
Tax
Advantages from Your Craft Business
Craft
business owners who sell what they make may qualify for tax reaks. When
you begin your craft business, you spend money on expenses that the IRS
calls "start-up" costs. There are only two ways to deduct these
costs. One is that you capitalize the costs and get the deduction when
you quit or sell your business. In general, this is undesirable because
how many crafters will actually sell their business?
The
other way start-up costs can be deducted is to amortize or spread out
the deductions over five years. But you must choose to do this in the
start-up year.
It
is important in the beginning of your business to make the right choice.
If you don’t make the correct choice, you may lose your deductions.
For
instance, say you spent $7,000 on equipment, tools, furniture, travel,
and rent to start-up a craft business which as of yet does not exist.
You deduct these expenses from your income as normal business expenses.
The
IRS disallows your deductions because the business did not exist when
you put that money out. By this time, you are into the next tax year.
You lose the chance to amortize and must now wait until you sell or quit
the business.
To
get your deduction, choose to amortize these costs in the tax year during
which the active business starts. Consult an accountant. Start-up costs
are any money paid to create an active business and any expenses that
would normally be deductible if there were an existing business. Examples
include travel, entertainment, hiring consultants, advertising, training,
finding suppliers, finding buyers, getting professional accounting advice,
tools, and so on.
Keep
a business journal
Use
a daily planner or appointment book and record your business activities
every day. Keep receipts for all expenses and sales, canceled checks,
credit card charge slips, letters, photographs, and any additional evidence
to support your claims.
The
way the tax law reads, it is a requirement to keep a diary of daily tasks
to prove business activity.
In
1995, it became tax law that you are not required to keep receipts for
business travel and entertainment expenses less than $75 while out of
town.
As
for as receipts, keep them all. Canceled checks are not enough alone,
as you have to produce documentation to list your expenses.
Use
a separate credit card for business costs because you get a receipt as
proof of payment and you get a monthly statement as proof of payment.
A
separate charge card for business also allows you to track business interest
payments which is deductible.
Some
of the documentation proofs that may safeguard you from an audit include
an appointment book, a business customer list, a daily log or receipts,
journal of expenses and income, deposit slips, bank statements, and canceled
checks.
Another
tip, make sure your receipts match your claims. An auditor can check your
motel receipts to show how many people occupied the room.
Home
office deductions
You
can use many different kinds of structures for your home office business.
Examples include a house, apartment, condo, mobile home, or boat. You
can also include structures on property like a separate garage, studio,
barn, or greenhouse. The home office deduction is probably worth about
$1,000 in deductions for each $100,000 in home worth. The IRS considers
your home office as your principal place of business when you:
-
Use
it for performing the important functions of your business.
-
Collect
money from customers in it.
-
Spend
more time in the home office than at other work locations.
You
can deduct expenses for a separate structure like a studio or garage if
the building is used exclusively for the business. In this case, the building
does not have to be the principal place of business or a place where you
meet customers.
You
can also expense property or assets used for your business in your home,
even if you don’t qualify for the home office deduction.
For
instance, you buy a new work table that costs $500. Your crafts business
does not qualify you for home office deduction because you use the room
only 75% for the business (you must use the room 100% for business to
qualify.) You can expense $375 of the table or 75% of $500.
You
are allowed to deduct up to $17,500 of the cost of new or used office
equipment, tools and other qualifying personal property bought in the
same tax year.
You
must use the property 100% for business or you can only deduct the percentage
of business use of the property. Also you can only deduct up to the amount
of business income for the same tax year. Any cost chosen to be expensed
that is above the limitation of the current year can be carried into the
next year.
You
can deduct indirect expenses like rent, utilities, insurance, security
systems, property taxes, deductible mortgage interest, repairs, and depreciation
in proportion to your business use of the crafts.
To
determine the amount, first find out the total square feet of your home.
Then measure the square feet of your home office. Divide the home office
footage by the total area of the house. That gives you the percentage
to multiply your indirect expenses by.
Say
you have a 1,600 square foot house and you use one 400 square foot room
for business. You use 25% of your crafts for business and can deduct 25%
of the indirect expenses. Remember to keep a journal or diary proving
this room is only used for business. Photos with dates stamped by the
film developers will be acceptable evidence.
Hire
your kids
If
your child is over six years old, the IRS says they may be a real employee.
If the child is under eighteen years old, wages parents pay their children
are a legitimate deduction.
You
can’t use your children as employees if your business is a corporation
or a partnership, only if you are a sole proprietorship, independent contractor,
or an employee. To qualify the deduction must be:
Your
child’s employment must be by the books and you have to prove it with
check stubs, receipts, and a diary. Use a time sheet log - examples can
be found in How to Price Crafts and
Things You Make to Sell
You
benefit from hiring a child under eighteen, because you can deduct wages,
which reduces your income and self-employment taxes. However, you have
to prove that the amount you pay in wages is a normal wage for the particular
tasks and not artificially high.
Rent
or lease from your spouse
Since
rent is a deductible business expense, you pay Social Security and self-employment
taxes on your net business income after you deduct any rent you pay to
your spouse.
You
report rent income (your spouse’s) on Schedule E of your tax return where
you deduct depreciation. On rental income, you don’t pay Social Security
of self-employment taxes.
When
husband and wife are separate taxpayers, rent paid by the husband to the
wife, or vice versa, is deductible by the husband and reportable income
for the wife, or vice versa.
If
your business income is under $61,000, for each dollar of rent expense
you claim, you will save around 15%.
Possible
assets you might need in your business you could rent from your spouse
include a car, desk, computer, tools, furniture, office equipment, and
even office or studio space. The test is do you really need it in your
business and would you rent it from a retail rental agent? To pass an
audit for claiming the rent from spouse, you must prove that:
-
You
paid fair market rent for the assets.
-
You
have a written agreement.
-
Your
spouse received payments and deposited them in a separate account.
-
Your
spouse can prove they owned the assets.
-
You
paid state sales tax on the rentals.
Health
deductions
Self-employed
health deduction allows you to deduct 30% of money spent on health insurance.
You would get a much better deal by hiring your spouse and paying medical
expenses under an employee health plan.
You
can then claim 100% of those expenses as a deductible employee expenses
on your Schedule C.
Mileage
A
trip from your crafts to your office or any regular place of business
is considered commuting, therefore personal, and not deductible as a business
expense.
However,
you can deduct miles driven between two business locations. So if you
have a crafts office and you drive to a store account, that is legitimate
deductible mileage.
Recently,
standard mileage deductions were around 36 cents per business mile.
You
can claim the IRS standard mileage or figure all your gas, repairs, tires,
oil, insurance, registration fees, and depreciation.
You
must have adequate records to prove your total miles driven during the
tax year.
Travel
You
can claim travel expenses for your business if you have to spend the night
away from home while pursuing business. Even if you spend some time for
personal reasons, as long as you spend more days on business than pleasure,
deduct 100% of travel expenses.
For
each day of business travel, deduct lodging costs, and 50% of your meals.
If weather or other circumstances prevent you from carrying out your business,
you can still deduct the travel expenses.
You
can deduct travel costs to attend trade shows, trainings and conventions
if business related. If your spouse or children are employed by you, you
can deduct their expenses, too.
Your
travel expense deductions are more credible if you log and record the
expenses at the time of purchase. Usually, taxpayers who lose court cases
involving travel lacked proper entries in a diary. You should record:
-
Amount
you spent on lodging, food, gas, parking, or taxis.
-
Time
of day you departed and returned for each trip and number of days
away for business.
-
Place
you traveled to.
- Nature
of business or purpose of business trip.
About
the Author
James Dillehay, author of seven books, is a nationally recognized expert
on marketing arts and crafts. Artist, entrepreneur, and educator, his
articles have helped over 15,000,000 readers of Family Circle, The Crafts
Report, Better Homes & Gardens, Sunshine Artist, Ceramics Monthly,
and more. James has appeared as a featured guest on HGTV's popular The
Carol Duvall Show and he is a member of the advisory boards to ArtisanStreet.com
and The National Craft Association. This article is copyrighted and excerpted
from James Dillehay's How to Price
Crafts and Things You Make to Sell
"An excellent resource . . . a well organized
book is nothing without solid information and the book delivers here."
-- The Crafts Report

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