Home Office Deduction for Freelancers

Updated April 2026 · 8 min read

The home office deduction is one of the most lucrative — and most misunderstood — tax breaks for freelancers. Used correctly, it can shelter $1,500 to $10,000+ per year. Used incorrectly, it's an audit magnet. This article walks through the rules, both methods, and the math.

Who qualifies

Two requirements, both must be true:

  1. Regular use. You use the space regularly for business, not occasionally.
  2. Exclusive use. The space is used only for business. A desk in the corner of a guest bedroom that doubles as your kid's playroom doesn't qualify. A dedicated room with a closing door does.

The space must also be either your principal place of business OR a place where you regularly meet clients. Most freelancers easily meet the principal-place test if they don't have an external office.

Method 1: Simplified ($5/sq ft, capped at $1,500)

Multiply business square footage by $5/sq ft, capped at 300 sq ft (so max $1,500). No expense tracking needed. Report on Schedule C Line 30 directly.

Example: a 200 sq ft home office = 200 × $5 = $1,000 deduction.

Pros: zero paperwork, no Form 8829 required, no depreciation recapture if you sell the home.
Cons: capped at $1,500. Most apartment-renting freelancers can beat this with the actual method.

Method 2: Actual (percentage of home expenses)

Calculate the % of your home used for business, then apply that % to actual home expenses (rent or mortgage interest, utilities, insurance, depreciation).

Step 1: Calculate business %. If your home is 1,000 sq ft and your office is 150 sq ft: 15%.

Step 2: Add up all home expenses for the year:

Step 3: Apply business %. $27,920 × 15% = $4,188 home office deduction.

Compare to the simplified method's $1,500 — the actual method gives the renter $2,688 more in deductions.

Homeowners: depreciation matters

If you own your home, you can also deduct a percentage of property taxes, mortgage interest, and home depreciation. The depreciation piece is tricky — when you eventually sell the home, you'll owe depreciation recapture tax on the amount you've depreciated. For most freelancers staying in their home long-term, this is fine. For those planning to sell within 5 years, the simplified method may be cleaner.

Real-world examples

Example A — Apartment renter, NYC

Actual method wins by $5,775. At a 32% combined federal+state+SE rate, that's ~$1,848 in tax savings from picking the right method.

Example B — Suburban homeowner

Actual method wins by ~$1,500 — but creates depreciation recapture risk on sale.

Form 8829 — what to fill out

If you use the actual method, you must file Form 8829 with your Schedule C. The form asks for:

  1. Business sq ft and total home sq ft
  2. Direct expenses (paint just for the office: 100% deductible)
  3. Indirect expenses (rent, utilities: business % deductible)
  4. Depreciation calculation (homeowners only)

The form does the math; you just need accurate numbers.

Limit: home office can't create a loss

The home office deduction can reduce your business profit to zero, but it can't create a loss on Schedule C. Excess home office expenses carry forward to future years. Most freelancers running profitable businesses never hit this limit.

Common mistakes

The bottom line

For renters in moderate-to-high-rent cities, the actual method usually beats simplified by $1,000-$5,000+ per year. For low-rent rural homeowners, the simplified method is often easier and not much worse. Spend 30 minutes calculating both methods once a year and pick whichever pays more.

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