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Deducting "other" business expenses
Some tax deductions are not mentioned by name on a tax form but can still be
quite valuable to a taxpayer. If you own a trade or business, you can deduct a
number of expenses under the broad category of “other.”
In general, taxpayers may deduct ordinary and necessary expenses incurred in the
conducting of a trade or business. An ordinary expense is common and accepted in
the taxpayer’s trade or business. A necessary expense is appropriate for the
business.
Although many common expenses are deducted on designated lines of the tax
schedule, some expenses may not fit into a particular category. Taxpayers can
deduct these as “other” expenses. A breakdown of “other” expenses must be listed
on line 48 of Form 1040 Schedule C. The total is then entered on line 27.
Examples of “other” expenses include:
• Amortization of certain costs, such as pollution-control facilities, research
and experimentation, and intangibles including goodwill.
• Bad debts. Business bad debts must be directly related to sales or services
provided by the business must have been previously included in income and must
be worthless (non-recoverable). If a taxpayer deducts a bad debt expense and
later recovers it, the amount must be included in income in the year collected.
• Business start-up costs. These are costs related to creating an active trade
or business, or investigating the creation or acquisition of an active trade or
business. Generally these costs are amortized. However, taxpayers who started a
business in 2006 may elect to deduct up to $5,000 of certain start up costs,
subject to limitations. Refer to chapter 7 of Publication 535, Business
Expenses, for more information.
• Gulf Opportunity (GO) Zone clean-up costs. Fifty percent of qualified clean-up
costs for the removal of debris from, or the demolition of structures on, real
property located in the GO Zone which are paid or incurred in 2006 are
deductible as “other” expenses. The property must be held for use in a trade or
business, for the production of income, or as inventory.
Personal, living and family expenses, do not qualify as deductible “other”
business expenses.
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