Surgent's Home Office Rules

Since 2017, employees have not been eligible to take an itemized deduction for a home office. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act suspended all miscellaneous...

4/26/2027 1:00pm - 3:00pm  |  Online  |  Surgent

$119.00

CPE Categories: Taxation (2 CPE)

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Description

Since 2017, employees have not been eligible to take an itemized deduction for a home office. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act suspended all miscellaneous itemized deductions for tax years 2018 through 2025. That deduction is scheduled to go into effect in 2026. Self-employed individuals can deduct office expenses on Schedule C, Form 1040. The home office deduction includes typical office-connected expenditures such as supplies, postage, computers, printers, and all the other ordinary and necessary expenses a person would have in connection with running a home office.

The home office tax deduction for the self-employed would cover expenses for the business use of a home, which includes mortgage interest, rent, insurance, utilities, repairs, and depreciation. This program discusses many of the most important issues relating to the deductibility of home office–related expenses.

Instructor: Mike Tucker, Ph.D., LL.M., J.D., CPA

Target Audience

Accounting and finance professionals who need to know about the deductibility of home office-related expenses.

Course Objectives

Understand the rules relating to taxpayers who are entitled to deduct expenses associated with a home office

Subjects

Calculating the home office deduction

Actual expense method

Simplified expense method

Definition of a home for purposes of the home office deduction

Whether working-from-home employees can claim a home office deduction

What is a “separate, identifiable space?”

The “regularly and exclusively used” rule

Defining a “principal place of business”

Meeting clients, patients, and customers

More than one trade or business

Special rules that apply to daycare providers

Separate, free-standing structures

Depreciating the home