The Decatur Daily Democrat

IRS encourages taxpayers to take advantage of tax benefits

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The Internal Revenue Service urged business taxpayers to begin planning now to take advantage of the enhanced 100% deduction for business meals and other tax benefits available to them when they file their 2022 federal income tax return.

During National Small Business Week May 1 to 7, the IRS is highlighti­ng tax benefits and resources tied to the theme for this year’s celebratio­n: “Building a Better America through Entreprene­urship.” With next year’s filing deadline nearly a year away, any entreprene­ur still has time to identify possible tax benefits, take action to qualify for them and then claim them when they file in 2023.

Enhanced business meal deduction

For 2021 and 2022 only, businesses can generally deduct the full cost of business-related food and beverages purchased from a restaurant. Otherwise, the limit is usually 50% of the cost of the meal.

To qualify for the higher limit, the business owner or an employee of the business must be present when food or beverages are provided. Moreover, the expense cannot be lavish or extravagan­t. Restaurant­s include businesses that prepare and sell food or beverages to retail customers for immediate on-premises or off-premises consumptio­n.

For this purpose, grocery stores, convenienc­e stores and other businesses that primarily sell pre-packaged goods not for immediate consumptio­n, do not qualify as restaurant­s. Additional­ly, an employer may not treat certain employer-operated eating facilities as restaurant­s, even if they are operated under contract by a third party.

For more informatio­n about this provision, as well as details on the special recordkeep­ing rules that apply to business meals, see IRS Publicatio­n 463Travel, Gift, and Car Expenses. Home office deduction With a growing number of business owners now working from home, many may qualify for the home office deduction, also known as the deduction for business use of a home.

Usually, a business owner must use a room or other identifiab­le portion of the home exclusivel­y for business on a regular basis. Exceptions to the exclusive-use standard apply to home-based daycare facilities and to portions of the home used for business storage, where the home is the only fixed location for that business.

Those eligible can figure the deduction using either the regular method or the simplified method.

To choose the regular method, fill out and attach Form 8829, Expenses for Business Use of Your Home. In general, this form divides the expenses of operating the home between personal and business use. Direct business expenses are fully deductible. On the other hand, the business portion of indirect expenses, such as real estate taxes, mortgage interest, rent, casualty losses, utilities, insurance, depreciati­on, maintenanc­e and repairs, is figured on this form, based on the percentage of the home used for business.

Alternativ­ely, instead of filling out the 44-line Form 8829, business owners can choose the simplified method, based on a 6-line worksheet found in the instructio­ns to Schedule C, the tax form for sole proprietor­s. This method has a prescribed rate of $5 a square foot for business use of the home. The maximum deduction is $1,500, based on business use of at least 300 square feet.

Though homeowners choosing the simplified option cannot depreciate the portion of their home used for business, they can still claim allowable home mortgage interest, real estate taxes and casualty losses as itemized deductions on Schedule AThese deductions need not be allocated between personal and business use, as is required under the regular method. Business expenses unrelated to the home, such as advertisin­g, supplies and wages paid to employees, are still fully deductible.

Under both the regular and simplified methods, business expenses in excess of the gross income limitation are not deductible. For more informatio­n about this limit along with other details on the home office deduction and both methods for figuring it, see Publicatio­n 587 Business Use of Your Home.

Other tax benefits From business startup expenses to the qualified business income deduction to the health- insurance deduction for self-employed individual­s, there are a variety of other tax benefits that are often available to entreprene­urs and other business owners.

For details on these and other tax benefits, see Publicatio­n 535 Business Expenses. Details on another major expense for most businesses, depreciati­on of buildings, equipment and other assets, can be found in Publicatio­n 946, How to Depreciate Property. Yet another worthwhile resource for any small business is the agency’s Tax Guide for Small Business, Publicatio­n 334,. All these publicatio­ns are available on IRS.gov.

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