Tax Deductions for House Cleaners & Cleaning Services
Self-employed house cleaners and cleaning service operators spend heavily on supplies, equipment, and transportation between jobs. These recurring costs are all deductible and can add up to significant tax savings over the course of a year.
Cleaning Supplies & Products
All-purpose cleaners, disinfectants, glass cleaners, and specialty products are deductible consumable supplies.
Cleaning Equipment
Vacuums, steam cleaners, carpet extractors, and other cleaning equipment are deductible.
Mileage / Vehicle Expenses
Business miles driven can be deducted using the standard mileage rate (67 cents/mile for 2024) or actual expenses (gas, insurance, repairs, depreciation). You must keep a mileage log.
Pro Tip: The standard mileage rate is simpler, but actual expenses may yield a larger deduction for expensive vehicles. You must choose one method in the first year you use the car for business.
Phone & Internet
The business-use percentage of your cell phone bill and internet service is deductible. If you use your phone 70% for business, you can deduct 70% of the bill.
Pro Tip: Keep a log for one representative month showing business vs. personal usage to establish your percentage.
Advertising & Marketing
Costs for promoting your business are deductible, including website hosting, social media ads, business cards, flyers, SEO services, and online directory listings.
Business Insurance
Premiums for professional liability (E&O), general liability, and business property insurance are deductible. This includes malpractice insurance for licensed professionals.
Uniforms & Work Clothing
Specialized clothing or uniforms required for your profession that are not suitable for everyday wear are deductible. This includes protective gear, scrubs, steel-toe boots, and branded uniforms.
Pro Tip: Regular clothing you also wear outside work is not deductible, even if you bought it specifically for work. The clothing must be unsuitable for everyday wear.
Supplies & Materials
Supplies and materials consumed in the course of your business are deductible. This includes items used up within the year that are not capital equipment.
Self-Employed Health Insurance
Self-employed individuals can deduct 100% of health insurance premiums for themselves, their spouse, and dependents. This is an above-the-line deduction taken on Form 1040, not Schedule C.
Pro Tip: This deduction cannot exceed your net self-employment income. If you're eligible for employer-sponsored coverage through a spouse, you cannot take this deduction.
Retirement Contributions (SEP-IRA / Solo 401k)
Self-employed individuals can contribute to a SEP-IRA (up to 25% of net SE earnings, max $69,000 for 2024) or Solo 401(k) with employee + employer contributions.
Pro Tip: A Solo 401(k) lets you contribute more at lower income levels because of the employee elective deferral ($23,000 for 2024 + catch-up if 50+).
Home Office Deduction
If you use part of your home regularly and exclusively for business, you can deduct a portion of rent/mortgage, utilities, and insurance. The simplified method allows $5/sq ft up to 300 sq ft ($1,500 max).
Pro Tip: The simplified method is easier but caps at $1,500. If your actual expenses exceed that, use the regular method and keep records of all housing costs.
Related Resources
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