|
Happy Thursday! Did you know that the average small business overpays on taxes every year? Not because they’re bad at math, but because they’re claiming 12 deductions when they qualify for 30. The tax code isn’t hiding these write-offs, but it’s not exactly handing them to you on a silver platter either.
|
|
|
|
|
-
🧾 Yes, you can write that off…if you prove it: “Ordinary and necessary.” Two simple words that control your entire deduction strategy. Here’s what they actually mean.
-
💸 20 deductions you’re probably missing: They’re not exotic. They’re sitting in your bank statement right now. Here are the write-offs most small business owners overlook.
-
🍔 The business meal deduction – a survival guide: The 100% COVID write-off is gone, the rules changed again, and the IRS has five documentation requirements. Miss one and the whole deduction disappears.
-
📋 Free download: The overlooked deductions audit checklist: Run through your expenses claim by claim. Find out what you’re missing before the IRS finds out what you can’t prove.
|
|
|
|
Follow us for even more great tips, tricks, and deadline reminders. Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn
|
The Basics
|
🧾 Yes, you can write that off…if you prove it
|
 |
|
Image from Unsplash
|
|
|
The Quick & Bristly: A business deduction is any expense that’s “ordinary and necessary” for running your business. The IRS doesn’t care what you think is a business expense. They care what you can prove. Understanding the basics of what qualifies, what doesn’t, and what documentation you need is the difference between saving thousands at tax time and sweating through an audit.
|
|
|
|
There’s a moment in every new business owner’s life, usually sometime around their first quarter, when a wonderful thought crosses their mind: I can write this off!
|
|
The coffee. The laptop. The “business lunch” that was really just tacos with a friend who happens to work in the same industry. It feels like a superpower. And in a way, it is. Business deductions are one of the most powerful tools available to small business owners. They reduce your taxable income, which reduces your tax bill, which means more money stays in your pocket.
|
|
But here’s the part that nobody mentions during the honeymoon phase: not everything is deductible, the IRS has rules, and “I use it for work sometimes” is not one of them.
|
The Two-Word Test the IRS Actually Uses
|
|
The tax code doesn’t provide a checklist of approved deductions. Instead, it gives you a principle. Under 26 U.S. Code § 162, a business expense is deductible if it’s ordinary and necessary for your trade or business.
|
|
That sounds straightforward until you realize how much ambiguity lives inside those two words.
|
|
Ordinary means common and accepted in your industry. If you’re a freelance graphic designer, a Creative Cloud subscription is ordinary. A subscription to a commercial fishing newsletter is not, unless you have a very unusual niche.
|
|
Necessary means helpful and appropriate for your business. It doesn’t mean you’d go bankrupt without it. It means there’s a legitimate business reason for the expense. A second monitor for your home office? Necessary. A hot tub for your “creative thinking space”? You’d better have an extremely compelling explanation.
|
|
The IRS also cares that the expense is directly connected to your business activity. This is where a lot of new business owners get tripped up. That gym membership might make you more productive, but unless you’re a personal trainer or fitness professional, good luck defending it in an audit.
|
|
“Ordinary and necessary” sounds simple, until you’re staring at a receipt wondering which side of the line it falls on. Keep reading →
|
|
|
PRESENTED BY KALSHI
|
The Final Four Is Set. Place Your Trade.
|
|
|
|
Kalshi lets you trade on March Madness, elections, economics, and more, all on a federally regulated exchange. Arizona, Michigan, UConn, or Illinois, who’s cutting down the nets? Put real money behind your prediction and get $10 free when you sign up.
|
|
Claim Your Free $10
|
|
|
True or False: Since the pandemic, business meals at restaurants are still 100% deductible.
|
|
(Find the answer at the end of this newsletter)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Deep Dive
|
🍔 The business meal deduction – a survival guide
|
 |
|
Image from Evanto
|
|
|
The Quick & Bristly: Your S-Corp salary has withholding, but your distributions don’t, and the IRS expects you to pay taxes on that income quarterly. Miss the payments or get the math wrong and you’re looking at penalties that start at 0.5% per month and can stack up to 25%. The safe harbor rules can protect you, but which one applies depends on your AGI, and the smartest S-Corp owners use a combination of W-2 withholding and quarterly vouchers to stay ahead.
|
|
|
|
Of all the deductions available to small business owners, meals are the one everybody thinks they understand and almost nobody gets completely right.
|
|
It makes sense. Eating is universal. Business happens over food. And the rules seem simple enough on the surface: take a client to lunch, write it off. What’s complicated about that?
|
|
As it turns out, quite a lot. The meal deduction has been rewritten, expanded, shrunk, temporarily doubled, and then shrunk again, all within the last decade. If you learned the rules in 2021, they changed. If you learned them in 2023, they changed again. And if you’re going off what your friend told you at a dinner that he was almost certainly deducting incorrectly, it’s time for a reset.
|
A Brief and Mildly Exhausting History
|
|
The meal deduction has been on a rollercoaster. For years, business meals were 50% deductible. Then, in late 2020, Congress passed the Consolidated Appropriations Act, which temporarily bumped restaurant meals to 100 percent deductible for 2021 and 2022. The goal was to help the restaurant industry recover from the pandemic, and for two glorious years, every legitimate business dinner was a full write-off.
|
|
That provision expired at the end of 2022. Starting in 2023, we went back to the standard: 50% for qualifying business meals. That’s where we are now, and barring new legislation, that’s where we’ll stay.
|
|
The problem is that a lot of business owners either didn’t notice the change or are still operating on muscle memory from the 100% days. If you’ve been deducting meals at the full amount on your 2023, 2024, or 2025 returns, that’s an error, and exactly the kind of error the IRS looks for.
|
What Actually Qualifies as a “Business Meal”
|
|
The IRS has a surprisingly specific framework for what makes a meal deductible. It’s not enough for food to be present while business also happens to be occurring. The meal needs to meet a few conditions.
|
-
There must be a clear business purpose. You’re meeting with a client, a prospect, a vendor, a contractor, or a business partner to discuss something directly related to your business. “Networking” in the vague sense doesn’t cut it. “Discussing the Q3 proposal with a prospective client” does.
-
You or an employee must be present. You can’t just send a gift card to a client’s favorite restaurant and call it a business meal. Someone from your business has to be at the table.
-
The meal can’t be lavish or extravagant. The IRS uses this language without defining a dollar amount, which is peak IRS. In practice, it means the meal should be reasonable for your industry and market. A $200 dinner for two in Manhattan probably won’t raise eyebrows. A $2,000 dinner for two at a resort in Aspen might, unless you have a very good explanation and a very profitable business.
|
|
The business discussion can happen before, during, or after the meal. You don’t have to talk shop while chewing. A meal immediately before or after a substantive business meeting qualifies.
|
|
The meal deduction has five documentation rules. Miss one and the whole write-off disappears. Here’s how to get it right →
|
|
|
Private Credit on Your Terms
|
|
|
|
Percent’s secondary marketplace lets accredited investors buy into eligible deals or indicate interest in selling existing positions. Secondary market access in private credit is still rare. 16.72% current weighted average coupon. Terms start at 3 months. New investors can receive up to $500 credit.
|
|
See how it works.
|
|
Alternative investments are speculative. Secondary liquidity not guaranteed. Past performance not indicative. Terms apply.
|
The Freebie
|
📋 The overlooked deductions audit checklist
|
 |
|
Image from Evanto
|
|
|
You just read about 20 deductions you might be missing. Now find out for sure. This printable checklist walks you through the most commonly overlooked write-offs, claim by claim, so you can cross-reference against your actual expenses. Grab your bank statements, a cup of coffee, and about 15 minutes.
|
|
This checklist is for self-audit purposes only. It is not tax advice, and your CPA will still want to hear from you.
|
|
Download the Checklist (PDF) →
|
|
|
|
|
Answer: ❌ False!
|
|
The 100% deduction was a temporary pandemic relief measure that expired at the end of 2022. Business meals are back to 50% deductible, and if you’ve been writing off the full amount since 2023, that’s worth correcting.
|
|
|
|