How to Calculate Home Office Tax Deduction
What is Home Office Tax Deduction?
The Home Office Tax Deduction Calculator determines your eligible deduction for using part of your home exclusively for business, comparing the simplified method ($5/sq ft, max $1,500) with the regular method based on actual expenses and business-use percentage.
Formula
- A_off
- Office Square Footage (sq ft) — Dedicated home office area used exclusively for business
- A_home
- Total Home Square Footage (sq ft) — Total living area of the home
- E
- Total Home Expenses ($/year) — Annual deductible home expenses including mortgage interest, utilities, insurance
- BU
- Business Use Percentage (%) — Ratio of office space to total home space
Step-by-Step Guide
- 1Enter your home office square footage and total home square footage
- 2For the regular method, input actual expenses: mortgage/rent, utilities, insurance, repairs, depreciation
- 3The calculator computes both methods and shows which yields the larger deduction
- 4Review eligibility requirements: exclusive and regular business use
Worked Examples
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- ✕Claiming a home office space that is not used "exclusively and regularly" for business — a guest room with a desk does not qualify
- ✕Forgetting that W-2 employees cannot claim the home office deduction since the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (only self-employed)
- ✕Not considering that the regular method allows home depreciation which can trigger recapture tax when you sell the home
Frequently Asked Questions
Can remote employees claim the home office deduction?
No. Since 2018, W-2 employees cannot claim the home office deduction on federal taxes, even if their employer requires them to work from home. Only self-employed individuals (Schedule C, 1099) qualify. Some states like New York still allow it for employees.
Which method gives a bigger deduction?
The regular method almost always yields a larger deduction for offices in expensive homes, but requires detailed record-keeping. The simplified method ($5/sq ft, max $1,500) is easier but caps at $1,500 regardless of actual expenses.
Does the home office deduction increase audit risk?
Historically it drew scrutiny, but the IRS has become more accepting as remote work is now common. The key requirement is exclusive and regular business use — document this with photos and a floor plan.
Ready to calculate? Try the free Home Office Tax Deduction Calculator
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