Tax write-offs for authors
Today's post is all about everyone's favorite time of the year -- springtime. Flowers bloom, birds sing, pollen clogs sinuses, and the IRS comes calling.
Here are a couple of helpful hints to help you as an author keep more of your hard-earned cash.
When you sign your first publishing contract, it's a good idea to set up a meeting with your accountant. And if you don't have one, you might want to consider getting one. Our accountant is also a tax attorney -- he stays on top of all of the new tax laws that could benefit his clients. Mike rocks!
There are all kinds of things that you can write-off on your taxes when you become a published (and paid) author:
Coming up tomorrow: I'll continue the "what I didn't know until I got published" series with the dangers of burnout (yep, it can happen). Then on Friday and into next week, I'll talk about Amazon rankings (ignore them), gifts for your publishing "team", and advertising.
Lisa
Here are a couple of helpful hints to help you as an author keep more of your hard-earned cash.
When you sign your first publishing contract, it's a good idea to set up a meeting with your accountant. And if you don't have one, you might want to consider getting one. Our accountant is also a tax attorney -- he stays on top of all of the new tax laws that could benefit his clients. Mike rocks!
There are all kinds of things that you can write-off on your taxes when you become a published (and paid) author:
- Office equipment and furnishings
- Office supplies
- Phone calls related to your work
- The part of your home exclusively devoted to your writing. (Check with your accountant about the possibility of deducting a percentage of your house payment or power bill if you do the majority of your writing from your home office.)
- Postage (mailing galleys back to your publisher or mailing out prizes to your fans)
- Research expenses
- Hired help to do office work or assist with editing or research (SNORT, like I can afford an assistant. Hmmm, I wonder if this covers hiring a chef so I don't have to cook. Note to self: Ask Mike. Second note to self: Ingore Mike laughing at you because you asked that question.)
- Reference books (Woot! B&N here I come!)
- Computer, printer, fax machine.
- Software (I finally broke down and bought the latest version of Word. I like it.)
- Magazines or newsletters related to your work. (I use the heck out of this one.)
- Advertising (Ads in magazines don't come cheap. I love this deduction.)
- Internet access (Yes, we all surf way too much; but if you email your agent and editor, and conduct writing business online, your monthy Internet bill is deductible.)
- Dues or memberships in writer's organizations (This can get pricey, too. Great deduction.)
- Seminars or training sessions to help you learn something related to your craft. (Conference expenses are deductible.)
- Travel expenses -- including food, lodging, mileage, and parking. (This applies to conferences, speaking engagements, events, book signings, anywhere you travel/drive related to your work.)
- Photography and photo processing (Need a new headshot? It's deductible.)
- Web design, promotional item design, website maintenance, website hosting fees
- Any additional artwork and design
- Entertainment related to your work -- everything from taking your editor to lunch, to throwing a party to celebrate your book's completion. This includes gifts for the bookstore manager who coordinates your booksigning, gifts for your publishing team (editor, editorial assistant, agent, agent's assistant, your publicist, etc.)
- KEEP RECORDS OF EVERYTHING!! Save every receipt, bill, everything. I use an accordion file folder and I keep it in my safe. (Yep, I'm extra special paranoid about losing important paperwork.)
Coming up tomorrow: I'll continue the "what I didn't know until I got published" series with the dangers of burnout (yep, it can happen). Then on Friday and into next week, I'll talk about Amazon rankings (ignore them), gifts for your publishing "team", and advertising.
Lisa
8 Comments:
Ooooh I love Tam's regards. And I think hiring a chef is a perfectly reasonable idea ;-)
Tam thought you would. ; )
I think a chef, and heck even a housekeeper is a perfectly reasonable request (though the IRS might not agree). Cooking and cleaning takes away from my writing time.
I think I'd like someone like Niles from The Nanny -- snarky, with a delicious British accent. ; )
Trying to think about what's so great about a British Accent...must be an across the pond thing cos to me it sounds normal! I like being British. Sometimes.
Really looking forward to the info on burnout! Done that once in my life, not nice.
I've heard that some British go gaga over Southern accents. ; ) I have a Southern accent and can't for the life of me understand why anyone would find it sexy. But to each his or her own. ; )
You know, I bet there's a case to be made about a chef and a housekeeper. If you're not fed, and if you're stressed out about your house being messy, then you can't write, and your publisher is upset, and your fans are upset, and all things bad happen. So a chef and a housekeeper are essential components of your writing process. Maybe you could write them off as "office supplies" or something ;-)
A British butler as an office supply -- I LIKE it! : )
Lisa, thanks for that comprehensive list. Great info to have. *runs to print it for her files*
Glad it's helpful. ; )
Lisa
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