
Tax Write-Offs for LLC 2026: 20 Deductions Every Owner Should Claim
Complete list of LLC tax write-offs for 2026: home office, vehicle, health insurance, retirement, and 16 more. With IRS rules and dollar amounts for each.

Business expense categories are the groupings the IRS uses to report deductible business costs on Schedule C (Form 1040), Part II, lines 8 through 27b: advertising, car and truck expenses, contract labor, insurance, office expense, rent, supplies, taxes and licenses, travel, meals, utilities, wages, and other expenses. An expense belongs in any of these categories only if it passes the two-part test of IRC §162: ordinary (common and accepted in your trade) and necessary (helpful and appropriate for your business). Below is the full business expense categories list for taxes, with the Schedule C line for each, what qualifies, and the misconceptions that cost money: meals are 50% deductible, entertainment is 0%, and commuting is never deductible.
Key takeaways:

Every category below maps to a line on Schedule C, the form sole proprietors and single-member LLCs file with Form 1040. The table matches the current Schedule C (the 2025 revision, filed in 2026). One line moved on recent forms: "other expenses" now sits on line 27b, because line 27a is reserved for the Section 179D energy efficient commercial buildings deduction.
| Line | Category | What It Covers |
|---|---|---|
| 8 | Advertising | Marketing and promotional costs |
| 9 | Car and truck expenses | Business vehicle costs (mileage or actual) |
| 10 | Commissions and fees | Sales commissions, referral and platform fees |
| 11 | Contract labor | Payments to independent contractors |
| 12 | Depletion | Natural resource extraction |
| 13 | Depreciation and Section 179 | Asset write-offs (Form 4562) |
| 14 | Employee benefit programs | Health insurance, benefits for employees |
| 15 | Insurance (other than health) | Business insurance premiums |
| 16a | Interest: mortgage | Interest on business property mortgage |
| 16b | Interest: other | Business loan and credit line interest |
| 17 | Legal and professional services | CPA, attorney, consulting fees |
| 18 | Office expense | Office supplies, software, postage |
| 19 | Pension and profit-sharing plans | Employer retirement contributions |
| 20a | Rent: vehicles, machinery, equipment | Leased equipment and vehicles |
| 20b | Rent: other business property | Office, retail, or storage rent |
| 21 | Repairs and maintenance | Fixing or maintaining business property |
| 22 | Supplies | Materials consumed in business |
| 23 | Taxes and licenses | Business licenses, employer payroll taxes |
| 24a | Travel | Business travel (airfare, hotels) |
| 24b | Deductible meals | Business meals (usually 50%) |
| 25 | Utilities | Phone, internet, electricity |
| 26 | Wages | Employee salaries and bonuses |
| 27a | Energy efficient commercial buildings deduction | Section 179D only (Form 7205); most leave it blank |
| 27b | Other expenses | Everything else, itemized in Part V (line 48) |
| 30 | Business use of home | Home office deduction |
Legal basis: IRC §162 (trade or business expenses), IRS Publication 334, and the Schedule C instructions.
Mostly, but not exactly. Your bookkeeping chart of accounts can use any expense categories that help you run the business; at tax time, each one must map to a Schedule C line. The cleanest setup is to name your accounting and bookkeeping categories after Schedule C lines from day one, so year-end filing is a copy job instead of a re-sort.
No. The IRS uses the same Schedule C expense categories for every industry. What differs is which lines carry the weight: line 9 (car and truck) dominates for a rideshare driver, line 22 (supplies) for a crafter, line 17 (legal and professional) for a consultant. The "ordinary and necessary" test is also industry-specific. Steel-toe boots pass it for a contractor but not for a copywriter.
What qualifies: Any cost to promote your business to potential or existing customers.
Examples:
What doesn't qualify:
Record-keeping: Keep invoices, receipts, and screenshots of digital ad spend showing business purpose.
What qualifies: Business use of your vehicle. Choose one method for the entire year:
Standard mileage rate: 72.5 cents per mile for 2026 driving, per IRS Notice 2026-10. The 2025 rate was 70 cents, so use 70 cents on the 2025 return you file in 2026.
Worked example: 15,000 business miles driven in 2026 × $0.725 = $10,875, plus business parking and tolls on top.
Actual expenses method:
Multiply total by your business-use percentage.
Critical rule: You must keep a mileage log. Record date, destination, business purpose, and miles for every business trip. Without this log, the IRS can disallow the entire deduction.
What doesn't qualify:
Legal citation: IRC §274(d) requires "adequate records" for vehicle deductions.
What qualifies: Payments to non-employee agents, brokers, or facilitators who earn commissions or fees for their services.
Examples:
Note: For payments made in 2026, you must issue a 1099-NEC to anyone you pay $2,000 or more during the year. The old $600 threshold still applies to 2025 payments reported in early 2026.
What qualifies: Payments to independent contractors who perform services for your business.
Examples:
1099-NEC requirement: Issue Form 1099-NEC to any contractor paid $2,000 or more during 2026 (the threshold was $600 for 2025 payments). Forms are due by January 31 of the following year, shifting to the next business day when that date falls on a weekend.
Important distinction: If someone works under your direction and control on a regular schedule, they may be an employee — not a contractor. Misclassifying employees as contractors can result in back taxes, penalties, and interest. See our employees vs contractors guide for the IRS classification rules.
What qualifies: The cost of business assets that have a useful life beyond one year.
Instead of deducting the full cost in the year of purchase, you spread the deduction over the asset's useful life (depreciation). Alternatively, Section 179 lets you deduct the full cost immediately.
2026 depreciation options:
| Method | What It Does | 2026 Limit |
|---|---|---|
| Section 179 | Full deduction in Year 1 | $2,560,000 (phase-out starts at $4,090,000 of purchases) |
| Bonus depreciation | Full first-year deduction | 100%, made permanent by OBBBA for property acquired after January 19, 2025 |
| MACRS | Spread over useful life | Based on asset class |
Common asset classes:
| Asset | Depreciation Period |
|---|---|
| Computers and peripherals | 5 years |
| Office furniture | 7 years |
| Vehicles | 5 years |
| Buildings (nonresidential) | 39 years |
| Building improvements | 15 years |
Form 4562 is required for depreciation and Section 179 claims.
See our Section 179 depreciation guide for complete details.
Legal citation: IRC §167 (depreciation), IRC §179 (expensing election)
Three related lines on Schedule C:
Line 14: Employee benefit programs
Note: Self-employed health insurance for the owner is NOT reported here — it's deducted on Schedule 1, Line 17.
Line 19: Pension and profit-sharing plans
Line 26: Wages
Legal citation: IRC §162(a)(1) — Reasonable compensation for services
What qualifies: Business insurance premiums (excluding employee health insurance, which goes on Line 14).
Examples:
What doesn't qualify on this line:
Line 16a: Mortgage interest on business property
Line 16b: Other business interest
What doesn't qualify:
Legal citation: IRC §163 — Business interest deduction
What qualifies: Fees paid to professionals for business-related services.
Examples:
What doesn't qualify:
What qualifies: Supplies, materials, and services used in your office.
Examples:
Threshold: Items over $2,500 with a useful life beyond one year should generally be depreciated (Line 13) or expensed under Section 179, not listed as office expense.
Line 20a: Rent — vehicles, machinery, equipment
Line 20b: Rent — other business property
What doesn't qualify:
What qualifies: Costs to keep your business property in ordinary operating condition.
Examples:
Important distinction: Repairs maintain current condition; improvements add value. A repair is deductible immediately. An improvement must generally be capitalized and depreciated.
| Repair (deductible) | Improvement (capitalize) |
|---|---|
| Fixing a broken window | Installing new windows |
| Patching a roof leak | Replacing the entire roof |
| Repairing a machine | Upgrading a machine |
What qualifies: Materials and supplies consumed or used in your business operations.
Examples:
Distinction from Office Expense (Line 18): Office expenses are for administrative and office items. Supplies are for materials used in the actual production or delivery of your service or product.
What qualifies: Business taxes and license fees you pay to operate.
Examples:
What doesn't qualify:
What qualifies: Transportation and lodging when traveling away from your tax home for business purposes.
Deductible travel expenses:
Rules:
Record-keeping: Keep receipts for every expense and document the business purpose of each trip.
Legal citation: IRC §162(a)(2) and IRS Publication 463
Deduction rate: 50% of the cost
What qualifies:
Documentation required for every meal:
What doesn't qualify:
New for 2026: Meals you provide to employees for your own convenience (overtime dinners, food at an on-site cafeteria) are 0% deductible starting January 1, 2026, under IRC §274(o). Through 2025 they were 50% deductible. Client meals and travel meals stay at 50%.
Legal citation: IRC §274(k) and (n) limit the meal deduction to 50%; IRC §274(o) ends the deduction for employer-convenience meals in 2026
What qualifies: Utility costs for your business location.
Examples:
Mixed-use utilities: If you use your phone or internet for both business and personal purposes, calculate and deduct only the business percentage.
What qualifies: Any ordinary and necessary business expense that doesn't fit into Lines 8-26.
Common "Other Expenses":
List these individually on Line 48 (Part V) with a description and amount for each; the total flows to Line 27b.
About line 27a: On the current Schedule C, line 27a is reserved for the Section 179D energy efficient commercial buildings deduction (Form 7205). Most sole proprietors leave it blank.
What qualifies: A portion of your home expenses if you use a dedicated space regularly and exclusively for business.
Two methods:
Simplified method: $5 per square foot, maximum 300 sq ft = $1,500/year
Regular method (Form 8829): Calculate actual expenses × business percentage:
Worked example: a 200 sq ft office in a 1,800 sq ft home is 11.1% business use. With $30,000 of total home expenses for the year, the deduction is $30,000 × 11.1% = $3,330.
For complete home office calculations, see our home office deduction guide.
Legal citation: IRC §280A and IRS Publication 587
The IRS can disallow deductions if you don't have adequate records. Here's what to keep:
For every business expense, maintain:
| Situation | Keep Records For |
|---|---|
| Standard | 3 years from filing date |
| Underreported income >25% | 6 years |
| Loss from worthless securities | 7 years |
| Didn't file or filed fraudulently | Indefinitely |
| Employment tax records | 4 years |
| Asset/depreciation records | Until asset is fully depreciated + 3 years |
The IRS accepts digital copies of receipts and records. You don't need to keep paper originals if you have clear digital images. This includes photographs of receipts, bank and credit card statements, and digital invoices.
Problem: Dumping all expenses into Line 27b because it's easier than categorizing. At Anna Money, where we served 60,000+ small businesses, miscategorized expenses were the single most common tax mistake we saw: everything thrown into "Other Expenses" or small purchases never categorized at all.
Impact: Increases audit risk (the IRS flags unusually large "Other Expenses") and makes it harder to identify patterns in your spending.
Solution: Use the specific Schedule C lines. Only put truly miscellaneous items in "Other Expenses."
Problem: Using one bank account for everything, then trying to separate at tax time.
Impact: Missed deductions, inaccurate categorization, and potential loss of LLC liability protection.
Solution: Use a dedicated business bank account and credit card. Every transaction in those accounts is a business transaction.
Problem: Deducting meals without documenting who attended and the business purpose.
Impact: The entire meal deduction can be disallowed in an audit.
Solution: Write the business purpose and attendees on the receipt immediately, or log it in your phone. "Lunch with [client name] to discuss [project]" is sufficient.
Problem: Deducting a $15,000 roof replacement as a repair instead of capitalizing it.
Impact: Overstated deductions in the current year, potential accuracy penalty.
Solution: Repairs maintain current condition (deductible). Improvements add value or extend useful life (capitalize and depreciate).
Manual categorization is the most common reason business owners miss deductions: the gap sits between what's deductible and what actually gets claimed. Jupid closes it. Connect your business bank account and Jupid's AI categorizes every transaction to the correct expense category at 95.9% accuracy, in real time rather than at tax time. Forward receipts through WhatsApp or iMessage, and ask questions like "how are my expenses breaking down by category this quarter?" to get an instant line-by-line answer.
| Item | 2026 Amount |
|---|---|
| Standard mileage rate | 72.5 cents/mile (70 cents on 2025 returns) |
| Meal deduction | 50% (employer-convenience meals: 0% from 2026) |
| Home office (simplified) | $5/sq ft, max 300 sq ft = $1,500 |
| Section 179 maximum | $2,560,000 |
| Bonus depreciation | 100% (permanent under OBBBA) |
| 1099-NEC threshold (2026 payments) | $2,000 |
| De minimis safe harbor | $2,500 per item |
| Startup cost deduction | Up to $5,000 |
Business expense categories aren't arbitrary: they map directly to IRS reporting requirements on Schedule C. Getting the categorization right means accurate tax filing, maximum deductions, and clean records if the IRS ever asks questions.
The key strategies:
The difference between a well-organized LLC and a disorganized one isn't sophistication; it's consistency.
Disclaimer
This article provides general information about business expense categorization for tax purposes and should not be considered tax advice. Deduction eligibility depends on your specific business, industry, and circumstances. The IRS requires expenses to be "ordinary and necessary" for your particular trade or business. Some expense categories have specific documentation requirements and limitations not fully detailed here. For advice specific to your situation, consult with a qualified tax professional.
Tax Year: 2026 Last Updated: July 11, 2026

CEO & Co-Founder
Fintech CEO with 10+ years building accounting and financial technology products. Previously co-founded and scaled an AI-powered accounting platform to $30M revenue and 100K+ business users, achieving 30,000 customers per accountant through automation — recognized by CNBC as a top fintech company. Holds a Master's in Management Information Systems. At Jupid, he leads the development of AI-native bookkeeping, tax, and compliance tools designed for freelancers and small business owners.

Complete list of LLC tax write-offs for 2026: home office, vehicle, health insurance, retirement, and 16 more. With IRS rules and dollar amounts for each.

Complete line-by-line guide to filling out Schedule C for 2026. Learn how to report business income, claim deductions, and avoid costly mistakes.

Who qualifies for the 2026 home office deduction: $5/sq ft simplified method (max $1,500) vs Form 8829 actual expenses, and why W-2 remote workers can't claim it.
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