Pub. 911, Direct Sellers |
2004 Tax Year |
Main Contents
This is archived information that pertains only to the 2004 Tax Year. If you are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
You are a direct seller if you meet all the following conditions.
- You are engaged in one of the following trades or businesses.
- Selling or soliciting the sale of consumer products, either�
- In a home or other place that is not a permanent retail establishment, or
- To any buyer on a buy-sell basis or a deposit-commission basis for resale in a home or other place that is not a permanent
retail
establishment.
- Delivering or distributing newspapers or shopping news (including any services directly related to that trade or business).
- Substantially all your pay (whether paid in cash or not) for services described in (1) is directly related to sales or other output (including the performance of services) rather than to the number of hours worked.
- Your services are performed under a written contract between you and the person for whom you perform the services, and the contract provides that you will not be treated as an employee for federal tax purposes.
As a direct seller, you usually sign up with a particular company to sell its product line. The company may refer to you by one of the following titles.
- Consultant
- Coordinator
- Dealer
- Demonstrator
- Designer
- Director
- Distributor or direct distributor
- Instructor
- Manager or supervisor
- Representative or sales representative
Self-employed.
Direct sellers are self-employed. This generally means you
have to pay self-employment tax (discussed later under Business Taxes).
Employee.
You are a direct seller only if you are in business for
yourself. Selling consumer products as a company employee does not make
you a direct seller.
The fact that you work under another direct seller does not
make you that person's employee.
Recruiting.
You are engaged in the trade or business of selling or
soliciting the sale of consumer products if you attempt to increase the
sales of direct sellers who work under you (your downline group) and your earnings depend in part on how much they sell. Recruiting, motivating, and
training are examples of attempts to increase sales.
Host or hostess.
You are not a direct seller if you simply host a party at
which sales are made. Nevertheless, some information in this
publication may still apply to you.
The gift you receive for giving the party is a payment for helping the direct seller make sales. You must report it as income at its
fair market value. See Other Income, later.
Your out-of-pocket party expenses are subject to the 50%
limit for meal and entertainment expenses, discussed under Meals and
Entertainment,
later. These expenses are deductible as miscellaneous itemized
deductions subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit on Schedule
A (Form 1040), but only up to the amount of income you receive for
giving the party. See Not-for-Profit Limit, later.
The following discussion gives basic tax information that may help if you have never been in business for yourself. For more
information about
starting a business, see Publication 583.
Employer Identification Number (EIN)
EINs are used to identify the tax accounts of employers, certain sole proprietors, corporations, partnerships, estates, trusts,
and other entities.
If you do not already have an EIN, you need to get one if any of the following apply to your business.
- You have employees.
- You have a qualified retirement plan.
- You operate your business as a corporation or partnership.
- You file returns for:
- Employment taxes,
- Excise taxes, or
- Taxes on alcohol, tobacco, or firearms.
You can apply for an EIN in the following ways:
- By going online�Click on the EIN link at www.irs.gov/businesses/small. The EIN is issued immediately once the application
information is validated.
- By telephone at 1�800�829�4933 from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. in the applicant's local time zone.
- By mailing or faxing Form SS�4, Application for Employer Identification Number.
The following kinds of federal business taxes may apply to direct sellers.
- Income tax
- Self-employment tax
- Employment taxes
Your state, county, or city may impose other kinds of tax and licensing obligations.
Income tax.
All businesses except partnerships must file an annual
income tax return. (Partnerships file an information return.) For
example, if you operate your direct-selling business as a sole
proprietor, you must file Schedule C or Schedule C�EZ as part of your
individual income tax return (Form 1040). You are a sole proprietor if
you are self-employed (work for yourself) and are the only owner of
your unincorporated business.
Self-employment tax.
Self-employment tax is a social security and Medicare tax
primarily for those who work for themselves. It is similar to the
social security and Medicare taxes withheld from the pay of most wage
earners. If you are a direct seller, you generally must pay this tax on
your income from direct selling. You must pay it whether you are a sole
proprietor or a partner in a partnership. Use Schedule SE (Form 1040)
to figure your self-employment tax. For more information about
self-employment tax, see Publication 533.
The Social Security Administration (SSA) time limit for posting self-employment income.
Generally, the SSA will give you credit for
self-employment income reported on a tax return filed within 3 years, 3
months, and 15 days after the tax year you earned the income. If you
file your tax return or report a change in your self-employment income
after this time limit, the SSA may change its records, but only to
remove or reduce the amount. The SSA will not change its records to
increase the amount of your self-employment income.
Employment taxes.
If you have employees in your business, you generally
withhold and pay the following kinds of employment taxes.
- The federal income tax you withhold from employees' wages.
- Social security and Medicare taxes�both the amount you withhold from employees' wages and the amount you pay as the employer.
- Federal unemployment (FUTA) tax (none of which is withheld from the employees' wages).
For more information, see Publication 15.
Other taxes.
You can deduct personal property and other taxes as a
business expense if you incur them in the ordinary course of your
business. For information about deducting these taxes, see Taxes under Business Expenses, later.
The federal income tax is a pay-as-you-go tax. You must pay it as you earn or receive income during the year. There are two
ways to pay as you go.
- Withholding. If
you are an employee, your employer likely withholds income tax from
your pay. By revising your W�4, you can increase your withholding to
cover the tax you owe on income from your job and from direct selling.
- Estimated tax. If you do not pay tax through withholding, or do not have enough withheld, you may have to pay estimated
tax.
Estimated tax is used to pay both income and self-employment taxes.
General rule for making estimated tax payments.
You must make estimated tax payments for 2004 if you expect
to owe at least $1,000 in tax, after subtracting your withholding and
credits, and you expect your withholding and credits to be less than
the smaller of the following.
- 90% of the tax to be shown on your 2004 tax return.
- 100% of the tax shown on your 2003 tax return. Your 2003 tax return must cover all 12 months for this rule to apply.
Paying estimated tax.
You can use Form 1040�ES to figure your estimated tax and
make quarterly estimated tax payments. Or, you can make estimated tax
payments by electronic funds withdrawal or by credit card. See the Form
1040�ES instructions or How To Pay Estimated Tax in Publication 505.
Underpayment penalty.
If you did not pay enough estimated tax or have enough
income tax withheld, you may be subject to a penalty for underpayment
of tax. You can use Form 2210 to figure the penalty. In most cases, you
can have the Internal Revenue Service figure the penalty for you. See
Form 2210 to determine if you must complete the form.
Exceptions.
Generally, you do not have to pay an underpayment penalty
if you meet either of the following exceptions.
- Your total tax is less than $1,000.
- You had no tax liability last year.
For more information on estimated tax, see Publication 505.
You
must file an information return to report that you made direct sales of
at least $5,000 of consumer products to a buyer for resale anywhere
other than a permanent retail establishment. The information return,
Form 1099�MISC, must show the name, address, and identification number
of the buyer (recipient). Check box 9 of Form 1099�MISC to show these
sales. Do not enter a dollar amount.
You
must also provide a statement to the buyer by January 31 of the year
following the calendar year for which the information return is filed,
showing your name, address, phone number for contacting you, and
identifying number. The statement you give to the buyer for these
direct sales may be in the form of a letter showing this information
along with commissions, prizes, awards, etc. See the instructions for
Form 1099�MISC for more information.
The
law imposes penalties for noncompliance with tax laws. Some of these
penalties are discussed next. If you underpay your tax due to fraud,
you could be subject to a civil fraud penalty. In certain cases, you
could be subject to criminal prosecution.
Failure-to-file penalty.
If you do not file your return by the due date (including
extensions), you may have to pay a failure-to-file penalty. The penalty
is usually 5% of the tax not paid by the due date for each month or
part of a month that the return is late. This penalty cannot exceed 25%
of your tax, and it is reduced by the failure-to-pay penalty (discussed
next) for any month both penalties apply. However, if you file your
return more than 60 days after the due date or extended due date, the
minimum penalty is the lesser of $100 or 100% of the unpaid tax. You
will not have to pay the penalty if you show that you failed to file on
time because of reasonable cause and not because of willful neglect.
Failure-to-pay penalty.
You may have to pay a penalty of � of 1% of your unpaid
taxes for each month or part of a month after the due date that the tax
is not paid. This penalty cannot be more than 25% of your unpaid tax.
You will not have to pay the penalty if you can show good reason for
not paying the tax on time. This penalty does not apply during the
automatic 4-month extension of time to file if you paid at least 90% of
your actual tax liability on or before the due date of your return and
you pay the balance when you file the return.
The monthly rate of the failure-to-pay penalty is half the
usual rate (.25% instead of .50%) if an installment agreement is in
effect for that month. You must have filed your return by the due date
(including extensions) to qualify for this reduced penalty.
Penalty for frivolous return.
You may have to pay a penalty of $500 if you file a return
that does not include enough information to figure the correct tax or
that contains information clearly showing the tax you reported is
substantially incorrect.
You will have to pay the penalty if you filed this kind of
return for either of the following reasons.
- A frivolous position on your part.
- A desire to delay or interfere with the administration of federal income tax laws.
This penalty is in addition to any other penalty provided for by law.
Accuracy-related penalty.
An accuracy-related penalty of 20% applies to any
underpayment due to the following reasons.
- Negligence or disregard of rules or regulations.
- Substantial understatement of income tax.
This penalty also applies to conditions not discussed here.
Even though an underpayment was due to both negligence and
substantial underpayment, the total accuracy-related penalty cannot
exceed 20% of the underpayment. The penalty is not imposed if you can
show reasonable cause and that you acted in good faith.
Negligence.
Negligence includes a failure to make a reasonable attempt
to comply with provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.
Disregard.
Disregard means the careless, reckless, or intentional
disregard of rules or regulations.
Substantial understatement of income tax.
For an individual, income tax is substantially understated
if the understatement exceeds the greater of the following amounts.
- 10% of the correct tax.
- $5,000.
Information reporting penalties.
A penalty applies if you do not file information returns by
the due date, do not include all required information, or do not report
correct information. The amount of the penalty is based on when you
file the correct information return, as follows.
- Correct information returns filed within 30 days after the due date, $15 each.
- Correct information returns filed after the 30-day period but by August 1, $30 each.
- Information returns filed after August 1 or not filed, $50 each.
Maximum limits apply to all these penalties.
Failure to furnish correct payee statements.
If you do not provide a complete, correct, and timely copy
of an information return (payee statement), you may be subject to a
penalty of $50 for each statement. If the failure is due to intentional
disregard of the requirements, the minimum penalty is $100 per
statement with no maximum penalty.
Failure to supply identification number.
If you do not include your identification number (SSN or
EIN) or the identification number of another person where required on a
return, statement, or other document, you may be subject to a penalty
of $50 for each
failure. You may also be subject to the penalty if you do not give your
identification number to another person when it is required on a
return, statement, or other document.
You will not have to pay the penalty if you can show the failure was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect.
Accounting Periods and Methods
All income tax returns are prepared using an accounting period (tax year) and an accounting method.
When preparing a statement of income and expenses, you must use books and records for a specific interval of time called an
accounting period. The
annual accounting period for your tax return is called a tax year. You can generally use one of the following tax years.
- A calendar year, which begins on January 1 and ends on December 31.
- A fiscal year (including a period of 52 or 53 weeks). A regular fiscal year is 12 consecutive months ending on the last day of
any month except December.
You
generally adopt a tax year by filing your first income tax return using
that tax year. If you filed your first return as a wage earner using
the calendar year and you later start your own business, you must
continue to use the calendar year as your business tax year. You
generally cannot change your tax year without IRS approval.
For more information, see Publication 538.
An
accounting method is a set of rules used to determine when and how
income and expenses are reported. You must use the same accounting
method from year to year. The two most common accounting methods are
the cash method and an accrual method. A third method, called a hybrid
method, is generally a combination of cash and accrual.
The
text and examples in this publication generally assume you use the
calendar year as your tax year and either the cash or hybrid method as
your accounting method. Generally, if inventories are needed to account
for your income, you must use an accrual method, discussed later, for
your sales and purchases. However, if you are a qualifying taxpayer or
a qualifying small business taxpayer, you can use the cash method of
accounting, even if you purchase or sell merchandise. You also can
account for inventoriable items as materials and supplies that are not
incidental. For more information, including definitions of a qualifying
taxpayer, a qualifying small business taxpayer, and an explanation of
materials and supplies that are not incidental, see Publication 538.
Cash method.
Under the cash method, you report income in the year it is
received, credited to your account, or made available to you on demand.
You need not have physical possession of it. You deduct expenses in the
year you pay them, even if they were incurred in an earlier year.
Check received.
If you receive a check before the end of the tax year, you
must include it in income for the year you receive it even though you
do not cash or deposit it until the next year.
Accrual method.
Under an accrual method, you generally report income for
the tax year when all events have occurred that fix your right to
receive the income and you can determine the amount with reasonable
accuracy. Generally, you deduct or capitalize business expenses when
all events have occurred that fix the fact of liability, the liability
can be determined with reasonable accuracy, and economic performance
has occurred. See Publication 538 for an explanation of economic
performance.
Prepaid expenses.
Expenses paid in advance generally can only be deducted in
the year to which they apply under either the cash or an accrual
method. (However, see Exception for recurring items under Accrual Method
in Publication 538.) For example, suppose you have a subscription to a
direct-selling journal that runs out at the end of 2003. It will cost
you $30 to renew the subscription for one year or $54 for 2 years. You
decide to renew for 2 years and mail your check at the end of November
2003. You cannot deduct the $54 on your 2003 return. However, you can
deduct half of the $54 in 2004 and the other half in 2005.
You must report all income you receive as a direct seller. This includes any of the following.
- Income from sales�payments you receive from customers for products they buy from you.
- Commissions, bonuses, or percentages you receive for sales and the sales of others who work under you.
- Prizes, awards, and gifts you receive from your selling business.
You must report this income regardless of whether it is reported to you on an information return.
You have income from sales if your customers buy directly from you and you buy the products you sell from a company (or another
direct seller).
If some of your customers buy their products directly from the company, you, as the sales agent, do not have any sales income
from these
transactions. You will generally receive a commission or bonus
for making the sale, but you will have no direct income from the sale
itself. If all of your sales are handled this way, the rules in this
section do not apply to you. Report your commissions as other business
income. For more information, see Other Income, later.
Depending on the company with which you are affiliated and the nature of its marketing and compensation plan, you may have
income from sales,
commissions, bonuses, or all three.
Example 1.
Your customers pay you the retail price for goods they order. You forward the orders and payments to the company. The company
sends the merchandise
to fill the orders. The company also sends you a commission.
You
are acting as a sales agent for the company. You did not purchase the
products to sell to your customers. Your payment from the company is
commission income, not income from sales. Include the commission in
your gross receipts. The amount your customers pay for the goods they
order is not included in income.
Example 2.
Your
customers pay you a deposit when you take their orders. You send the
orders to the company, but keep the deposits for yourself. The company
fills the orders by shipping the merchandise to your customers. Your
customers pay the company the remainder of the retail price (usually
cash on delivery).
You are acting as a sales agent for the company. The deposit is your commission income. You have no income from sales.
Example 3.
Your
customers pay you for the goods you sell them, either when you take
their orders or when you make deliveries. After your customers place
orders, you order the goods from the company (or from a direct seller
you work under). You either send the money directly to the company with
your orders, or you are billed later. In either case, you are able to
charge your customers more than you pay for the goods.
You are buying products wholesale and selling them retail. The full amount received from your customers is income from sales.
Example 4.
You keep a supply of goods that your customers regularly buy from you. This allows you to fill their orders without delay.
You order and pay for
the goods before your customers request them.
You have purchased goods to resell to customers. The full amount received from your customers is income from sales.
Example 5.
You have recruited several other direct sellers who order their products through you. Commissions or bonuses paid to you by
the company are shared
with the direct sellers in your group based
on sales, purchases, or some other formula established by the company
whose products you sell. You keep the portion of the commissions you
are not required to distribute to the direct sellers in your group.
The bonuses you receive from the company are included in income as commissions, not as income from sales.
Gross receipts minus cost of goods sold equals gross profit.
If you have income from sales and you are filing Schedule C, Form 1040, figure your gross profit and the income to report
by following these steps.
- Figure the total your customers paid you during the year for goods you sold them. Include this in the gross receipts you report
on line 1 of
Schedule C.
- Subtract the amount (if any) your customers paid that you had to return in the form of refunds, rebates, or other allowances.
Show this on
line 2 of Schedule C.
- Finally,
subtract the cost of the goods sold (line 4 of Schedule C). To figure
the cost of goods sold, you must know the value of the inventory at the
beginning and end of the year, and your purchases during the year. See Cost of Goods Sold, next, and Inventory,
later.
To figure your cost of goods sold, follow these steps.
- Start
with the value of your inventory at the beginning of the tax year. This
is usually the same as the value of your inventory at the end of the
previous year. Valuing inventory is discussed later under Inventory.
- Add to your beginning inventory the cost of merchandise you bought during the year to sell to customers. This does not include
the cost of
merchandise you bought for your own use.
- Subtract from this total the inventory on hand at the end of the year. The difference is your cost of goods sold during the
year.
Example 1.
Janet sells cookware on the sales-party plan. On December 31, 2002, she did not have any cookware on hand to sell to customers.
She does not have a
beginning inventory for 2003.
During
the year, Janet spent $5,270 on goods in her product line. Of this
amount, $130 was for cookware sets she gave for personal gifts and $40
was for a set for her own use. She purchased $5,100 [$5,270 - ($130 +
$40)] worth of goods to sell to customers.
On
December 31, 2003, Janet had several sets of cookware in boxes for
delivery to customers. The cost of these sets was $220. Her ending
inventory for the year is $220, and her cost of goods sold for 2003 is
$4,880 ($0 beginning inventory + $5,100 purchases - $220 ending
inventory).
Example 2.
Lisa
is a direct seller of cosmetics. She has an established clientele and
knows what items are steady sellers. When the company has a special
sale on these items, she buys extra quantities for future sales. She
had merchandise costing $200 on hand at the end of 2002 (which would be
her beginning inventory for 2003) and merchandise costing $175 at the
end of 2003. During the year she purchased $3,250 of merchandise.
Purchase returns and allowances were $50. She withdrew $200 of
cosmetics for personal use. Lisa figures her cost of goods sold for
2003 as follows:
Lisa figures her gross profit by subtracting the cost of goods sold from her gross receipts ($5,375) for the year as follows:
Purchases.
When figuring cost of goods sold, include the full cost of all merchandise you buy to sell to customers. This cost includes all postage
and freight charges incurred.
Figure your purchases at the actual price you pay. Deduct a
cash discount or a trade discount
in figuring the cost of your purchases. A cash discount or a trade
discount is the difference between the invoice price and the actual
price you have to pay.
Purchase returns and allowances.
Subtract purchase returns and allowances from your total
purchases for the year when figuring cost of goods sold. This includes
any rebates or refunds you received off the purchase price. It also
includes any credit you received for returned merchandise.
Personal withdrawals.
Subtract from your purchases for the year the cost of goods
in your product line that you bought for personal use and the cost of
goods you withdrew from inventory. Merchandise is considered withdrawn
from inventory when it is no longer available for sale to customers.
For example, if you sell a particular kind of soap and give some as a
gift or use some yourself, you must withdraw the soap from inventory
because it is no longer available for sale. Follow this procedure for
all products withdrawn for personal use, even if you are using the
product only to familiarize yourself with its characteristics or to
demonstrate loyalty to the company whose products you sell.
Many
direct sellers have little or no inventory. Others keep a considerable
inventory on hand. If you must account for an inventory in your
business, you must use an accrual method of accounting for your
purchases and sales. However, see Qualifying taxpayer and Qualifying
small business taxpayer in the discussion on exceptions under Inventories in Publication 538.
If
you have income from sales, you need to know how to figure your
inventory at the end of each tax year. Your inventory practices must be
consistent from year to year.
Figuring inventory involves:
- Taking inventory,
- Identifying the cost, and
- Valuing the inventory.
You
need to know your inventory at the beginning and end of each tax year
to figure your cost of goods sold. Beginning inventory will usually be
the same as the prior year's ending inventory. Any differences must be
explained in a schedule attached to your return.
Taking inventory.
The first step is to identify and count all merchandise in
your inventory. Include all goods to which you have title at the end of
the year. This generally will be any goods you have on hand and have
not yet sold to customers.
Include merchandise you have purchased, if title has passed
to you even if you have not yet physically received the goods. You may
have title to goods that were shipped to you but are still in transit
and not yet received. If the risk of loss during shipment is yours, you
will probably have title to the goods during shipment. If you buy
merchandise that is sent C.O.D., title passes when payment and delivery
occur.
Goods not yet paid for.
You may have title to goods purchased but not yet paid for.
If you are billed for merchandise, you must usually pay the bill within
a certain time. In this case, you have title to the goods and must
include them in inventory, provided they are not sold by the end of the
year.
Consignments.
Merchandise you receive on consignment is not purchased by
you and is never included in your inventory. You have merchandise on
consignment if you do not have to pay for what you have in stock until
the time you sell it and collect the retail price from the customer.
Identifying the cost.
The second step in figuring your inventory is to identify
the cost of inventory items. Use the specific identification method
when you can identify and match the actual cost to the items in
inventory. Most direct sellers will be able to use this method.
If you cannot identify specific items with their invoices,
you must make an assumption about which items were sold during the year
and which remain. Make this assumption using either the first-in first-out (FIFO) method or the last-in first-out (LIFO) method.
The FIFO method assumes that the first items you purchased
or produced are the first items you sold, consumed, or otherwise
disposed of.
The LIFO method assumes that the last items that you
purchased are sold, consumed, or otherwise disposed of first.
Valuing the inventory.
The third step in figuring your inventory is to value the
items you have in inventory. The value of your inventory is a major
factor in figuring your taxable income. The method you use is very
important.
The two most common methods to value non-LIFO inventory are
the cost method and the lower of cost or market method. LIFO
inventory may only be valued at cost.
Cost method.
If you use the cost method to value your inventory items,
the value of each item is usually its invoice price. Add
transportation, shipping, and other necessary costs to acquire the
items. Subtract appropriate discounts you received.
Lower of cost or market method.
See Publication 538 for a discussion of the lower of cost
or market method.
New business.
For a new business not using LIFO, you may choose either
method to value your inventory. You must use the same method to value
your entire inventory, and you cannot change the method without first
obtaining IRS approval.
You
must report on your tax return all income you receive from your
business unless it is excluded by law. In most cases, your business
income will be in the form of cash, checks, and credit card charges.
But business income can be in other forms, such as property or
services. These and other types of income are explained next.
Commissions, bonuses, and percentages.
Many direct sellers receive a commission on their sales or
purchases. Your commission might be called a bonus or percentage, and
it might be based on both your own sales and the sales of other direct
sellers working under you, or on purchases from the company with which
you are affiliated.
Report the full amount of any commissions you receive as
business income, even if you pay part of it to other direct sellers
working under you. You can usually deduct the part you pay to others as
a business expense. For more information, see Commissions under Other Expenses,
later.
Prizes, awards, and gifts.
If
you receive prizes, awards, or gifts in your role as a direct seller,
report their full value as business income. The following are examples
of items that must be included in income.
- Cash.
- Free merchandise.
- Expense-paid trips.
- Use of a car.
- Jewelry signifying your level of achievement as a direct seller.
- Membership in organizations or clubs.
- Tickets to sporting events, shows, or concerts.
Value of goods or services received.
Report income received in the form of goods or services at
their fair market value.
Fair market value is the price agreed on between a willing buyer and a
willing seller when both have reasonable knowledge of the facts and
neither is forced to buy or sell.
Value of use of property.
If you receive the free use of property through your
direct-sales performance, you must include the fair market value of the
use of the property in your business income. There are special rules
for the free use of an automobile and certain other property. For more
information, see Valuation
of Fringe Benefits in Publication 525.
You must capitalize some costs rather than deduct them. These costs are a part of your investment in your business and are
called capital
expenses. When you capitalize a cost, you add it to the basis of the property to which it relates.
Although you generally cannot take a current deduction for a capital expense, you may be able to take deductions for these
costs over a period of
years as explained later under Cost Recovery.
Kinds of Capital Expenses
You must capitalize the following costs.
- Going into business. The costs of getting started in business, before you are authorized to start selling your company's
products, are capital expenses. These start-up costs
include the cost of exploring different direct-selling opportunities,
the cost of any training you must have before becoming a direct seller
for your product line, any fees you must pay to the company to become a
direct seller, and similar costs. See chapter 9 of Publication 535 for
information on how to treat these costs.
- Business assets. The
cost of any asset (property) that will last substantially beyond the
tax year it is placed in service is a capital expense. Examples of
business assets include office furniture, business vehicles, and
storage shelves. See Cost Recovery, later.
- Improvements. The
costs of making improvements to a business asset are capital expenses
if the improvements add to the value of the asset, appreciably lengthen
the time you can use it, or adapt it to a different use. However,
normal repair expenses are deducted as current business expenses and
are not capitalized. For example, if you have a car you use only for
business, you can deduct as business expenses, maintenance and repair
costs such as tune-ups, new headlights, or brake repairs. The cost of
overhauling the engine, however, would be a capital expense.
If
you keep your company's products on hand to show to potential
customers, their cost may be part of the cost of goods sold, a capital
expense, a business expense, or a personal expense, depending on the
circumstances. The cost of a product you use yourself is a personal
expense, even if you occasionally show it to prospective customers.
Example.
Sheila
is a direct seller who uses many of the products in her own home. When
potential customers come to her house, she can show them drapes she
bought from the company, as well as her lawn chairs, toaster, grill,
tea set, and spice cabinet. By showing these items in her own home, she
hopes to interest people in buying from her company or in becoming
direct sellers themselves.
Sheila
cannot take a deduction for the cost of any of these products. Because
she uses them in her own home for personal reasons, their cost is not a
cost of doing business.
Used one year or less.
If you have a product you use as a demonstrator for one
year or less and the demonstrator itself is not available for purchase
by your customers, its cost is a business expense.
If the demonstrator itself can be bought by your customers,
include it in your inventory.
Example 1.
Constance
is a direct seller of kitchenware. Customers must order items from a
catalog, but she keeps at least one of each type on hand to show
buyers. When her product line changes and an item is discontinued, she
either starts using the demonstrator in her own kitchen or tries to
sell it. When she had a garage sale, she sold a number of unused
demonstrators.
Constance
includes her demonstrators, including those for discontinued products,
in her inventory of goods for sale. When she sells a demonstrator,
including those she sold at the garage sale, she includes the income in
her gross business receipts.
When Constance starts using a demonstrator in her own kitchen, it is a withdrawal of inventory for personal use. She subtracts
the cost of the item
from her purchases for the year. See Personal withdrawals under Cost of Goods Sold, earlier.
Example 2.
Lydia sells needlework kits at sales parties. She has catalogs and a number of kits to show customers. She uses these kits
to demonstrate various
needlework techniques.
The demonstrator kits last less than one year and are not sold to customers. Some are ruined and thrown away. Their cost is
a business expense.
More than one year of use.
If you use a demonstrator for more than one year, its cost
is a capital expense. However, if you expect to eventually sell the
demonstrator, include it in your inventory of goods for sale.
Example 1.
Mike sells educational books door-to-door. He carries copies of the books to show potential customers. If someone wants a
book, he takes a deposit
and delivers the book at a later time.
His
product line changes little from year to year, so Mike can use a book
as a demonstrator for a long time. Although he periodically replaces
his demonstrators with new ones and sells the old ones at a discount,
he has kept some books as demonstrators for up to 3 years.
Because Mike eventually sells his demonstrators, they remain part of his inventory of goods for sale.
Example 2.
Janet sells the same line of educational books as Mike in Example 1. She
tries to use her demonstrators as long as possible. She puts the books
in plastic jackets to protect them, and ordinarily only stops using
them as demonstrators when the company comes out with a new edition.
Janet never sells the old demonstrators. She can recover the cost of
the books she uses as demonstrators as discussed under Cost Recovery,
next.
You can usually recover
(subtract from income) your cost for capital expenses over a number of
years. Each year a part of your basis is recovered through depreciation
or amortization. Use depreciation to recover capital expenses for most
tangible business assets. Use amortization to recover the cost of
intangible assets, such as start-up costs. Amortization is discussed in
chapter 9 of Publication 535.
Under certain circumstances, you may be able to recover a limited amount of the cost of qualifying property as a current expense
by electing the
section 179 deduction rather than recover the cost as a capital expense. The section 179 deduction is discussed later.
Form 4562.
Generally, use Form 4562 to report depreciation,
amortization, and the section 179 deduction. A filled-in Form 4562 is
illustrated in an example in Publication 946.
You can elect to deduct all or part of the cost of certain qualifying property in the year you place it in service. Property
is placed in service
when it is first made ready and available for a specific use.
Qualifying property.
Qualifying property includes tangible personal property for
which depreciation is allowable. See chapter 2 in Publication 946 for
more information.
Dollar limit.
The maximum section 179 cost you can choose to deduct for
2003 is generally $100,000.
Certain benefits, including an increased section 179
deduction, are available for certain property you place in service in
the New York Liberty Zone or in an empowerment zone.
Business income limit.
The total cost you can deduct each year after you apply the
dollar limit is further limited to the taxable income from the active
conduct of any trade or business during the year.
Any cost not deductible in one year because of this limit can be carried to the next tax year.
More information.
For more information, see chapter 2 in Publication 946.
If
you do not choose a section 179 deduction or you choose a section 179
deduction and do not recover all your cost, you can take a depreciation
deduction (which may include a special depreciation allowance for
qualified property) for part or all of the cost you did not claim as a
section 179 deduction.
Property
whose cost can be recovered through depreciation is depreciable
property. Depreciable property includes most types of tangible property
(except land), such as buildings, machinery, vehicles, furniture, and
equipment. Depreciable property also includes certain intangible
property.
You can depreciate property if it meets the following requirements.
- It must be property you own.
- It must be used in your business or income-producing activity.
- It must have a determinable useful life. This means it is something that wears out, decays, gets used up, becomes obsolete,
or loses value
from natural causes.
- It must be expected to last more than one year.
- It must not be excepted property, such as property placed in service and disposed of in the same year.
You must use the modified accelerated cost recovery system (MACRS) to depreciate most property placed in service after 1986.
For information about the depreciation of property placed in service after 1986, see Publication 946. Chapter 4 contains a
detailed discussion on
figuring depreciation under MACRS.
For information about the depreciation of property placed in service before 1987, see Publication 534, Depreciating Property Placed in Service
Before 1987.
Special depreciation allowance.
You can take a special depreciation allowance to recover
part of the cost of qualified property placed in service during the tax
year. An allowance applies for the first year you place the property in
service. For qualified property acquired before May 6, 2003, it is an
additional 30% deduction. For qualified property acquired after May 5,
2003, it is an additional 50% deduction, or you can elect to take an
additional deduction determined at the 30% rate. You can take the
additional 30% or 50% deduction after any section 179 deduction and
before you figure regular depreciation under MACRS for the year you
place the property in service. For more information, see chapter 3 in
Publication 946.
Listed
property includes property which lends itself to personal use such as
property used for transportation, entertainment equipment, certain
computers, and cellular phones. In addition, there are recordkeeping
requirements and rules you must follow when depreciating listed
property. If listed property is not used more than 50% for a qualified
business use during any tax year, you cannot claim the section 179
deduction or a special depreciation allowance and special rules apply
to the depreciation deduction. See chapter 5 in Publication 946.
Passenger automobiles.
For most passenger automobiles, the section 179 deduction
and depreciation deduction (including the special depreciation
allowance) you can claim is limited. See Publication 946 for limits
that apply for trucks, vans and electric passenger automobiles placed
in service in 2003.
For a passenger automobile that is qualified property for a
special depreciation allowance (see definitions below) placed in
service during 2003, the total of your section 179 deduction and
depreciation deduction (including the special depreciation allowance)
cannot be more than $10,710 for a car acquired after May 5, 2003
($7,660 for a car acquired before May 6, 2003). If you elected not
to claim the special depreciation allowance for the automobile or if
the automobile is not qualified property, the limit is generally
$3,060. For 2004 and 2005, the maximum deduction amounts for a
passenger automobile placed in service in 2003 are $4,900 and $2,950
respectively. The maximum deduction for each year after 2005 is $1,775.
Qualified property for the 30% special depreciation
allowance includes a car that meets all the following requirements.
- You bought the car new after September 10, 2001.
- You placed the car in service for business in 2003.
- You used the car more than 50% in a qualified business use.
Qualified property for the 50% special depreciation
allowance includes a car that meets all the following requirements.
- You bought the car new after May 5, 2003.
- You placed the car in service for business after May 5, 2003.
- You used the car more than 50% in a qualified business use.
You can elect to claim the 30% special depreciation allowance instead
of the 50% special depreciation allowance for property that qualifies
for the 50% allowance. This election applies to all property in the
same property class placed in service during the year.
If your business/investment use of the automobile is less than 100%,
you must reduce the maximum deduction amount proportionately.
Example.
Peter
purchases a used car this year for $4,500 and he uses it 60% for
business. The car is not qualified property for the 30% or 50% special
depreciation allowance. He chooses to take a section 179 deduction for
the car. The cost of Peter's car that qualifies for the section 179
deduction is $2,700 ($4,500 � 60%). However, Peter's section 179
deduction is limited to $1,836 ($3,060 � 60%).
The operating costs of running your business are called business expenses. These are costs you do not have to capitalize or
include in the cost of
goods sold.
Keep business expenses separate from personal expenses. If you have an expense that is partly for business and partly personal,
deduct only the
business part on your business return.
To be deductible, a business expense must be both ordinary and necessary. An ordinary expense is one that is common and accepted in your
trade or business. A necessary expense is one that is appropriate and helpful for your trade or business. An expense does not have to be
indispensable to be considered necessary.
This section discusses business expenses you might have as a direct seller. For more information on business expenses, see
Publication 535.
You
can generally deduct the pay you give your employees for the services
they perform for your business. The pay may be in cash, property, or
services. It may include wages, salaries, vacation allowances, bonuses,
commissions, and fringe benefits.
If you are a sole proprietor, you cannot deduct your own salary or any personal withdrawals you make from your business. You
are not an employee of
the business.
For detailed discussions of salaries, wages, and other payments to employees, see Publications 15 and 15�A, and chapter 2
in Publication 535.
You
can deduct as a business expense various federal, state, local, and
foreign taxes directly attributable to your direct-selling business.
Some of these taxes were discussed earlier under Business Taxes and others are discussed next.
Income taxes.
Most income taxes, including federal income taxes, cannot
be deducted as a business expense. You can generally deduct personal
state and local income taxes as an itemized deduction on Schedule A
(Form 1040).
Personal property tax.
You can deduct as a business expense any tax imposed by a
state or local government on personal property used in your
direct-selling business.
You can also deduct registration fees for the right to use
property within a state or local area.
Example.
May
and Julius Winter drove their car 7,000 business miles out of a total
of 10,000 miles during the tax year. They had to pay $25 for their
annual state license tags and $20 for their city registration sticker.
They also paid $235 in city personal property tax on the car, for a
total of $280. They are claiming their actual car expenses for the
year. Because they used the car 70% for business, they can deduct 70%
of the $280, or $196, as a business expense.
Sales tax.
Treat any sales tax you pay on a service or on the purchase
or use of property as part of the cost of the service or property. If
the service or the cost or use of the property is a deductible business
expense, you can deduct the tax as part of that service or cost. If the
property is merchandise bought for resale, the sales tax is part of the
cost of the merchandise. If the property is depreciable, add the sales
tax to the basis for depreciation. See Publication 551, Basis of Assets, for information about the basis of property.
Do not deduct state and local sales taxes imposed on the buyer that you must collect and pay over to the state or local government. Do
not include these taxes in gross receipts or sales.
Fuel taxes.
Taxes on gasoline, diesel fuel, and other motor fuels that
you use in your business usually are included as part of the cost of
the fuel. Do not deduct these taxes as a separate item.
Interest is the amount charged for the use of borrowed money. You can generally deduct as a business expense all interest
you pay or accrue during
the tax year on debts related to your trade or business.
You can deduct interest on a debt only if you meet all the following requirements.
- You are legally liable for that debt.
- Both you and the lender intend that the debt be repaid.
- You and the lender have a true debtor-creditor relationship.
No deduction is allowed for interest paid or accrued on personal loans. If a loan is part business and part personal, allocate
the interest between
the two. For more information, see chapter 5 in Publication 535.
Example.
During
the tax year, you paid $600 interest on a car loan. You used the car
60% for business and 40% for personal purposes. You can deduct $360
(60% x $600) as a business expense on your Schedule C (Form 1040) or
Schedule C�EZ (Form 1040). The remaining interest ($240) is a
nondeductible personal expense.
You can generally deduct premiums you pay for the following kinds of insurance related to your trade or business. This list
is not all inclusive.
- Fire, theft, flood, or similar insurance.
- Car and other vehicle insurance on vehicles used in your business if you do not use the standard mileage rate to figure your
car expenses.
- Credit insurance to cover losses from business bad debts.
- Liability insurance.
- Use and occupancy and business interruption insurance. This insurance pays for lost profits if your business is shut down
due to a fire or
other cause. Report the proceeds as ordinary income.
You generally cannot deduct the cost of life insurance paid on your own life. However, see chapter 7 in Publication 535 for
information on when
life insurance premiums are deductible.
Business and personal.
If you pay premiums for insurance coverage that is both
business and personal, deduct only the part that is for business
coverage. For example, if you use your car 25% in your direct-selling
business and 75% for personal transportation, you can deduct 25% of
your car insurance premiums if you claim actual expenses for the use of
the car.
When to deduct.
You generally cannot deduct expenses in advance, even if
you pay them in advance. This rule applies to both the cash and accrual
methods. If you make an advance payment on an insurance policy that
provides coverage substantially beyond the end of the current tax year,
deduct only the part for the current tax year. You must wait until the
following tax year to deduct the part for that year, and so on.
Example.
You
are a direct seller. In June 2003, you pay $1,200 in premiums for theft
insurance effective July 2003 through June 2005 ($50 per month). You
can deduct $300 in 2003 ($50 � 6 months), $600 in 2004 ($50 � 12
months), and $300 in 2005.
Dividends.
An insurance dividend is a return of part of the premiums
you paid. If you receive dividends from business insurance premiums you
deducted in an earlier year, report all or part of the dividend as
business income. For more information on recovery of prior deductions,
see Publication 525.
You
cannot deduct the cost of basic local telephone service (including any
taxes) for the first telephone line you have in your home, even if you
have an office in your home. However, charges for business long
distance phone calls on that line, as well as the cost of a second line
into your home used exclusively for business, are deductible business
expenses.
Example 1.
Leo had a separate telephone line installed in his home for his direct-selling business. He had this phone number printed
on his business cards and
always uses it only for business calls.
Leo can deduct the full amount of his business phone bill because the phone is used exclusively for business.
Example 2.
Mary and George run an active direct-selling business out of their home. For February, their phone bill was $65 ($20 for basic
telephone service
and $45 for long-distance calls).
The total charge for long-distance business calls on their bill is $31. Mary and George can deduct $31 as a business expense.
Away from home.
If you travel away from home and make a business phone
call, you can deduct the cost of the call, whether or not the rest of
your travel expenses are deductible.
Business and personal calls.
You can deduct telephone expenses only for business calls.
Personal calls do not become business calls because some business is
discussed.
Example.
Lydia
is interested in sponsoring others as direct sellers for her product
line. She often talks by phone with her sister who lives 50 miles away.
They talk about personal matters. When Lydia mentions her
direct-selling work, she usually says something to encourage her sister
to become a direct seller.
Lydia's phone calls to her sister are personal and nondeductible. Their primary purpose is not to recruit her sister as a
direct seller, but to
continue their personal relationship.
Discussed next are other expenses you may have as a direct seller.
Licenses and regulatory fees.
License and regulatory fees for your business paid each
year to state or local governments are generally deductible business
expenses. Some licenses and fees may have to be amortized. See chapter
9 of Publication 535 for information on amortization.
Catalogs.
The cost of catalogs you use in your selling business for
more than one year must be capitalized. The cost can then be recovered
as explained under Cost Recovery, earlier. If the catalogs are used in your selling business for one year or less, you can deduct their full cost in the tax
year you pay for them.
Commissions.
If you must pay a bonus, percentage, or other type of
commission to direct sellers working under you, you can deduct it.
Report the full amount of any commissions you receive as business
income, and deduct the commissions you pay as ordinary and necessary
business expenses.
Example.
Freda
has her own direct-selling business and sponsors two other direct
sellers. These direct sellers report their sales to her each month. She
in turn adds their sales to hers and reports the total to the direct
seller who sponsored her. In March, the people working under her each
had $400 in sales and she had $500 in sales of her own. She reports to
the company (or her sponsor) $1,300 ($400 + $400 + $500) in monthly
sales for her group even though her income is only $500.
Freda received a commission or performance bonus for March equal to 10% of the $1,300, or $130, in sales. She reports the entire $130 as
business income on her tax return.
Freda
must pay the direct sellers working under her a commission of 7% on
their monthly sales of $400. She paid each of them $28 (7% of $400) for
their March sales. She deducts the total, $56, as a business expense on
her tax return.
Computer.
If you use a computer in your direct sales business, you
can depreciate it. However, if you use it 50% or less in your business,
you must use the Alternative Depreciation System (ADS) under MACRS to
figure your depreciation deduction. For more information, see chapter 5
in Publication 946.
Home meetings.
If you have business meetings in your home, you can deduct
expenses for the meetings as entertainment expenses and as expenses
related to the business use of your home only when they meet certain
tests.
- The expenses of entertaining business associates in your home are deductible as entertainment expenses if they meet the rules
discussed
under Meals and Entertainment, later, and you can prove your expenses as discussed later under Recordkeeping.
- The expenses of maintaining your home as a place of business are deductible if you meet the tests discussed under Business Use of Your
Home, later.
Example.
Barbara
and Bill hold biweekly meetings in their home for the direct sellers
who work under them. They discuss selling techniques, solve business
problems, and listen to presentations by company representatives.
Because the meetings are for business, Barbara and Bill can deduct 50% of the cost of the food and beverages they provide.
The 50% limit is
explained later under Meals and Entertainment. They
keep a copy of their grocery receipts for these refreshments, and
record the date, time, and business nature of each meeting. Because the
meetings are held in their living room rather than in a special area
set aside only for business, they cannot deduct any of their home
expenses for the meetings.
Journal subscriptions.
If you subscribe to a journal for direct sellers, you can
deduct the annual subscription fee as a business expense.
Club dues and membership fees.
Generally, you cannot deduct amounts you pay or incur for
membership in any club organized for business, pleasure, recreation, or
any other social purpose. This includes country clubs, golf and
athletic clubs, hotel clubs, sporting clubs, airline clubs, and clubs
operated to provide meals under circumstances generally considered to
be conducive to business discussions. The purpose and activities of a
club, not its name, will determine whether or not you can deduct the
dues.
Exception.
None of the following organizations will be treated as a
club organized for business, pleasure, recreation, or other social
purpose, unless one of its main purposes is to conduct entertainment
activities for members or their guests or to provide members or their
guests with access to entertainment facilities.
- Boards of trade.
- Business leagues.
- Chambers of commerce.
- Civic or public service organizations.
- Professional associations.
- Trade associations.
Legal and professional fees.
Legal and professional fees, such as fees charged by
accountants, that are ordinary and necessary expenses directly related
to operating your business are deductible as business expenses.
However, you usually cannot deduct legal fees paid to acquire business
assets. Those are added to the basis of the property.
If the fees include payments for work of a personal nature
(such as making a will), you can take a business deduction only for the
part of the fee related to your business. The personal portion of legal
fees for producing or collecting taxable income, doing or keeping your
job, or for tax advice may be deductible on Schedule A (Form 1040) if
you itemize deductions. See Publication 529, Miscellaneous Deductions.
Tax preparation fees.
You can deduct as a trade or business expense the cost of
preparing that part of your tax return relating to your business as a
sole proprietor. The remaining cost may be deductible on Schedule A
(Form 1040) if you itemize deductions.
You can also take a business deduction for the amount you
pay or incur in resolving asserted tax deficiencies against your
business as a sole proprietor.
Samples and promotional items.
You can deduct the cost of samples you give to your
customers and the cost of promotional items such as posters. You cannot
deduct the cost of any samples you use personally.
Service charges.
You can deduct service charges you pay on orders for goods.
The service charge can be a flat charge or it can be based on other
criteria.
Supplies.
Unless you have deducted the cost in any earlier year, you
generally can deduct the cost of materials and supplies actually
consumed and used during the tax year.
If you keep incidental materials and supplies on hand, you
can deduct the cost of the incidental materials and supplies you bought
during the tax year if all three of the following requirements are met.
- You do not keep a record of when they are used.
- You do not take an inventory of the amount on hand at the beginning and end of the tax year.
- Your taxable income is clearly reflected by this method.
Business Use of Your Home
Many direct sellers work out of their homes and have business expenses for using their homes. You can deduct expenses for
using your home if you
meet certain tests.
Qualifying for a Deduction
To deduct expenses related to the business use of part of your home, you must meet the following tests. Even if you meet the
tests, your deduction
may be limited. See Deduction limit, later.
- Your use of the business part of your home must be:
- Exclusive (however, see Exception under Exclusive use, later),
- Regular,
- For your trade or business, AND
- The business part of your home must be one of the following:
- Your principal place of business (defined later),
- A place where you meet or deal with clients or customers in the normal course of your trade or business, or
- A separate structure (not attached to your home) used in connection with your trade or business.
Exclusive use.
Exclusive use means you use a specific part of your home
solely for carrying on your direct-selling business. You do not
meet the exclusive use test if you use the area in question for your
direct-selling business and that same part for personal purposes.
Example.
You use a den in your home to write orders and do the paperwork for your business. The den also is used by your children to
do their homework. You
cannot claim any business deduction for the use of the room.
Exception.
If you use part of your home for the storage of inventory
or product samples, you can claim expenses for the business use of your
home without meeting the exclusive use test. However, you must meet all
the following tests.
- You keep the inventory or product samples in your home for use in your direct-selling business.
- Your home is the only fixed location of your business.
- You use the storage space on a regular basis.
- The space you use is separately identifiable and suitable for storage.
Example.
Your
home is the only fixed location of your business. You regularly use
half your basement for storing inventory as well as for personal
purposes. You can deduct the expenses for the storage space even though
this part of your basement is not used exclusively for business.
Regular use.
Regular use means you use a specific part of your home for
business on a continuing basis. Occasional or incidental business use
of part of your home does not meet the regular use test even if you do
not use that part for any other purpose.
Principal place of business.
Your home office will qualify as a principal place of
business if you meet both the following requirements.
- You use it exclusively and regularly for the administrative or management activities of your trade or business.
- You have no other fixed location where you conduct substantial administrative or management activities of your trade or
business.
Alternatively, if you do business at more than one location
and your home office does not qualify as your principal place of
business based on these rules, you determine your principal place of
business based on the following factors.
- The relative importance of the activities performed at each location.
- The time spent at each location if the relative importance factor does not determine your principal place of business.
Place to meet clients or customers.
If you meet with clients or customers in your home in the
normal course of your direct selling business, even though you also
carry on business at another location, you can deduct your expenses for
the part of your home used exclusively and regularly for business if both the following
apply.
- You physically meet with clients or customers on your premises.
- Their use of your home is substantial and integral to the conduct of your business.
You do not qualify to deduct expenses for the business use
of your home if you have only occasional meetings or telephone calls.
Separate structure.
You can deduct the expenses for a separate free-standing
structure, such as a studio, garage, or barn, if you use it exclusively
and regularly for your business. This structure does not have to be
your principal place of business or a place where you meet clients or
customers.
Deduction limit.
If the gross income from the business use of your home
equals or exceeds your total business expenses (including
depreciation), you can deduct all your business expenses related to the
use of your home. If your gross income from the business use of your
home is less than your total business expenses, your deduction for
certain expenses for the business use of your home is limited.
Where to deduct.
If you qualify to deduct expenses for the business use of
your home, you must figure your deduction on Form 8829 and attach it to
Form 1040. You deduct the expenses on Schedule C (Form 1040).
More information.
For more information, including how to figure the
deduction, see Publication 587.
Travel and Transportation
Travel expenses generally are those business-related expenses for trips that require you to sleep or rest while traveling
away from your tax
home,
explained later, for substantially longer than an ordinary day's
work�for example, the cost of travel to a distant city to attend a
business-related function or convention. Transportation expenses
generally are those business-related expenses for trips you make in the
area of your tax home�for example, the cost of transportation to call
on customers or make deliveries in the city where you work and its
suburbs.
You must be able to prove your expenses for travel and transportation. Deductions for travel and transportation are looked
at closely when the IRS
examines returns. For more information, see Recordkeeping, later.
Generally, your tax home is your regular place of business or post of duty, regardless of where you maintain your family home.
If
you temporarily travel away from your tax home on business, you
generally can deduct your ordinary and necessary travel expenses. You
cannot deduct lavish or extravagant expenses or those for personal or
vacation purposes.
You
can deduct all your ordinary and necessary travel expenses, subject to
certain limits, discussed later, if your trip was entirely business
related. This includes expenses for attending a seminar, meeting,
convention, or other function if you can show that your attendance
benefits your business. If your trip was primarily for business and,
while at your business destination, you extended your stay for a
vacation, made a nonbusiness side trip, or had other nonbusiness
activities, you can deduct only your business-related travel expenses.
These expenses include the travel costs of getting to and from your
business destination and any business-related expenses at your business
destination.
Example.
You
live in and conduct your direct selling business from Atlanta and take
a business trip to New Orleans. On your way home, you stop in Mobile to
visit your parents. You spend $830 for the 9 days you are away from
home for transportation, meals, lodging, and other travel expenses. If
you had not stopped in Mobile, you would have been gone only 6 days,
and your total cost would have been $730. You can deduct $730 for your
trip, including the cost of round-trip transportation to and from New
Orleans. The cost of your meals is subject to the 50% limit on meals
explained later.
If
your trip was primarily for personal reasons, such as a vacation, the
entire cost of the trip is a nondeductible personal expense. However,
you can deduct any expenses you have while at your destination that are
directly related to your business.
For more information, see Publication 463.
You
can deduct transportation expenses for your business when you are not
traveling away from home. Transportation expenses include the costs of
getting from one workplace to another in the course of your business
when traveling within the city or general area that is your tax home,
and of getting from your home to a temporary work location. They also
include the following kinds of trips you make in the area where you
live and work.
- Visiting clients or customers.
- Attending business meetings away from your workplace.
Transportation
expenses include train, bus, and cab fares, car rental fees, and the
cost of driving and maintaining your car for business transportation.
Meals and lodging are not included in transportation expenses.
Commuting expenses.
You cannot deduct the cost of transportation between your
home and your main or regular place of work. The cost of commuting is a
nondeductible personal expense, regardless of the distance or whether
work is performed during the trip.
Example.
Elaine
works full time as a bank teller. She also sells cosmetics part time to
her co-workers at the bank. After her customers select items from a
catalog, she sends the orders to the cosmetics company. She delivers
the items to the bank when she receives them from the company.
Elaine's expense of delivering items is not deductible. Her cost of getting to the bank is a commuting expense. The fact that
she carries cosmetics
does not make her commuting expense a deductible business expense.
Two places of work.
If you work at two places in one day, you can deduct the
expense of getting from one workplace to the other. However, if you do
not go directly from one location to the other, deduct only the amount
it would have cost you to go directly from the first location to the
second.
Deductible expenses.
If you use your vehicle in your business, see Publication
463 for information on how to figure your expenses for business
transportation.
Because
you are in the selling business, you may take business associates to
lunch or otherwise entertain them. The cost can be a deductible
business expense. However, certain conditions must be met before you
can take a deduction for business meals and entertainment, and you
generally can deduct only 50% of the cost. This section discusses those
rules.
Meals.
Include as meals the amounts spent on food and beverages
and the taxes and tips on those amounts. Generally, no deduction is
allowed for an entertainment-related meal unless you or your employee
is present when the food or beverages are provided.
Entertainment.
Include as entertainment any activity generally considered
to provide entertainment, amusement, or recreation. This includes
entertaining guests at nightclubs; at social, athletic, and sporting
clubs; at theaters; at sporting events; on yachts; and on hunting,
fishing, and vacation trips or on similar outings. It can also include
meeting your customers' personal, living, or family needs, such as
providing meals, a hotel suite, or a car. However, see Not directly related, later.
Directly Related or Associated
To be deductible, meal and entertainment expenses must be ordinary and necessary expenses of carrying on your direct-selling
business and you must
be able to prove them as explained later under Proving Your Deductions. Unless
certain exceptions apply, you must be able to show that entertainment
expenses (including expenses for entertainment-related meals) are directly related to or associated with the
active conduct of your business.
For more information, see chapter 2 of Publication 463.
Directly related.
For entertainment expenses to meet the directly-related
test, all the following must apply.
- You had more than a general expectation of getting income or some other specific business benefit from the expense.
- You engaged in business with the person during the entertainment period.
- The main purpose of the combined business and entertainment was the active conduct of business.
You do not have to show that business income or another business
benefit actually resulted from each entertainment expense.
It is not necessary to devote more time to business than to
the entertainment. However, if the business discussion is only
incidental to the entertainment, it does not qualify as directly
related.
Example.
You
are a direct seller of women's cosmetics. A state women's organization
is holding its annual convention in a local hotel and you decide to
display your products in a hospitality room in the hotel. You also
provide entertainment and give out product samples. You can deduct the
cost of the hospitality room and entertainment provided.
Not directly related.
Generally, expenses are not directly related if you are not
there, or there are substantial distractions that prevent you from
actively conducting business. The following are situations where there
are substantial distractions.
- A meeting or discussion at a nightclub, theater, or sporting event.
- A meeting or discussion during what is essentially a social gathering, such as a cocktail party.
- A meeting with a group that includes persons who are not business associates at places such as cocktail lounges, country clubs,
golf clubs,
athletic clubs, or vacation resorts.
You may prove the entertainment is directly related by
clearly establishing you had a substantial business discussion during
the entertainment.
When entertainment takes place on a hunting or fishing
trip, or on a yacht or pleasure boat, the conduct of business is not
considered the main reason for the combined business and entertainment
unless you clearly show otherwise.
Associated.
You can deduct entertainment expenses (including expenses
for entertainment-related meals) that do not meet the directly-related
test if both the following apply.
- The expenses are associated with your direct-selling business.
- The entertainment is directly before or after a substantial business discussion.
An
ordinary and necessary entertainment expense is generally associated
with your direct-selling business if you can show you had a clear
business purpose for the expense. The purpose may be to get new
business or to encourage the continuation of an existing business
relationship.
Substantial business discussion.
Whether a business discussion is substantial depends upon
the facts and circumstances in each case. You must show that you
actively engaged in a discussion, meeting, negotiation, or other
business transaction to get income for your business or another
specific business benefit.
The meeting does not have to be for a specified length of
time. However, you must show that the business discussion was
substantial in relation to the entertainment. It is not necessary to
devote more time to business than to the entertainment and you do not
have to discuss business during the meal or entertainment.
Business and nonbusiness guests.
You must divide your entertainment expenses between
business and nonbusiness expenses. You can deduct only the business
part. If you cannot establish the part of the expense for each person
participating, you can allocate the expense to each participant on a
pro rata basis. For example, if you entertain a group of 11 (including
yourself)�three business prospects and seven social guests�deduct only
four-elevenths of the expense.
Expenses for spouses.
You generally cannot deduct the cost of entertainment for
your spouse or for the spouse of a business customer. However, you can
deduct these costs if you can show that you had a clear business
purpose, rather than a personal or social purpose, for providing the
entertainment.
Example.
You
entertain a business customer. The cost is an ordinary and necessary
business expense and is allowed under the entertainment rules. The
customer's spouse joins you because it is impractical to entertain the
customer without the spouse. You can deduct the cost of entertaining
the customer's spouse as an ordinary and necessary business expense.
Furthermore, if your spouse joins the party because the customer's
spouse is present, the cost of the entertainment for your spouse also
is deductible as an ordinary and necessary business expense.
Lavish or extravagant expenses.
You cannot deduct expenses for meals and entertainment to
the extent they are lavish or extravagant. An expense is not considered
lavish or extravagant if it is reasonable considering the facts and
circumstances. Expenses will not be disallowed merely because they are
more than a fixed dollar amount or take place at a deluxe restaurant,
hotel, nightclub, or resort.
Your meals.
Generally, you can deduct your business meal expenses while
traveling away from home for business (other than lavish or extravagant
amounts). However, if you entertain a business customer locally and the
conditions discussed earlier are met, the cost of your own meal is
deductible only to the extent the cost exceeds the amount you would
normally have spent for personal purposes.
You
usually can deduct only 50% of your unreimbursed business-related meal
and entertainment expenses. The 50% limit applies, for example, to
expenses you incur while traveling away from home on business (whether
eating alone or with others), entertaining business customers at your
place of business or a restaurant, or attending a business function,
convention, or reception.
Taxes
and tips related to a business meal or entertainment activity are
included in the amount subject to the 50% limit. Expenses such as cover
charges to a nightclub, rent for a room where you hold a dinner or
cocktail party, or the amount paid for parking at a sports arena are
subject to the 50% limit. However, the cost of transportation to and
from an otherwise allowable business meal or entertainment activity is
not subject to the 50% limit.
If
you have one expense that includes the costs of meals, entertainment,
and other services (such as lodging or transportation), you must
reasonably allocate the expense between the cost of meals and
entertainment and the cost of other services. For example, you must
make an allocation if a hotel includes one or more meals in its room
charge.
Apply
the 50% limit after figuring the amount that would otherwise qualify
for a deduction. First determine the amount of meal and entertainment
expenses that would be deductible under the rules discussed earlier.
Then apply the 50% limit to figure the deductible amount.
Example.
You spend $100 for a business-related meal. If $40 of that amount is not allowable because it is lavish and extravagant, the
remaining $60 is
subject to the 50% limit. You cannot deduct more than $30 (50% of $60).
Exceptions to the 50% limit are discussed in Publication 463.
Giving prizes, awards, and gifts may be an ordinary and necessary part of doing business as a direct seller. In each of the
following situations
you can deduct the cost as a business expense.
Situation 1.
You do your direct selling on the sales party plan. As an
incentive for people to host your parties, you offer them a variety of
gifts. The choice of gift depends on the success of the party�the
higher the volume of sales, the more valuable the gift.
In this situation, your gift to the host or hostess is
actually payment for hosting the party, and the host or hostess must
report the fair market value of the gift as income.
You can deduct the cost of the gift. If you give hosts and
hostesses items from your inventory or items you purchase from the
company at the same time you purchase goods you sell, their cost will
be included in the cost of goods sold. You cannot deduct their cost
again as a business expense. However, if you purchase the gifts
separately from the goods you sell, deduct their cost as an ordinary
and necessary business expense.
Situation 2.
You have several direct sellers working under you. Because
your income depends in part on their sales, you regularly meet with
them, encourage them, and provide them with incentives and support. As
an incentive to make sales, you sometimes offer a prize, such as an
evening on the town or tickets to a sporting event, to the person who
sells the most during the month.
In this situation, the prizes you give are actually
payments for the winners' selling efforts. You can deduct the cost of
the prizes as ordinary and necessary business expenses. The direct
sellers who receive your incentive prizes must report them as income at
their fair market value. For more information, see Other Income, earlier.
Situation 3.
You sell cosmetics door-to-door. To spur sales, you often
give away small samples.
In this situation, you can deduct the cost of the samples.
If you purchase samples separately from the products you sell, you can
deduct their cost as an ordinary and necessary business expense.
Do not deduct the cost of the same item twice. If the item
was included in inventory, you cannot later deduct it as a business
expense. The item will already be part of the cost of goods sold.
Gift limit.
You cannot deduct more than $25 for business gifts you give
directly or indirectly to any one person during the year (see the
exceptions discussed later). Personal gifts are not deductible.
Figuring the limit.
A gift to the spouse (or family member) of a customer is
generally considered an indirect gift to the customer. However, if you
have bona fide independent business connections with the spouse (or
family member) and the gift is not intended for the customer's eventual
use, this rule does not apply.
If you and your spouse both give gifts, you are treated as
one taxpayer for the $25 limit. It does not matter whether you have
separate businesses or independent connections with the recipient.
Incidental cost.
Costs that do not add substantial value to a gift, such as
engraving on jewelry, packaging, insuring, and mailing, are generally
not included in determining the cost of a gift for purposes of the $25
limit. For example, the cost of gift wrapping is considered an
incidental cost. However, the purchase of an ornamental basket for
packaging fruit is not considered an incidental cost if the basket's
value is substantial in relation to the value of the fruit.
Exceptions.
The following items are not included in the $25 limit for
business gifts.
- Items
that cost $4 or less, on which your business name is clearly and
permanently imprinted, and which are part of a number of identical
items you widely distribute. This includes such items as pens, desk
sets, and plastic bags and cases.
- Signs, display racks, or other promotional material to be used on the business premises of the recipient.
Gift or entertainment.
Any item that might be considered either a gift or
entertainment will generally be considered entertainment and not
subject to the $25 limit. However, if you give a customer packaged food
or beverages to be used later, they are gifts.
If you provide business associates with tickets to a
theater performance or a sporting event and you do not accompany them,
you may treat the tickets as either a gift or entertainment, whichever
is to your advantage. However, if you go to the event with them, you
must treat the cost of the tickets as an entertainment expense.
If you do not carry on your direct-selling activity to make a profit, there is a limit on the deductions you can take. If
the not-for-profit limits
apply, you cannot use a loss from direct selling to offset any other income.
This limit applies, for example, if you go into direct selling primarily for the business deductions you can take. It also
applies if you become a
direct seller only so you and your friends can buy products at reduced rates.
If the not-for-profit limit applies, you can take the deductions allowed only if you itemize them on Schedule A (Form 1040).
See Limit on
Deductions and Losses under Not-for-Profit Activities in chapter 1 of Publication 535 for information on how to figure your allowable
deductions. Do not use a business tax return, such as Schedule C (Form 1040).
Not for profit.
In deciding whether your direct selling is carried on for
profit, take into account all facts about the activity. No one factor
alone is decisive. The following are factors to consider.
- Whether you carry on your direct selling in a businesslike manner and maintain complete and accurate books and records.
- Whether the time and effort you put into direct selling indicates you intend to make it profitable.
- Whether you are depending on income from direct selling for your livelihood.
- Whether your losses are due to circumstances beyond your control (or are normal in the start-up phase of direct selling).
- Whether you change your methods of operation in an attempt to improve profitability.
- Whether you, or your advisors, have the knowledge needed to carry on direct selling as a successful business.
- Whether you were successful in making a profit in similar activities in the past.
- Whether your direct selling makes a profit in some years, and how much profit it makes.
- Whether you can expect to make a future profit from the appreciation of the assets used in your direct-selling business.
If the IRS inquires about your tax return, you may be asked
to provide proof that your direct-selling activity is carried on for
profit. However, your direct selling is presumed to be carried on for
profit if it produced a profit in at least 3 of the last 5 tax years,
including the current year, unless the IRS establishes otherwise.
If you are starting a business and do not have 3 years
showing a profit, you may want to elect to have the presumption made
after you have the 5 years of experience allowed by the test. For more
information on postponing any determination that your direct selling is
not carried on for profit, see Using the presumption later under Not-for-Profit Activities in chapter 1 of Publication 535.
You must keep records to correctly figure your taxes. Your records must
be permanent, accurate, complete, and clearly establish your income,
deductions, and credits. The law does not require you to keep records
in any particular way. But if you have more than one business, you
should keep a complete and separate set of books and records for each
business.
Publication 583 provides information about setting up a recordkeeping system, the types of books and records included in a
typical system for a
small business, and sample records.
Publication 463 provides information on the records to keep if you use your car in your business.
The following are suggestions for keeping adequate business records.
- Keep a business bank account. Deposit all business receipts in a separate bank account. Make all payments by check, if possible.
Then business income and business expenses will be well documented.
- Make a record. Record all your business transactions in separate account books and keep a monthly summary of your business income
and expenses.
- Keep your records. You
must keep your business books and records available at all times for
inspection by the IRS. You must keep the records as long as they may be
needed in the administration of any Internal Revenue law. You should
also keep copies of your tax returns to help prepare future returns or
file claims for refunds.
- Support your entries.
File cancelled checks, paid bills, duplicate deposit slips, and other
items that support entries in your books and on your tax return in an
orderly manner and store them in a safe place. For instance, organize
them by year and type of expense.
If
you cannot provide a cancelled check to prove payment of an expense
item, you may be able to prove it with certain financial account
statements prepared by financial institutions. These include account
statements prepared for the financial institutions by a third party.
These account statements must be highly legible. The following table
lists acceptable account statements.
Proof of payment alone does not establish that you are entitled to a
tax deduction. You should also keep other documents as discussed in
Proving Your Deductions, next.
The IRS may ask you to prove your deductions for business expenses.
For travel expenses, you must be able to prove the following items.
- Each
separate amount you spent for travel away from home, such as the cost
of your transportation or lodging. A receipt, bill, or other
documentary evidence generally is required for all lodging expenses.
You can total the daily cost of your breakfast, lunch, dinner, and
other incidental travel costs if they are listed in reasonable
categories, such as meals, gas and oil, and taxi fares.
- The dates you left and returned home for each trip, and the number of days spent on business while traveling away from home.
- The destination or area of your travel, described by the name of the city or town.
- The business reasons for your travel or the business benefit you gained or expected to gain from it.
For entertainment expenses, including expenses for entertainment-related meals, you must be able to prove the following.
- The amount of each separate entertainment expense. You can total incidental expenses, such as taxi fares and telephone calls,
on a daily
basis.
- The date the entertainment took place.
- The
name and address or location of the place of entertainment. Include the
type of entertainment, such as dinner or the theater, if the
information is not clear from the name or designation of the place.
- The
occupation or other information about the persons for whom you are
claiming an entertainment expense. Include their names, titles, or
other information sufficient to establish their business relationship
to you.
- The business reason for the entertainment or the business benefit you gained or expected to gain from it and the nature of
any business
discussion or activity that took place.
- The presence of you or your employee if the entertainment was a business meal given for a client.
Business discussion.
If the entertainment took place before or after a
substantial and bona fide business discussion, in addition to the
information in (1), (2), (3), (4), and (6) above, you must be able to
prove the following.
- The date, place, and duration of the business discussion.
- The nature of the business discussion.
- The business reason for the entertainment or the business benefit you gained or expected to gain from entertaining.
- The identification of the persons who participated in both the business discussion and the entertainment activity.
Business relationship.
If you entertain a readily identifiable group of people,
you do not have to record the name of each person. It is enough to
designate the group. For example, if you entertain all the members of a
garden club, an entry such as � members of the Hillcrest Garden Club� is enough.
For gift expenses, you must be able to prove the following.
- The cost of the gift.
- The date you gave the gift.
- A description of the gift.
- Your reason for giving the gift or any business benefit you gained (or expected to gain) from giving it.
- The
occupation or other information about the person receiving the gift,
including name, title, or other information establishing a business
relationship to you.
The
name of each recipient of a business gift does not always have to be
recorded. A general listing will be enough if it is evident that you
are not trying to avoid the $25 annual limit on the deduction for gifts
to any one person. For example, if you buy a large number of tickets to
local high school basketball games and give one or two tickets to each
of many customers, it is usually enough to record a general description
of the recipients.
You
should keep proof of travel, meal, entertainment, and gift expenses in
an account book, diary, statement of expense, or similar record. You
should also keep adequate documentary evidence to support each element
of an expense.
You do not have to record information shown on a receipt if your records and receipts complement each other in an orderly
manner.
Keep
your records up to date. Record your expenses in your account book at
or near the time of the expense. Entries made later, when you may not
remember them accurately, do not have as much value as entries made at
or near the time of the expense.
Separating expenses.
Usually, each separate payment you make must be recorded as
a separate expense. For example, if you entertain someone at dinner and
then go to the theater, the dinner expense and the cost of the theater
tickets are separate expenses. You must record them separately in your
records.
Expenses of a similar nature occurring during the course of
a single event will be considered a single expense. For example, if
during entertainment at a cocktail lounge you pay separately for each
serving of refreshments, treat the total expense for the refreshments
as a single expense.
Some items can be totaled in categories. You can make one
daily entry for such categories as taxi fares, telephone calls away
from home, gas and oil, and other incidental travel costs. Meals should
be a separate category. Include tips for meal-related services with the
costs of the meals.
Documentary evidence.
A receipt or bill is often the best evidence to prove the
amount of an expense. Documentary evidence is needed for all your
lodging expenses unless, under an accountable plan, your employer pays
you a per diem reimbursement of no more than the government rate in
effect at that time and in that area. It is also generally needed for
any other expense of $75 or more.
Documentary evidence will ordinarily be considered adequate
if it shows the amount, date, place, and essential character of the
expense. For example, a hotel receipt is enough to support expenses for
business travel if it has the name and location of the hotel, the dates
you stayed there, and separate amounts for charges such as lodging,
meals, and telephone calls. A restaurant receipt is enough to prove an
expense for a business meal if it has the name and location of the
restaurant, the number of people served, and the date and amount of the
expense. If a charge is made for items other than meals and beverages,
the receipt must show that this is the case.
Canceled check.
A canceled check, together with a bill from the payee,
usually establishes the cost. However, a canceled check by itself does
not prove a business expense without other evidence to show a business
purpose.
Incomplete records.
If you do not have adequate records to prove an element of
an expense, you must prove the element by providing both of the
following.
- Your own statement, whether written or oral, containing specific information about the element.
- Other supporting evidence sufficient to establish the element.
Additional proof.
You may be required to provide additional information to
the IRS to clarify or establish the accuracy or reliability of the
information in your records, statements, testimony, or documentary
evidence.
This
section will familiarize you with Schedule C (Form 1040), used to
report business income or loss, and Schedule SE (Form 1040), used to
figure self-employment tax. The line numbers in bold type follow the
line numbers on the form being discussed.
If
you are the sole owner of an unincorporated trade or business, report
business income and expenses on Schedule C (Form 1040) or Schedule C�EZ
(Form 1040). If you and your spouse each own one separate business,
file a separate Schedule C or C�EZ for each business. If a person, as a
sole owner, has more than one business, that person must file a
Schedule C for each separate business.
Samples of Schedule C and Schedule SE for Kathleen Woods are illustrated on the following pages. (Amounts have been rounded
to the nearest dollar.)
Kathleen Woods is a secretary for a small firm. She reports her salary of $25,000 on line 7 of Form 1040.
Kathleen is also a direct seller of household cleaning products manufactured and distributed by Spotless, Inc. She reports
the income and expenses
of her selling business on Schedule C because she is self-employed.
Kathleen
uses the cash method of accounting and files her return on a
calendar-year basis. She has no employees and does not keep an
inventory of the products she sells. Any products ordered for personal
use are not shown in purchases, sales, cost of goods sold, or
inventory.
Kathleen's
customers select the products they want from a catalog listing retail
prices for each item. She places an order with Spotless every 10 days,
at which time she also pays for her prior order. She receives the items
ordered with an invoice payable within 10 days or, if sooner, with the
next order. When she delivers the merchandise, she collects the retail
(catalog) price for each item. She can get full credit for any items
returned to Spotless within 10 days.
Kathleen's
cost for each item is 65% of the retail price. During 2003, she had
total retail sales of $14,600. She paid Spotless $9,490 for the
merchandise she received in 2003. She also received an award of $200 in
January for having over $20,000 in total sales in 2002.
Lines 1�3.
Kathleen reports $14,600 as her gross sales on line 1. On
line 2, she would enter any refunds she had to give on merchandise, as
well as adjustments made to customers' purchases. Since she has no
entry on line 2, she enters $14,600 on line 3.
Line 4.
Kathleen uses Part III to figure her cost of goods sold for
the year. She has no inventory at the beginning or end of the year.
Therefore, she has no entry on line 35 or line 41 of Part III. She
purchased $10,000 worth of household products during 2003 for $9,490.
(She received trade discounts of $510.) She enters her net cost of
$9,490 ($10,000 - $510) on line 36. She also enters this amount on
lines 40 and 42 of Part III and on line 4 of Part I.
Line 5.
Gross profit, $5,110, is the difference between Kathleen's
net receipts of $14,600 on line 3 and the cost of goods sold of $9,490
on line 4.
Line 6.
Kathleen reports the $200 received as a bonus on line 6.
She does not include on Schedule C any income not related to her
direct-selling business, such as income from investments or her salary.
She reports such income on other lines of Form 1040.
Line 7.
Kathleen's gross income from direct selling is $5,310, the
sum of her gross profit of $5,110 on line 5 and the bonus of $200 on
line 6.
Line 8.
Kathleen gave her customers samples that cost $48. This
amount was not included in the cost of goods sold on line 4.
Line 9.
Kathleen's business mileage was 2,100 miles, and her total
2003 mileage was 6,000 miles. She used her car 35% for business. She
uses the standard mileage rate to figure the deduction of $756 (2,100 �
.36).
Kathleen must also complete Part IV of Schedule C.
Line 16b.
$280 is 35% of the total interest of $800 paid during the
year on Kathleen's car loan.
Line 18.
Kathleen spent $260 for various office supplies and postage
for her direct-selling business.
Line 22.
Kathleen paid $392 in 2003 for order blanks, bags, and
miscellaneous selling supplies.
Line 23.
$168 is 35% of the personal property tax of $480 Kathleen
paid on her car in 2003.
Line 24.
Kathleen attended two direct-selling seminars during 2003.
Her travel expenses, including lodging, were $515, which she entered on
line 24a. Her meals and entertainment, subject to the 50% limit, were
$200 and were entered on line 24b. The nondeductible amount of $100 is
shown on line 24c and the net deduction of $100 is shown on line 24d.
Line 25.
Kathleen uses her second telephone 100% for business
purposes. She paid $264 for local service on her second phone and $62
for long-distance calls. She enters the total of $326 on this line. She
has no deduction for other utilities because she does not use any part
of her home exclusively for business.
Line 27.
This line is for other direct-selling expenses not listed
separately on the schedule. These expenses are listed in Part V on page
2. Kathleen paid $35 to her bank for check printing and account charges
for her separate business bank account. She paid membership dues of $30
to a local business association and $38 for a 1-year subscription to a
retail sales magazine. She enters these expenses, along with the $199
she paid for catalogs, in Part V. She totals the expenses, $302, on
line 48 and enters the total on line 27.
Line 28.
Kathleen adds all her business deductions listed on lines 8
through 27 and enters the total of $3,147 on this line.
Line 29.
Kathleen subtracts her total deductions on line 28 from her
Schedule C gross income on line 7. Because her gross business income is
greater than her total deductions, she has a tentative profit of
$2,163.
Line 30.
Kathleen did not use any part of her home for business, so
she does not make an entry here.
Line 31.
Kathleen has a net profit of $2,163 (line 29 - line 30).
She enters her net profit here, on line 12 of Form 1040, and on line 2,
Section A of Schedule SE (Form 1040).
Line 32.
Kathleen does not have a loss, so she skips this line. If
she had a loss and was not at risk
for all her investment in the business, she would have to attach Form
6198. See the Schedule C instructions for the meaning of at risk.
Kathleen
uses Short Schedule SE (Form 1040), because her net earnings from
self-employment are more than $400 and the total of her net earnings
plus her wages subject to social security and Medicare taxes (FICA) are
not more than $87,000.
Line 2.
Kathleen enters $2,163, the amount from line 31 of Schedule
C (Form 1040).
Line 3.
Kathleen enters the amount from line 2, $2,163.
Line 4.
Kathleen multiplies her net profit by .9235 and enters the
result, $1,998.
Line 5.
Kathleen multiplies $1,998 (line 4) by .153 and enters $306
as her self-employment tax. She also enters this amount on line 55 of
Form 1040.
Line 6.
Kathleen enters one-half of the amount from line 5. She
also enters this amount on line 28 of Form 1040 as an adjustment to
income.
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