Every dollar you deduct reduces both your self-employment tax and income tax. At typical freelancer rates, a $1,000 deduction saves $300–$400 in actual cash. Here's every deduction you're legally entitled to — most freelancers miss at least 3 of these.
Enter your income and expenses — the calculator shows exactly how much each deduction saves you.
Open the Free Calculator →If you use a part of your home exclusively and regularly for business, you can deduct it. The space must be your principal place of business — a dedicated desk in a shared room doesn't qualify, but a spare bedroom used only as an office does.
Simplified Method: $5 × square footage, max 300 sq ft = up to $1,500 deduction. Easy, no receipts needed.
Regular Method: Deduct the actual percentage of your rent/mortgage, utilities, and insurance proportional to office size. Example: 150 sq ft office ÷ 1,200 sq ft home = 12.5% × $24,000 annual rent = $3,000 deduction.
Typical savings: $400 – $900/yearEvery mile you drive for business — client meetings, picking up supplies, going to a coworking space — is deductible at the IRS standard rate.
What counts: client visits, bank trips for business, post office runs, business conferences. What doesn't count: commuting from home to a regular office.
As a freelancer who works from home, almost all your driving is business driving.
| Business Miles/Year | Deduction | Tax Saved (~30%) |
|---|---|---|
| 2,000 miles | $1,400 | ~$420 |
| 5,000 miles | $3,500 | ~$1,050 |
| 10,000 miles | $7,000 | ~$2,100 |
Track it: Use MileIQ or Everlance — apps that auto-log trips via GPS. Takes 10 seconds to swipe "business" or "personal" per trip.
Typical savings: $400 – $2,100/yearAny equipment used for your freelance work is deductible. Under Section 179, you can deduct the full cost in the year of purchase — not spread over years.
Eligible items: laptops, desktop computers, tablets, monitors, external hard drives, printers, scanners, cameras, microphones, lighting, headphones, standing desks, ergonomic chairs used in your home office.
If used partly for personal use, deduct only the business-use percentage. A laptop you use 80% for work → deduct 80% of the cost.
Typical savings: $300 – $2,000/year depending on equipment purchasesIf you use it for work, it's deductible. This includes:
If you pay for your own health insurance (not through a spouse's employer plan), you can deduct 100% of the premiums — including dental and vision coverage.
This is an "above the line" deduction — it reduces your Adjusted Gross Income directly, which is even more valuable than a regular deduction because it lowers the income used to calculate your tax bracket.
Average freelancer health insurance premium: $400–700/month = $4,800–8,400/year in deductions.
Typical savings: $1,400 – $2,500/year — one of the biggest freelancer deductionsIf your spouse works and has employer health insurance that covers you, you can't deduct premiums for those months.
This is the biggest tax lever available to freelancers — and most don't use it.
| Account | 2026 Limit | Who it's for |
|---|---|---|
| Solo 401(k) | Up to $70,000 | Solo freelancers with no employees |
| SEP-IRA | 25% of net income, max $69,000 | Simple setup, any freelancer |
| Traditional IRA | $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+) | Lower-income supplement |
Real example: Freelancer earns $100,000. Contributes $30,000 to a Solo 401(k). Taxable income drops by $30,000 → saves roughly $9,000 in taxes in a single year. The money isn't gone — it's in your retirement account growing tax-free.
Potential savings: $2,000 – $20,000+/year — the most powerful deduction you haveYou can deduct the portion of your phone and internet bills used for business. Most freelancers use their phone and internet heavily for work — a 70–80% business-use estimate is reasonable for most.
Average internet: $80/month. Average phone: $60/month. At 70% business use: ($80 + $60) × 12 × 70% = $1,176 deduction.
Typical savings: $300 – $500/yearAny education that maintains or improves skills required in your current freelance work is deductible. The key word: current. Training for a new career doesn't qualify, but training that makes you better at your existing freelance work does.
Deductible: Udemy/Coursera courses in your field, industry books, professional conference tickets, certification exam fees, workshop fees, professional memberships (Freelancers Union, AIGA, etc.).
Typical savings: $200 – $600/yearMeals where you discuss business with a client, prospect, or colleague are 50% deductible. You must document: who attended, what was discussed, the business purpose.
Easiest documentation: snap a photo of the receipt and write a one-line note in your expense app ("Lunch with [client] to discuss website redesign project").
What doesn't qualify: meals alone while working, meals with no business discussion.
Typical savings: $100 – $400/yearAll marketing spend is 100% deductible: Google Ads, Facebook Ads, LinkedIn Premium, business cards, your website design and development costs, logo design, portfolio hosting, sponsored posts, PR services, and any freelancer marketplace fees (Upwork, Fiverr, Toptal service fees).
Typical savings: varies widely — but every dollar spent is worth ~$0.30 back in tax savingsFees paid to CPAs, tax preparers, bookkeepers, and attorneys for business-related matters are fully deductible. This includes the cost of tax preparation software if you use it for your business return.
Important: the deductible portion is only for business-related services. A lawyer who helps with both personal and business matters — only the business portion is deductible.
Typical savings: $150 – $500/yearThe IRS lets you deduct 50% of your SE tax from your Adjusted Gross Income. You don't need receipts — the calculator handles this automatically.
Example: $60,000 income → SE tax ≈ $8,479 → deduct 50% = $4,239 off your AGI. At the 22% bracket, that saves ~$933 in federal income tax.
Typical savings: $700 – $2,000/year — happens automatically, just make sure your tax software applies it| Deduction | Potential Annual Deduction | Tax Saved (est. 30%) |
|---|---|---|
| Home Office | $1,500 – $5,000 | $450 – $1,500 |
| Business Mileage (5K miles) | $3,500 | $1,050 |
| Equipment (laptop, etc.) | $1,000 – $5,000 | $300 – $1,500 |
| Software & Subscriptions | $500 – $3,000 | $150 – $900 |
| Health Insurance Premiums | $4,800 – $8,400 | $1,440 – $2,520 |
| Solo 401(k) Contribution | Up to $70,000 | Up to $21,000 |
| Phone & Internet (70%) | $1,000 – $1,500 | $300 – $450 |
| Education & Development | $500 – $2,000 | $150 – $600 |
| 50% SE Tax Deduction | $3,000 – $6,000 | $700 – $1,500 |
Use a separate business bank account and credit card for all business expenses. At tax time, every transaction is automatically categorized and documented. This single habit eliminates 90% of the hassle of claiming deductions — and protects you in an audit.
Enter your income and annual expenses — the calculator shows your tax before and after deductions.
Calculate With My Deductions →For informational purposes only — not tax advice. Consult a CPA for your specific situation.