) intentionally
Entity handling
Schedule C: documented home office deduction method and support
S-corp: accountable plan policy + reimbursement trail
Partnership: reimbursement policy or UPE support consistent with agreement
Final thoughts
The home office deduction is real.
It’s not a scam. It’s not a myth. It’s not “free money.”
If you want the easiest path: simplified method + clean photos + measurements.
If you want the bigger deduction: actual method + real documentation + accept that depreciation may haunt you later.
Do it clean. Do it boring. Keep the file.
And don’t try to deduct your entire apartment because you own a laptop.
Related Posts
-
Rental Property Taxes (Schedule E) — The Overview
-
How to Start a Veteran-Owned Business in Texas
-
Normal Schedule C Expense Categories (and How to Write Stuff Off Without Being Sketchy)
-
The Home Office Deduction (aka “How to Deduct Your Office Without Accidentally Deducting Your Couch”)
-
I Filed Late (or Didn’t File at All). Now What?
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