BE AWARE OF HOME-BASED BUSINESS TAX AVOIDANCE SCHEMES
Deducting all or most of the cost and operation of a personal residence. For example, placing a calendar, desk, file cabinet, telephone, or other business-related item in each room does not increase the amount that can be deducted.
The Internal Revenue Service had issued a consumer alert regarding home-based business schemes that purport to offer tax "relief." In reality, they provide bad advice to unwary taxpayers that, if followed, results in improper tax avoidance.
The promoters of these schemes claim that individual taxpayers can deduct most, or all, of their personal expenses as business expenses by setting up a bogus home-based business. But the tax code firmly establishes that a clear business purpose and profit motive must exist in order to generate and claim allowable business expenses.
Taxpayers should think carefully before filing a return that reflects such unallowable activities. No matter how convincing the claims that are found in marketing materials for these schemes may appear, nondeductible personal living expenses cannot be transformed into deductible business expenses.
Taxpayers should resist the temptation of quick and easy schemes. Creating a bogus home business or other schemes cross the line and puts the taxpayer on a path that will result in paying interest and penalties on top of the taxes they owe.
Some examples of personal expenses that are not deductible but are commonly claimed as business expenses in home-based business tax avoidance schemes include:
- Deducting a portion of the total house payment is not allowable if the business is not real.
- Paying children a salary for services, such as answering telephones, washing cars or other tasks and then deducting these costs as a business expense is not allowed.
- Deducting education expenses from the salary wrongfully paid to children as employees also is not allowed.
- Deducting excessive car and truck expenses when the vehicle has been used for both business and personal use is not allowed.
- Deducting personal furniture, home entertainment equipment, children’s toys, etc. is not allowed.
- Deducting personal travel, meals, and entertainment under the guise that "everyone is a potential client" is not allowed.
Any tax scheme that claims a person can deduct what would normally be personal expenses should be considered highly suspect.
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