Home Based Business: Your Ultimate Tax Shelter
by Stephen Pope
Published on this site: January 25th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

Starting and operating your own home based business is the
ultimate tax shelter.
Although this article has been written from a Canadian income
tax perspective, the principles should be practical in other
tax jurisdictions.
- Non-Deductible Personal Living Expenses
All of us have expenses that we incur in everyday living.
Either you rent an apartment or house or you own your residence.
Utilities, insurance, rent, mortgage interest, property
taxes, and maintenance and repairs are typical costs of
operating your home.
Likely, you have a vehicle which also consumes large amounts
of cash.
Add to this, dining out, entertainment, gifts, alcoholic
beverages, office supplies, telephone and many other expenditures,
and you have a significant cash outflow.
In most cases, as an employee, retired person, investor,
student, or homemaker, few of these expenses are tax-deductible
to you.
This means that you must earn a considerable income, pay
your income taxes first, and then use what is left to pay
all your expenses.
Some employees may be able to write-off some of their employment
related expenses, if such are required by their contract
of employment. However, even in this situation, the tax
deductions are very limited.
- Your Own Home Based Business Means Tax Deductions
Now consider the situation where you decide to start your
own home based business.
Suddenly, many of your everyday expenses are now being used
for business purposes and are now tax-deductible.
If you use one quarter of your home exclusively for business
use, you will be able to deduct (or write-off) one quarter
of all related occupancy costs. These expenses may include
maintenance and repairs (that are not capital in nature),
rent, mortgage interest, house or apartment insurance, power,
heat, water, and property taxes.
As well, your vehicle expenses used for business purposes
are another tax write-off. If you use your car ninety percent
for business purposes, you can deduct ninety percent of
your vehicle insurance, gas and oil, maintenance and repairs,
car washes, license and registration, auto club, loan interest
(within certain limits), and other costs from your income.
You may also write-off one hundred percent of your business
related parking. Capital Cost Allownance (C.C.A.) on your
vehicle is also allowed for income tax purposes; depreciation
is the accounting term for this tax deduction.
The Canadian government also allows as a deduction, fifty
percent of your business related entertainment expenses.
Also tax-deductible are business related telephone expenses,
Internet access, office supplies, travel, books, memberships,
and a host of other expenditures.
- Income Splitting with Your Home Based Business
If you have a high paying job, you will pay higher taxes
because the rates of tax increase as your income does.
With your own business, you can pay reasonable wages to
your spouse and children. In this way, you can legally divert
income taxed at your higher rate to your family members
that are in a lower tax bracket.
This tax saving technique is called income splitting. It
is another good reason why your own home based business
is the ultimate tax shelter.
- Even a Part-Time Home Based Business Works
Even if you have a full-time job, running a part-time business
can be advantageous.
Of course, you must actually run a real, moneymaking business.
Any attempts to write unprofitable hobbies off will ultimately
fail with the taxation authorities.
If you earned eight thousand dollars during the year from
your part-time business and were able to deduct eight thousand
dollars in car expenses, home office expenses, entertainment
costs, office supplies, and other business related expenditures,
you would have a net business income of nil. You would pay
no tax on this additional income.
Don`t miss this important point! Although these tax deductions
are actual, legitimate business expenses, these are expenditures
you would probably have made anyway, whether you had a business
or not.
Thus, by rearranging your affairs to start and operate a home
based business, you have been able to convert non-deductible
personal expenditures into legally deductible business expenses.
You have successfully sheltered your income from tax and have
split your income with family members in lower tax brackets.
Yes, indeed, your home based business has become your ultimate
tax shelter.

J. Stephen Pope, President of Pope Consulting Inc.,
has been helping clients to earn maximum business profits
for over twenty-five years. For more profitable Work at Home
Small Business Ideas, visit http://www.yenommarketinginc.com/

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