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New Member
posted Jun 1, 2019 10:31:37 AM

How can fix the Turbo Tax error of not let me taking the home office deduction while I am qualified?

I am qualified for the home office deduction.  I selected using simplified method.  But I got a message that I do not get any deduction because there is zero or less than zero net profit from the business. Actually, I have the net profit of $18,000. It seems like a software bug. Or I did something wrong.  How do I fix this problem?

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1 Best answer
Intuit Alumni
Jun 1, 2019 10:31:38 AM

It is likely that the income attributable to your home office and the other business expenses are limiting your home office expenses.    

If the home office expenses are limited and not allowed to be taken on the current year’s return, then they are carried forward to the next year as long as the actual home office expenses were being used and not the simplified method based solely on the square feet of the office.  Since you are using the simplified method, any expenses not allowed are lost and will not be carried forward, so disregard the information below about being able to carry the expenses forward.

After you take a look at the information below to understand the limitation, you might need to revisit your entry for the percent of business income attributed to your home office. 


There are some examples below that will illustrate this limitation a little better.

Income Earned from Home Office

The IRS limits the total of certain kinds of home office expenses - the ones you would not be able to deduct anywhere else on your tax return, such as your utilities and repairs - to the income earned from activities in your home office. Although these expenses cannot themselves create a loss on your business, you can carry over any unused portion to next year's home office deduction.

Here's how it works. Let's say
 - Your business income before any expenses was $10,000
 - All business expenses that would not limit your home office deduction were $4,000, and
 - The home office expenses were $3,000

1). If 90% of your income came from business conducted in your home office, then you can deduct all of your home office expenses:
 - $10,000 X 90% of income from the home office = $9,000 from business use of the home
 - $9,000 - $4,000 other expenses = $5,000 available for home office expenses
 - $5,000 is greater than $3,000 home office expenses, so you can deduct all of them.

2). However, if 60% of your income came from business conducted in your home office, then your home office expenses will be limited:
 - $10,000 X 60% of income from the home office = $6,000 from business use of the home
 - $6,000 - $4,000 other expenses = $2,000 available for home office expenses
 - $2,000 is less than $3,000 home office expenses, so you can deduct $2,000 of them this year, and carry the remaining $1,000 to next year.

3). In addition, if 30% of your income came from business conducted in your home office, then you would not be able to deduct any of them this year:
 - $10,000 X 30% of income from the home office = $3,000 from business use of the home
 - $3,000 - $4,000 other expenses = $0 available for home office expenses (this will never be less than zero)
 - You cannot deduct any home office expenses this year, but you can carry the entire $3,000 to next year.


5 Replies
Intuit Alumni
Jun 1, 2019 10:31:38 AM

It is likely that the income attributable to your home office and the other business expenses are limiting your home office expenses.    

If the home office expenses are limited and not allowed to be taken on the current year’s return, then they are carried forward to the next year as long as the actual home office expenses were being used and not the simplified method based solely on the square feet of the office.  Since you are using the simplified method, any expenses not allowed are lost and will not be carried forward, so disregard the information below about being able to carry the expenses forward.

After you take a look at the information below to understand the limitation, you might need to revisit your entry for the percent of business income attributed to your home office. 


There are some examples below that will illustrate this limitation a little better.

Income Earned from Home Office

The IRS limits the total of certain kinds of home office expenses - the ones you would not be able to deduct anywhere else on your tax return, such as your utilities and repairs - to the income earned from activities in your home office. Although these expenses cannot themselves create a loss on your business, you can carry over any unused portion to next year's home office deduction.

Here's how it works. Let's say
 - Your business income before any expenses was $10,000
 - All business expenses that would not limit your home office deduction were $4,000, and
 - The home office expenses were $3,000

1). If 90% of your income came from business conducted in your home office, then you can deduct all of your home office expenses:
 - $10,000 X 90% of income from the home office = $9,000 from business use of the home
 - $9,000 - $4,000 other expenses = $5,000 available for home office expenses
 - $5,000 is greater than $3,000 home office expenses, so you can deduct all of them.

2). However, if 60% of your income came from business conducted in your home office, then your home office expenses will be limited:
 - $10,000 X 60% of income from the home office = $6,000 from business use of the home
 - $6,000 - $4,000 other expenses = $2,000 available for home office expenses
 - $2,000 is less than $3,000 home office expenses, so you can deduct $2,000 of them this year, and carry the remaining $1,000 to next year.

3). In addition, if 30% of your income came from business conducted in your home office, then you would not be able to deduct any of them this year:
 - $10,000 X 30% of income from the home office = $3,000 from business use of the home
 - $3,000 - $4,000 other expenses = $0 available for home office expenses (this will never be less than zero)
 - You cannot deduct any home office expenses this year, but you can carry the entire $3,000 to next year.


Returning Member
Apr 12, 2023 10:25:24 PM

This is happening to me in 2023.

It was actually fine when I first ran the numbers.

I was just error-checking everything before submitting my taxes, and suddenly see this message.

I'm at a total loss for what to do.

Expert Alumni
Apr 13, 2023 8:56:57 AM

We'd love to help you complete your tax return, but need more information. Can you please clarify your question?

 

Provide more details about your situation.  What is the error message you received.

 

@rosepdx

Returning Member
Apr 11, 2024 2:07:47 PM

I am having the same issue for 2023.  I def. should qualify.

Expert Alumni
Apr 12, 2024 8:21:57 AM

To clarify, are you taking this deduction as an employee or as self-employed business person?

 

@tammydeviley