Business Meals Deduction for Freelancers (50% Rule)

Updated May 6, 2026 2026 · 8 min read

Buying a coffee while working from a cafe is not a business expense. Buying lunch with a client to talk about a project is — half of it. Buying lunch alone in your car between two client visits is a gray area that depends entirely on whether you are traveling away from your "tax home."

The IRS rules on meals are easy to misunderstand and easy to abuse, which is why meals are an audit trigger for self-employed returns. Here is the practical 2026 guide for freelancers: what is deductible, what is not, the records you need to keep, and the special travel rules that change the math.

The 50% rule, in one sentence

For 2026, 50% of the cost of a qualifying business meal is deductible on Schedule C, line 24b. That is the default rule, and it has been the default rule for decades — except for a brief 2021-2022 window during the pandemic when restaurant meals were temporarily 100% deductible to help the restaurant industry. That 100% rule expired on December 31, 2022, and is gone. Anyone telling you in 2026 that meals are 100% deductible is using stale information.

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The 50% applies whether you pay $12 for tacos or $400 for steak. The IRS does not directly cap the dollar amount, but a "lavish or extravagant" expense can be partially disallowed if you cannot defend it. In practice this almost never comes up for freelancers — it is a rule aimed at expense-account abuse at corporations.

What qualifies as a business meal

A meal is deductible if it meets all of these:

Concrete examples that work:

What does NOT qualify

This is where most freelancers run into trouble. The following are not deductible, despite intuition:

The expenseWhy it fails
Solo lunch at your desk while workingYou eat lunch every day regardless of whether you work — personal expense
Coffee while working from a cafe aloneSame — personal expense, not business
Groceries for your home officePersonal living expense
"Thinking time" or "creative" solo mealsNo business contact, not traveling — personal
A meal you ate alone, then claim was "for an idea"No documented business purpose with another party
Lunch with your spouse if they are not in the businessPersonal — even if you discussed work
Drinks at a bar with friends, even if one is a clientMixed personal/business — not defensible without a clear business agenda
The cost of food at an "entertainment" eventOnly deductible if the food is separately stated and itemized on the bill

The single biggest gray area is the home-office snack: granola bars, the office coffee, the bottled water you buy in bulk for your desk. The IRS treats these as personal living expenses for the self-employed. They were briefly partially deductible for W-2 employers under the old "de minimis" rule, but solo freelancers cannot use that rule for themselves.

Entertainment is gone — and the food/entertainment split

Before 2018, freelancers could deduct 50% of "entertainment" — sporting events with a client, theater tickets, golf rounds, etc. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated that deduction entirely. Even if the event was 100% business, entertainment is now 0% deductible.

Meals at or during entertainment events survived, but only under tight rules. To deduct food at an entertainment event:

  1. The food and beverage cost must be stated separately on the receipt or invoice — not bundled into the ticket price.
  2. The 50% rule still applies to that food cost.

Example: you take a client to a baseball game. The $80/ticket is non-deductible entertainment. If you buy $30 of hot dogs and beers at the game with a separate receipt, that $30 is a business meal — $15 is deductible. If the "ticket" was actually a $200 luxury-suite package that included food but did not itemize it, none of it is deductible.

Travel meals — the rules are different

When you are traveling away from your "tax home" (the city or general area where your business is based) on a business trip that requires you to sleep or rest, every meal you buy on that trip is potentially a business meal — even if you eat alone. You do not need a client present.

The trip qualifies as travel if you are:

Day trips do not qualify as travel meals — eating lunch alone in another town and driving home the same day does not produce a deductible meal. The key trigger is the overnight requirement.

Per diem option

Instead of tracking each receipt on a business trip, sole proprietors can use the IRS per diem rate for meals and incidental expenses (M&IE). The federal rate varies by city and is published at GSA.gov. Standard CONUS rate for 2026 is $68/day for most cities, with high-cost cities up to $92/day. You still apply the 50% rule, so you actually deduct $34-$46/day per travel day.

Two important rules:

The records the IRS actually wants

For every meal you deduct, you need to be able to produce — within reason — the following:

For meals under $75, the IRS does not strictly require the physical receipt as long as you have the other records. But save them anyway — credit-card statements alone do not prove business purpose. The simplest workflow: snap a photo of the receipt right at the table, jot the names and topic in your notes app, and tag the credit-card transaction in your accounting tool with a note like "Lunch — Maria Lee (client) — Q3 scope."

Tools that make this easier: Keeper Tax, QuickBooks Self-Employed, Wave, and Expensify all support photo receipts plus a notes field. Even a Google Sheet works as long as you fill in the five fields above.

How to report meals on Schedule C

Total your qualifying meals for the year. Multiply by 50%. Enter the result on Schedule C, Line 24b ("Deductible meals"). Travel-related meals can also go on Line 24b, or some preparers split them onto Line 24a (Travel) — the IRS accepts either as long as you do not double count.

Example: a freelance designer in Atlanta has the following 2026 meal activity:

ItemSpentDeductible
Client lunches (12 throughout year)$640$320
SXSW trip — 4 days of meals$280$140
Coffee meetings with referral partners$135$68
Solo lunches at desk$1,200$0
Office coffee + snacks$340$0
Total deduction (Line 24b)$528

That $528 deduction saves real tax money — at a 22% federal bracket plus 15.3% SE tax, it cuts about $197 from the year's bill. Still, meals are usually a small line. Most freelancers find their biggest write-offs in mileage, home office, software, and health insurance — not meals. See the freelancer deductions checklist for the complete list.

Common audit triggers

Meals are one of the most-audited Schedule C categories because abuse is widespread. Patterns that draw scrutiny:

The defense is documentation. If you actually had a client lunch and noted who and why, you survive. If you tried to deduct the gym smoothie because you "thought about a client," you do not.

How meals fit your overall tax picture

Meal deductions reduce Schedule C net profit, which lowers both income tax and self-employment tax. The combined benefit is typically 25-40% of the deductible amount, depending on bracket and state. To see how that flows through your full picture — including SE tax, federal, state, and quarterly estimates — plug your numbers into the Quarterly1099 calculator.

Also worth knowing: if you claim a home office, your "tax home" is fixed at your residence. That can change which trips count as travel and which do not.

FAQs

Can I deduct coffee I drink while working at a cafe alone? No. Solo meals and beverages where you are not traveling and have no business contact are personal expenses, even if you happen to be working.

What about meals during a work-from-home day? Personal. Home office snacks, lunch, coffee — all non-deductible.

Are alcoholic drinks deductible? Yes, the 50% rule applies to drinks ordered as part of a qualifying business meal. A separate bar tab without food is harder to defend.

Can my spouse's meal be deducted if they joined the client lunch? Generally no, unless your spouse is involved in the business and has a documented role in that meeting.

Do I need a paper receipt for every meal? Below $75, no — but you do need date, amount, place, business purpose, and contact recorded somewhere. Above $75, save the actual receipt (a photo is fine).

What is the deduction for meals provided to my own employees? Meals provided to employees for the convenience of the employer are 50% deductible through 2025 and (under current law) become 0% deductible after that. As a solo freelancer with no W-2 employees, this rule rarely applies.