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There is no specific amount of gross income (money coming in) or profit that you must meet in order for your expenses to be deductible.
Important note: You are only able to deduct your expenses in the year that you paid them - you cannot save them for a future year. Expenses incurred before you opened the business are considered "start-up" expenses, and up to $5,000 can be deducted now. If your start-up expenses exceed $5,000, you will captialize (treat as an asset rather than an expense) and amortize the balance.
To get to the input screens for your business (if it is a single-member LLC):
There is no specific amount of gross income (money coming in) or profit that you must meet in order for your expenses to be deductible.
Important note: You are only able to deduct your expenses in the year that you paid them - you cannot save them for a future year. Expenses incurred before you opened the business are considered "start-up" expenses, and up to $5,000 can be deducted now. If your start-up expenses exceed $5,000, you will captialize (treat as an asset rather than an expense) and amortize the balance.
To get to the input screens for your business (if it is a single-member LLC):
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