By Elizabeth Wasserman
Using technology makes filling in and shipping out your tax forms easier. Now, your use of gadgets can help you even more by reducing the amount of tax dollars you owe. Computers, iPhones, GPS devices, and other gadgets may be tax deductible if you use them for work. Congress recently added recession-era provisions to the tax code to allow small businesses to write off purchases of tech assets up to $250,000.
To Qualify for Tech Deductions
You can deduct your computers, software, gadgets, and other technology purchases on your income taxes if you’re using those items for business, tax experts say. “When you’re in business, virtually anything you buy for your business is deductible one way or the other,” says Stephen Fishman, author of several books for Nolo, the San Francisco-based legal publisher, including Tax Deductions for Professionals, Deduct It! Lower Your Small Business Taxes, and Home Business Tax Deductions: Keep What You Earn. If you own a small business, you can expense or depreciate the cost of all your business computers, software, smartphones, and GPS devices for employees who are on the road a lot, as well as Internet service and telecommunications service.
Here are other ways you may qualify to take some tech deductions:
Tax Write-offs for Techies
Before claiming any tech tax deductions, it’s a good idea to do your homework or consult an accountant, experts say. That said, there are two main types of tax deductions for business technology. One is called depreciation, which allows you to recover the cost of certain property over the course of several years. The other type of deduction is a straight business expense, which you can deduct wholly in the year you incur the expense. But some of these lines have blurred recently as Congress has sought to stimulate the economy and get businesses to spend more, and at the same time, the IRS issued opinions on how its rules apply to new types of technologies.
Here’s how some of these new rules impact your tech write-offs:
Tips on Using Tax-prep Software
Ever since the new U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner admitted to Congress in early 2009 that he used a commercial tax-preparation software package to file his personal income taxes, in which he underpaid federal taxes, there have been questions raised about tax software. But experts say not to worry. Geithner’s case was an anomaly; his tax problems stemmed from his work at the International Monetary Fund, which has highly unusual tax arrangements for its workers that aren’t likely to be covered in any tax program.
Tax-preparation software for personal and small business use can help most people decipher and keep updated with the ever-changing tax laws, including technology-related write-offs. But you do have to be careful. “You definitely have to buy a new version every year,” Jenkins says. “Congress guarantees that. They’re constantly dishing out all kinds of new rules.”
Elizabeth Wasserman is a freelance writer and editor based in Fairfax, Va. She writes for a variety of publications, including Congressional Quarterly and Inc. magazine, and she edits the online publication CIO Strategy Center.
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