A self-employed photographer deducts every ordinary and necessary business cost on Schedule C: camera bodies and lenses (fully expensed under Section 179, up to $2,560,000 in 2026), a home studio, 72.5 cents per business mile, editing software, props, and insurance. A photographer earning $75,000 typically writes off $15,000–$22,000, which cuts the federal tax bill by roughly $4,000–$6,000. The rule most people miss: gear must be used more than 50% for business to expense it in year one, and any personal-use share never qualifies.
Key takeaways:
- Section 179 lets you deduct the full cost of cameras, lenses, and computers in the year of purchase, up to $2,560,000 in 2026 (Rev. Proc. 2025-32).
- The 2026 standard mileage rate is 72.5 cents per mile (IRS Notice 2026-10), covering drives to shoots, scouting, and pickups.
- A home studio is worth $5 per square foot (up to $1,500) under the simplified method, or a larger figure under actual expenses.
- Business income under $201,750 (single) / $403,500 (joint) in 2026 also gets the 20% QBI deduction on top of business write-offs.
- No 1099-K does not mean no tax: photography clients only trigger a 1099-K above $20,000 and 200+ transactions, but all profit is reportable on Schedule C.

Save this cheat sheet — the key 2026 numbers in one image.
A freelance photographer files as a sole proprietor unless they formed an LLC or S corporation. Business profit is reported on Schedule C (Form 1040), and the net profit flows to two more forms.
- Schedule C: report gross income (all client payments, print sales, and any 1099-K or 1099-NEC amounts) minus business expenses. The bottom line is net profit on line 31.
- Schedule SE: calculate 15.3% self-employment tax on that net profit (see the worked example below).
- Form 4562: elect Section 179 to expense cameras and lenses in year one.
- Form 1040-ES: pay quarterly estimated taxes if you expect to owe $1,000 or more for the year. See the Quarterly Estimated Taxes Guide for the four due dates.
Income is taxable whether or not a client sends a form. A wedding client who pays $6,000 by check issues nothing, and that $6,000 still belongs on Schedule C.
Matching each cost to the correct Schedule C line is what turns a shoebox of receipts into a filed return. Here is where common photographer expenses belong.
| Photographer expense | Schedule C line | Notes |
|---|
| Cameras, lenses, lighting, editing computers | Line 13 (Depreciation and Section 179) | Elect Section 179 on Form 4562 |
| Backdrops, seamless paper, memory cards, consumables | Line 22 (Supplies) | Items used up or under about $2,500 each |
| Adobe Lightroom, Capture One, gallery hosting, CRM | Line 27a (Other expenses) | Software subscriptions |
| Driving to shoots, scouting, pickups | Line 9 (Car and truck expenses) | 72.5 cents per mile in 2026, or actual costs |
| Airfare and lodging for destination shoots | Line 24a (Travel) | Overnight business trips |
| Business meals | Line 24b (Meals) | 50% deductible (Publication 463) |
| Ads, directory listings, portfolio website | Line 8 (Advertising) | The Knot, WeddingWire, Google Ads |
| Liability and equipment insurance | Line 15 (Insurance) | Not health insurance |
| Second shooters, retouchers, editors | Line 11 (Contract labor) | Issue a 1099-NEC if you pay one $2,000 or more in 2026 |
| Legal, accounting, model-release templates | Line 17 (Legal and professional services) | |
| Square, Stripe, and PayPal processing fees | Line 10 (Commissions and fees) or 27a | |
| Home studio or editing room | Line 30 (via Form 8829) | Reported separately, not as office expense |
| Health insurance premiums | Schedule 1, line 17 | Self-employed health deduction, not Schedule C |
Photography equipment is your largest deduction, and Section 179 lets you write off the full cost in the year of purchase instead of depreciating it over five years.
For 2026, Section 179 allows you to deduct up to $2,560,000 in qualifying equipment purchases in the year you place them in service, with the phase-out beginning at $4,090,000 (Rev. Proc. 2025-32). No working photographer approaches that ceiling, so in practice your entire gear budget is deductible in year one.
Qualifying equipment: camera bodies, lenses, lighting (strobes, continuous lights, modifiers), tripods and support gear, memory cards and storage, drones used for business, and computers for editing.
Example gear purchase:
| Item | Cost |
|---|
| New camera body | $3,500 |
| Two lenses | $4,000 |
| Lighting kit | $1,500 |
| Drone for aerial work | $2,000 |
| Total, deducted under Section 179 | $11,000 |
At a 24% marginal rate, that $11,000 write-off saves about $2,640 in federal income tax, plus self-employment tax on the same amount.
Legal citation: IRC § 179 and IRS Publication 946.
If a purchase exceeds your business income for the year (Section 179 cannot create a loss), the remainder can use 100% bonus depreciation, which OBBBA made permanent for assets placed in service after January 19, 2025. Either route deducts the full cost; Section 179 is capped at business income, while bonus depreciation is not. Cameras and computers otherwise carry a 5-year MACRS recovery period.
A dedicated space used for shooting, editing, or client meetings qualifies for the home office deduction, reported on Form 8829 and Schedule C line 30.
The space must be used regularly and exclusively for business and be either your principal place of business or where you meet clients. A spare room set up as a portrait or product studio clearly qualifies; the corner of a bedroom you also sleep in does not.
The simplified method is $5 per square foot, up to 300 square feet, for a $1,500 maximum. A 200-square-foot studio gives a $1,000 deduction with no receipts required.
The actual expense method deducts your business-use percentage of rent or mortgage interest, utilities, insurance, and repairs.
| Method | Calculation | Deduction |
|---|
| Simplified | 200 sq ft × $5 | $1,000 |
| Actual (200 of 1,600 sq ft = 12.5%) | 12.5% × $24,000 home costs | $3,000 |
The actual method usually wins for a dedicated studio. Run both with the Home Office Tax Deduction Calculator and take the larger number.
Photography software is 100% deductible on Schedule C line 27a.
- Editing: Adobe Creative Cloud (Photoshop, Lightroom), Capture One, Luminar, DxO PhotoLab.
- Business tools: HoneyBook, Dubsado, or Studio Ninja for studio management; client galleries (Pixieset, ShootProof, Pic-Time); invoicing and CRM.
- Storage and backup: Dropbox, Google Drive, Backblaze, Carbonite.
A typical stack (Creative Cloud $660, gallery platform $360, studio management $400, cloud storage $120, backup $100) totals $1,640 a year, saving about $394 at the 24% bracket.
Travel for photography jobs, scouting, and conferences is deductible under IRS Publication 463.
The 2026 standard mileage rate is 72.5 cents per mile. Deductible drives include client shoots, location scouting, equipment pickups and rentals, meeting a second shooter, and travel to photography conferences. At 6,000 business miles, the deduction is 6,000 × $0.725 = $4,350. Keep a contemporaneous mileage log; the IRS disallows estimates reconstructed at tax time.
For overnight travel to a destination wedding or commercial shoot, you deduct airfare, lodging, 50% of meals, ground transportation, baggage fees (important for gear), and travel insurance.
| Destination wedding cost | Amount |
|---|
| Airfare | $400 |
| Hotel (2 nights) | $300 |
| Meals (50% of $150) | $75 |
| Ground transportation | $100 |
| Equipment shipping | $150 |
| Total travel deduction | $1,025 |
Business meals are 50% deductible in 2026. The temporary 100% restaurant deduction expired after 2022.
Items bought for shoots are 100% deductible as supplies (line 22) or, for longer-lived items, depreciable gear.
- Backdrops and surfaces: seamless paper rolls, fabric and vinyl backdrops, textured boards, flooring.
- Props: furniture for lifestyle shoots, newborn wraps and props, food-styling items, seasonal decor.
- Styling: accessories for styled shoots, flowers, and florals used on set.
A newborn photographer's typical year (seamless paper $200, backdrop stands $150, newborn props and wraps $400, styling accessories $200, surface boards $100) totals about $1,050.
Building the business is deductible on line 8.
- Portfolio: print books, portfolio website hosting, sample albums, display prints.
- Advertising: Instagram and Facebook ads, Google Ads, wedding directory listings (The Knot, WeddingWire).
- Branding: logo design, business cards, packaging, branded USB drives.
- Networking: conference registration and professional memberships (PPA, WPPI).
A common mix (website $200, directory listing $600, print portfolio $300, branding $400, conference $500) totals $2,000.
Continuing education that improves skills in your current photography business is deductible: online courses, in-person workshops, mentorships, and platforms like CreativeLive or KelbyOne. Education that qualifies you for a new profession is not deductible (IRS Publication 970). Conference travel follows the travel rules above.
- Business insurance (line 15): equipment insurance, general liability, professional liability (errors and omissions), business property.
- Health insurance: deducted separately as the self-employed health insurance deduction on Schedule 1, line 17. See the Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction guide.
- Professional fees (line 17): accountant or bookkeeper, contract review, model releases.
- Banking and processing (line 10 or 27a): business bank account fees, Square, Stripe, and PayPal fees.
A freelance photographer pays 15.3% self-employment tax (12.4% Social Security up to the 2026 wage base of $184,500, plus 2.9% Medicare). It is calculated on 92.35% of net profit, and half is deductible on Schedule 1.
Worked math on $70,000 net profit: $70,000 × 0.9235 = $64,645 of taxable self-employment earnings. That times 15.3% is $9,891 of SE tax, and half of that, $4,945, is deductible above the line. Estimate yours with the Self-Employment Tax Calculator.
Diego runs a wedding and portrait business as a sole proprietor. Here is how his write-offs flow through the forms.
| Schedule C item | Line | Amount |
|---|
| Gross photography income | 1 | $82,000 |
| Equipment (Section 179) | 13 | ($9,000) |
| Home studio, simplified 200 sq ft | 30 | ($1,000) |
| Software and subscriptions | 27a | ($1,640) |
| Mileage, 6,000 mi × 72.5¢ | 9 | ($4,350) |
| Props and backdrops | 22 | ($1,050) |
| Marketing and portfolio | 8 | ($2,000) |
| Business insurance | 15 | ($1,200) |
| Net profit | 31 | $61,760 |
From that $61,760 net profit:
- Self-employment tax: $61,760 × 0.9235 × 15.3% = $8,726 on Schedule SE, of which $4,363 is deductible.
- QBI deduction: 20% × $61,760 = $12,352. Diego's income is well under the 2026 phase-in threshold of $201,750, so he gets the full 20% regardless of how his work is classified. See the QBI Deduction Guide or run the QBI Calculator.
His $20,240 of business write-offs cut both income tax and self-employment tax, and the QBI deduction removes another $12,352 from taxable income on top.
Several costs feel business-related but fail IRS rules. Getting these wrong is what turns a deduction into an audit adjustment.
- The personal-use share of any asset. A camera used 70% for business is 70% deductible; a phone or car split between work and life is deducted only at its business percentage. Gear used 50% or less for business cannot use Section 179 at all.
- Your own everyday clothing. Outfits you wear to client meetings or shoots are not deductible even if you bought them for work, because they are suitable for everyday wear. Costumes and props worn by subjects are a different category.
- Commuting that isn't business travel. If your home studio is your principal place of business, drives to shoots are deductible; a personal errand tacked onto a shoot day is not.
- The value of your own time. You cannot deduct unpaid hours spent editing or the "cost" of shooting for exposure.
- Meals beyond 50%, and never lavish or extravagant meals with no business purpose.
- Hobby expenses. If photography is not run for profit, post-2017 law disallows deducting expenses against other income (IRC § 183). Keep separate books, a business bank account, and a profit motive to stay on the business side.
Spreading a $9,000 camera purchase over five years delays most of the benefit. Elect Section 179 on Form 4562, line 6 to deduct the full cost the year you place it in service.
Photographers often assume a "real" studio is required. A dedicated editing or shooting room qualifies on Form 8829, worth $1,000–$3,000 or more a year that goes unclaimed.
Reconstructed mileage fails an audit. Log each business drive as it happens, then apply the 72.5-cent 2026 rate on Schedule C line 9.
A photographer who only reports the amounts on a 1099-K understates income, because most client payments (checks, Zelle, cash) trigger no form. Every dollar of client payment belongs on Schedule C line 1.
Between shooting, editing, and client work, tracking receipts is the part that slips. Connect your business bank account and Jupid categorizes camera purchases, software, mileage, and props at 95.9% accuracy, mapping each to the right Schedule C line. Ask a question any time in WhatsApp or iMessage ("Can I deduct this $2,800 lens?") and get an answer backed by IRS guidance in seconds, plus a running estimate of what you'll owe. It is built for solo photographers who would rather be behind the camera than in a spreadsheet.
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- IRS Publication 946 — How to Depreciate Property (Section 179)
- IRS Publication 463 — Travel, Gift, and Car Expenses
- IRS Publication 587 — Business Use of Your Home
- Schedule C Instructions — Profit or Loss From Business
- IRC § 162 — Trade or Business Expenses; IRC § 179 — Expensing of Depreciable Assets; IRC § 280A — Home Office; IRC § 183 — Activity Not Engaged in for Profit
- IRS Notice 2026-10 — 2026 Standard Mileage Rates; Rev. Proc. 2025-32 — 2026 inflation adjustments
| Item | 2026 Figure |
|---|
| Section 179 limit | $2,560,000 |
| Section 179 phase-out begins | $4,090,000 |
| Standard mileage rate | 72.5¢ per mile |
| Simplified home office | $5/sq ft (max $1,500) |
| Business meals | 50% deductible |
| SE tax rate | 15.3% (on 92.35% of net) |
| 2026 SS wage base | $184,500 |
| QBI deduction | 20% (full below $201,750 single / $403,500 joint) |
This article provides general information about tax deductions for self-employed photographers and does not constitute tax advice. These rules apply to self-employed photographers; employees have different rules. Tax laws change, and individual circumstances vary. For advice specific to your situation, consult a qualified tax professional.
Tax Year: 2026
Last Updated: July 7, 2026