
Home Office Deduction 2026: Complete Guide to Maximizing Your Tax Savings
Who qualifies for the 2026 home office deduction: $5/sq ft simplified method (max $1,500) vs Form 8829 actual expenses, and why W-2 remote workers can't claim it.

Form 8829, Expenses for Business Use of Your Home, is the IRS form self-employed people file with Schedule C to deduct actual home office expenses: the business share of mortgage interest or rent, real estate taxes, insurance, utilities, repairs, and depreciation. The form runs 44 lines across four parts, and the final deduction on line 36 transfers to Schedule C, line 30. These instructions follow the 2025 revision of Form 8829 (the version you file with your 2025 tax return in 2026), verified line by line against the official IRS form and instructions.
Form 8829 key numbers (2025 form, filed in 2026):
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Who files | Self-employed (Schedule C) claiming actual home office expenses |
| Business percentage (line 7) | Office square footage ÷ total home square footage |
| Expense columns | Direct, column (a): 100% deductible. Indirect, column (b): multiplied by business % |
| Income limit (line 15) | Business gross income minus the business share of mortgage interest, real estate taxes, and casualty losses |
| Depreciation rate (line 41) | 2.564% if first used for business after May 12, 1993, and before 2025; monthly rates (2.461% for January down to 0.107% for December) if first used in 2025 |
| Carryover (lines 43-44) | Unused expenses carry to next year's Form 8829, lines 25 and 31 |
| Simplified alternative | $5 per sq ft, max 300 sq ft ($1,500 cap), claimed directly on Schedule C, line 30, with no Form 8829 |
Legal basis: IRC §280A; 2025 Form 8829 and 2025 Instructions for Form 8829; IRS Publication 587.
Before filling out Form 8829, check which method actually pays more:
| Feature | Simplified Method | Form 8829 (Regular Method) |
|---|---|---|
| Calculation | $5 × sq ft (max 300 sq ft) | Actual expenses × business % |
| Maximum deduction | $1,500 | No cap (limited by income) |
| Record keeping | Minimal | Detailed receipts required |
| Depreciation | None | Yes (recaptured on sale) |
| Carryover | No | Yes (unused amounts carry forward) |
| Best for | Small offices, low housing costs | Larger offices, high rent/mortgage |
Rule of thumb: If your home office is larger than 300 sq ft or your housing costs exceed $30,000/year, Form 8829 likely provides a bigger deduction.
For more on the simplified method and qualification requirements, see our Home Office Deduction Guide 2026.
Form 8829 is for self-employed individuals who:
✅ Use part of their home regularly and exclusively for business ✅ Want to deduct actual home expenses (not simplified method) ✅ Have housing costs high enough to exceed $1,500 deduction
To claim any home office deduction (simplified or regular), you must meet these tests:
1. Exclusive Use Test The area must be used ONLY for business—no personal use allowed.
Exception: Inventory storage and daycare facilities have modified exclusive use rules.
2. Regular Use Test You must use the space regularly (consistently), not just occasionally.
3. Principal Place of Business Test (One of These)
❌ W-2 employees: the IRS instructions state employees cannot deduct home office expenses on their personal returns ❌ Partners and farmers (Schedule F) claiming actual expenses: use the worksheet in Publication 587 instead ❌ Taxpayers who elected the simplified method for the same home this year ❌ Anyone not meeting exclusive/regular use tests
Form 8829 has four parts:
One sequencing note: line 30 in Part II needs the depreciation result from line 42, so in practice you complete Part I, then Part III, then Part II.
This section determines what percentage of your home is used for business.

Enter the square footage of the part of your home used regularly and exclusively for business. The form also counts space used regularly for daycare or for storing inventory or product samples, the two uses with relaxed exclusivity rules.
Example: 250 sq ft home office.
Measuring tips:
Enter the total square footage of your entire home. Example: a 1,500 sq ft apartment.
This is your business use percentage: 250 ÷ 1,500 = 16.67%.
These lines apply only if you operate a daycare facility in your home. They calculate a modified percentage based on hours of use; line 5 is 8,760 hours (the full year) unless you started or stopped daycare during the year.
For most taxpayers, this equals Line 3. For daycare facilities not used exclusively for business, multiply line 6 by line 3. In our example: 16.67%.
This section calculates your actual deduction based on expenses.
Enter the amount from Schedule C, Line 29 (tentative profit before the home office deduction), plus any gain derived from the business use of your home, minus any business loss not related to the home itself. If part of your income comes from work done at other locations, the IRS instructions require you to allocate first.
Example: Schedule C line 29 shows $80,000.
Important: Your home office deduction cannot exceed the income limit built from this number (line 15, below). Any excess carries forward to next year (Part IV).
Form 8829 distinguishes between two types of expenses:
Direct Expenses (Column a):
Indirect Expenses (Column b):
These are your "Tier 1" expenses: costs that would be deductible as personal itemized deductions even without a home office.
Line 9: Casualty Losses Enter the business portion of casualty losses from federally declared disasters (figured on a worksheet version of Form 4684).
Line 10: Deductible Mortgage Interest
Line 11: Real Estate Taxes
The Line 11 Worksheet, printed in the IRS Instructions for Form 8829, splits the business share of your real estate taxes between line 11 and line 17 when the SALT limit caps your state and local tax deduction. For 2025 returns the SALT limit is $40,000 ($20,000 married filing separately), phasing down once modified AGI passes $500,000 but never below $10,000.
The worksheet's mechanics: line 6 computes the business share of your real estate taxes (taxes on the home × your line 7 percentage). The portion that still fits under your SALT limit goes in column (a) of line 11; whatever doesn't fit flows to line 17 as excess real estate taxes, where it stays deductible against business income.
Line 15 matters more than it looks: it is the ceiling for all remaining operating expenses. Tier 1 expenses come off your business income first because they are deductible anyway; everything after lines 16-22 is limited to what's left on line 15.
Excess real estate taxes on Form 8829 (line 17) are the business share of property taxes that could not go on line 11, either because you claim the standard deduction or because the SALT limit already absorbed them. Excess mortgage interest (line 16) works the same way for interest above the personal home mortgage deduction limits. Both stay fully deductible against business income; they just move down to the income-limited tier.
Enter homeowners or renters insurance in the indirect column. Example: $1,500 annual premium in column (b).
If you rent rather than own, enter your annual rent in column (b). Example: $24,000. Homeowners leave this line blank.
Enter home repairs and maintenance costs.
Direct (Column a): Repairs only to office space, like painting the office ($300) Indirect (Column b): Repairs to the general home, like an HVAC repair ($500)
Enter utility costs in the indirect column, unless you have separate meters for your office. Example: electric $2,400 + gas $1,200 + water $600 = $4,200 in column (b).
Enter other home-related business expenses not listed above:
Line 23: Add lines 16 through 22 in each column. (Not lines 9-22: the Tier 1 expenses were already totaled on line 12.) Line 24: Multiply Line 23 Column (b) by Line 7 (business percentage) Line 25: Carryover of prior year operating expenses (see next section) Line 26: Add Line 23 column (a), Line 24, and Line 25 Line 27: Allowable operating expenses: the smaller of Line 15 or Line 26
Note that the cap on line 27 is line 15 (income remaining after Tier 1 expenses), not line 8.
Example calculation (our running example is a renter with no mortgage or property taxes, so lines 9-14 are zero and line 15 equals line 8):
| Step | Amount |
|---|---|
| Direct expenses, line 23(a): office painting | $300 |
| Indirect expenses, line 23(b): $1,500 insurance + $24,000 rent + $500 repairs + $4,200 utilities | $30,200 |
| Line 24 = $30,200 × 16.67% | $5,034 |
| Line 26 = $300 + $5,034 | $5,334 |
| Line 15 income limit | $80,000 |
| Line 27 allowable operating expenses | $5,334 |
Line 25 is where operating expenses that exceeded a prior year's income limit finally get deducted. Enter the amount from line 43 of your 2024 Form 8829. If you used the simplified method in 2024, enter the amount from line 6a of your 2024 Simplified Method Worksheet instead; the carryover survives a year on the simplified method, it just can't be used in that year.
Line 28: Subtract Line 27 from Line 15. This is the room left for excess casualty losses and depreciation Line 29: Excess casualty losses: the business percentage of casualty losses not already claimed on Line 9 Line 30: Depreciation of your home, from Line 42 (complete Part III first) Line 31: Carryover of prior year excess casualty losses and depreciation (2024 Form 8829, Line 44) Line 32: Add Lines 29 through 31 Line 33: Allowable excess casualty losses and depreciation: the smaller of Line 28 or Line 32 Line 34: Add Lines 14, 27, and 33 Line 35: Casualty loss portion, if any, from Lines 14 and 33 (carried to Form 4684) Line 36: Subtract Line 35 from Line 34. This is your allowable home office deduction. Enter it on Schedule C, line 30
If you OWN your home, you can also depreciate the business portion. Homes are depreciated as 39-year nonresidential real property (straight line, mid-month convention), which is where the percentages below come from.
Important: When you sell your home, you'll need to recapture this depreciation (pay tax on it), even if you later switch to the simplified method.
Use the values on the date you first started using the home for business, and don't adjust them afterward for depreciation claimed or later market swings.
Adjusted basis: Usually what you paid, plus improvements made before business use began.
Fair market value: What the home was worth when you started using it for business.
Example: purchase price $350,000, FMV at start of business use $400,000. Enter $350,000, the smaller of the two.
Enter the land value included in line 37 (you can't depreciate land). Example: $100,000.
Line 37 minus Line 38: $350,000 − $100,000 = $250,000.
Line 39 times Line 7 (business percentage): $250,000 × 16.67% = $41,675.
If you first used your home for business in 2025, the rate depends on the month (mid-month convention):
| Month first used in 2025 | Rate |
|---|---|
| January | 2.461% |
| February | 2.247% |
| March | 2.033% |
| April | 1.819% |
| May | 1.605% |
| June | 1.391% |
| July | 1.177% |
| August | 0.963% |
| September | 0.749% |
| October | 0.535% |
| November | 0.321% |
| December | 0.107% |
If you first used the home for business after May 12, 1993, and before 2025: Use 2.564%. (For business use that began before May 13, 1993, the IRS points you to the percentage tables in Publication 946 or, before 1987, Publication 534.)
If you used the simplified method last year, you still use this table: a home first used for business in 2024 gets 2.564% even though no Form 8829 was filed that year.
Line 40 times the Line 41 percentage. Enter the result here and on Line 30 in Part II.
Example: first used for business in 2020, so $41,675 × 2.564% = $1,069.
Attach Form 4562 only if you first used the home for business in 2025 or placed additions and improvements in service during 2025.
If your home office expenses exceed the income limit, the excess carries forward to next year, where it is subject to that year's limit, whether or not you still live in the same home.
Line 26 minus Line 27. If zero or negative, no carryover.
Line 32 minus Line 33. If zero or negative, no carryover.
These carryovers appear on next year's Form 8829, Lines 25 and 31.
Scenario: Dana, a freelance consultant who claims the standard deduction (so her mortgage interest and property taxes go on lines 16 and 17, and line 15 equals line 8).
Home details:
Annual expenses:
Schedule C tentative profit (line 29): $120,000
| Form 8829 line | Entry | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Line 7 | Business percentage: 200 ÷ 1,200 | 16.67% |
| Line 8 | Tentative profit from Schedule C, line 29 | $120,000 |
| Lines 9-14 | Blank (standard deduction, no casualty losses) | $0 |
| Line 15 | Income limit: $120,000 − $0 | $120,000 |
| Line 16(b) | Excess mortgage interest | $18,000 |
| Line 17(b) | Excess real estate taxes | $6,000 |
| Line 18(b) | Insurance | $1,800 |
| Line 20(a) / 20(b) | Office painting / general repairs | $400 / $1,200 |
| Line 21(b) | Utilities | $3,600 |
| Line 23 | Totals: column (a) $400, column (b) $30,600 | — |
| Line 24 | $30,600 × 16.67% | $5,101 |
| Line 26 | $400 + $5,101 | $5,501 |
| Line 27 | Smaller of line 15 or line 26 | $5,501 |
| Lines 37-40 | Building basis $320,000 × 16.67% | $53,344 |
| Lines 41-42 | $53,344 × 2.564% (first used 2023) | $1,368 |
| Lines 30, 33 | Depreciation, within the line 28 limit | $1,368 |
| Line 36 | Total: $0 + $5,501 + $1,368 → Schedule C, line 30 | $6,869 |
Compared to the simplified method:
Problem: Counting a room that's also used for personal purposes.
Impact: Entire deduction could be disallowed in audit.
Solution: Only claim space used 100% for business. Use room dividers or designate specific areas if needed.
Problem: Completing Part II but skipping Part III.
Impact: Missing significant additional deduction.
Solution: If you own your home, always calculate depreciation in Part III.
Problem: Losing track of expenses that exceeded income limitation.
Impact: Wasted deductions that should carry forward.
Solution: Keep prior year Form 8829s and enter carryovers on Lines 25 and 31.
Problem: Guessing at square footage instead of measuring.
Impact: Over or under-claiming the deduction.
Solution: Measure carefully. Keep a floor plan with measurements in your records.
Problem: Trying to use both methods for the same home in the same year.
Impact: The rules don't allow it; electing the simplified method for a home means no Form 8829 for that home that year.
Solution: Choose one method per home per year. You can switch methods in different years, and prior-year carryovers (lines 25 and 31) survive a simplified-method year.
When I moved to working from home full-time, I used the simplified method for a year before checking the math; Form 8829 would have given me nearly three times the deduction. Run both numbers before you default to the easy option.
Use Form 8829 when:
✅ Your home office exceeds 300 sq ft ✅ Your total housing costs exceed $30,000/year ✅ You own your home (to claim depreciation) ✅ You have excess expenses to carry forward ✅ Your calculated deduction exceeds $1,500
Stick with simplified method when:
✅ Small office (under 300 sq ft) ✅ Lower housing costs ✅ You want minimal record-keeping ✅ You plan to sell your home soon (avoid depreciation recapture)
Form 8829 rewards people who track home expenses all year, not just in April. Jupid connects to your bank and categorizes transactions automatically with 95.9% accuracy, so utility bills, insurance premiums, rent, and repair costs are already sorted when you sit down to fill out lines 16 through 22. Forward a repair receipt by WhatsApp or iMessage and Jupid attaches it to the matching transaction. Need a number mid-form? Ask your AI accountant "how much did I spend on utilities this year?" in chat and get the answer without digging through statements.
Form 8829 takes more effort than the simplified method, but for many home-based business owners, the additional deduction is worth it. The key principles:
The time you spend completing Form 8829 could save you thousands in taxes each year.
Disclaimer
This article provides general information about tax deductions and should not be considered tax advice. Tax laws change frequently, and individual circumstances vary significantly. For advice specific to your situation, consult with a qualified tax professional.
Tax Year: 2025 (returns filed in 2026) Last Updated: July 11, 2026

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