Is it a Hobby or a Business?
Most everyone dreams of making a living from doing things they
enjoy. Many successfully turn hobbies or vocations into a business.
However, the IRS has a watchful eye out for taxpayers who attempt
to deduct hobby expenses as business expenses. If your business
is profitable, you won’t have any unusual tax consequences.
Where you run afoul of the IRS is when an enterprise consistently
has a loss for the bottom line. That’s when the IRS may step
in and say it is a hobby and not a for-profit business.
Under the hobby loss rules, deductions are limited to the income
from the activity. In addition, those deductions that would be allowed
whether or not the activity is for-profit (such as state and local
property taxes) are deducted first. Then, if any net income remains,
expenses up to the amount of the remaining income can be deducted
as a miscellaneous itemized deduction subject to a 2%-of-AGI “floor.”
By contrast, if the enterprise wasn’t affected by the hobby
loss rules, all otherwise allowable expenses would be deductible
on Schedule C, even if they exceed the income from the enterprise.
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There are two ways to avoid the hobby loss rules. The first way
is to show a profit in at least three out of five consecutive years
(two out of seven years for breeding, training, showing, or racing
horses). The second option is to run the venture in such a way that
it shows your intention of turning it into a profit-maker rather
than to operate it as a mere hobby. The IRS regulations state clearly
that the hobby loss rules don’t apply if the facts and circumstances
show that you have a profit-making objective.
Please call our office for more details on whether your venture
may be affected by the hobby loss rules. |