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If I'm just starting out with Youtube and have created a DIY & Cooking channel, but haven't made any income yet, am I able to claim any of the expenses yet?
@mgd1231 You can only start deducting your expenses in the year that your activity is open for business. So, technically you could deduct the expenses in 2020 if you were available for sales but no one purchased anything yet, but for practical purposes you would not be open until the year you actually started receiving income.
You can write off expenses you incurred before you opened your business as start-up expenses in the year you are open. You can read more about start-up expenses here:
https://quickbooks.intuit.com/r/taxes/3-tax-deductions-available-only-to-startup-businesses/
What section under Schedule C expenses do you recommend to list this type of deduction?
What deductions? There are several other users in this thread.
Ah, to the original question this thread was about:
"I've started doing fashion related item (i.e purses and shoes) reviews on Youtube.."
What section under Schedule C expenses would you list a deduction for products/clothing related to your YouTube business?
@carburn wrote:
Ah, to the original question this thread was about:
"I've started doing fashion related item (i.e purses and shoes) reviews on Youtube.."
What section under Schedule C expenses would you list a deduction for products/clothing related to your YouTube business?
That's tricky and is going to be an audit risk.
If you are not in the business of selling the clothing items, then they are not inventory. For a reviewer, they would be supplies. However, if the items are then converted to personal use, you run a real risk at audit because you can't use your business as an excuse to buy personal items and get a write-off. You really shouldn't deduct them as business expenses in that case.
If you sell the items after reviewing them, that is business income. If you deduct $100 for the purchase of a pair of shoes, and deduct $100 as a business expense, and then you sell them used for $50, that $50 is business income.
I have a similar question- we review campgrounds- am I able to expense the cost of the overnight fee and gas? Or is it only a portion of it?
Also- if we purchased a product for a video- but continue to use the product (rarely- but did not sell it) do we expense a portion of it and how do we tell what portion to expense?
You can expense the cost of overnight fee and gas as travel expenses. The whole expense would be deductible if the trip was 100% business, otherwise you should prorate the cost based on the time of the trip spent on business. As far as the product is concerned, I think you mean your purchased it for the business, but then used it for personal purposes. If so, you can set it up for depreciation in TurboTax where you will be asked to enter when you stopped using it for business purposes, and you will get a depreciation deduction for the period of time it was used in the business. That would apply to a large purchase. If you purchased something of nominal value, you can apply a percentage to it to reflect the business use portion of the product versus personal use and take a partial deduction for it.
@TaraTa wrote:
Also- if we purchased a product for a video- but continue to use the product (rarely- but did not sell it) do we expense a portion of it and how do we tell what portion to expense?
Please seek professional advice.
The complicated answer is that when you buy an asset for your business (an asset is technically any durable item with an expected lifespan more than 1 year) you can depreciate it during the time it is used for business, then if you convert it to business use, you stop taking depreciation. For example, if a $1000 bicycle has an depreciable lifespan of 5 years and you use it in business for one month before converting it to personal use, you would be entitled to a deduction of $16 for depreciation.
This gets more complicated because there is a tax procedure to make taxes simpler for small businesses that allow you to expense most assets that cost less than $2500. In this case, if you expense the bike, its cost basis is now zero, so it carries that zero cost basis when converted to personal use. That then means that if you ever sell it, the money you get is taxable income (called depreciation recapture). But you could conceivably ride the bike until it wears out and then throw it away, and you technically never paid for it since you deducted the cost from your business income. While this fits the letter of the regulations, you may run into a problem with the IRS definition of business expenses. A business expense is whatever is "ordinary and necessary" for the business. I would be worried that buying expensive items and converting them to personal use after a brief business use period would not be "ordinary and necessary". The ordinary and necessary expense of reviewing an item might be seen as the cost of operating that item for the review period, not the cost of permanently owning the item. Businesses are supposed to operate in a businesslike manner which includes maximizing business profit. If a bakery bought 10 professional ovens to test them and kept one in use, they wouldn't leave the other 9 gather dust in a corner, they would sell them to recover their cost and maximize their business profit. Buying full price products, expensing the entire cost, and then converting them to personal use is a way of minimizing business profit to enrich your personal life.
I honestly can't say what would happen in an audit. It feels wrong, but might be legally correct (as long as you report taxable income whenever you sell the items, new or used). I would recommend professional advice.
I'm interested in the answer to your scenario. Three question. I know that the car question is quite intriguing, but I'm actually interested in S3 question as someone who will be doing fashion/decor aesthetic youtube channel as an extension of my business.
I'm interested in the answer to your scenario. Three question.
"Scenario 3: This is an add on to the original poster’s question.... If they buy an item for $500 and do a YouTube review on it but then every single time they do a future review on a different item that $500 item is on display in the background of their videos as part of their branding image. Each time they review a new item they put it on a shelf so everyone can see it in the background of all future videos. At that point the item is 100% for business use only. Can each item be deducted 100% in this scenario?"
I know that the car question is quite intriguing, but I'm actually interested in S3 question as someone who will be doing fashion/decor aesthetic youtube channel as an extension of my business. Thank you!
@DDBloomandzoom wrote:
I'm interested in the answer to your scenario. Three question. I know that the car question is quite intriguing, but I'm actually interested in S3 question as someone who will be doing fashion/decor aesthetic youtube channel as an extension of my business.
What scenario? What S3 question? This is a 6 year old discussion with many comments, you should probably start a new topic with your specific question.
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