Insight

How Start-Up Expenses are Handled on your Tax Return

How Start-Up Expenses are Handled on your Tax Return | Tax Preparation in Washington DC | Weyrich, Cronin & Sorra

Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, government officials are seeing a large increase in the number of new businesses being launched. From June 2020 through June 2021, the U.S. Census Bureau reports that business applications are up 18.6%. The Bureau measures this by the number of businesses applying for an Employer Identification Number.

Entrepreneurs often don’t know that many of the expenses incurred by start-ups can’t be currently deducted. You should be aware that the way you handle some of your initial expenses can make a large difference in your federal tax bill.

How to Treat Expenses for Tax Purposes

If you’re starting or planning to launch a new business, keep these three rules in mind:

  1. Start-up costs include those incurred or paid while creating an active trade or business — or investigating the creation or acquisition of one.
  2. Under the tax code, taxpayers can elect to deduct up to $5,000 of business start-up and $5,000 of organizational costs in the year the business begins. As you know, $5,000 doesn’t go very far these days! The $5,000 deduction is reduced dollar-for-dollar by the amount by which your total start-up or organizational costs exceed $50,000. Any remaining costs must be amortized over 180 months on a straight-line basis.
  3. No deductions or amortization deductions are allowed until the year when “active conduct” of your new business begins. Generally, that means the year when the business has all the pieces in place to start earning revenue. To determine if a taxpayer meets this test, the IRS and courts generally ask questions such as: Did the taxpayer undertake the activity intending to earn a profit? Was the taxpayer regularly and actively involved? Did the activity actually begin?

Eligible Expenses

In general, start-up expenses are those you make to:

  • Investigate the creation or acquisition of a business,
  • Create a business, or
  • Engage in a for-profit activity in anticipation of that activity becoming an active business.

An expense also must be one that would be deductible if it were incurred after a business began to qualify for the election, . One example is money you spend analyzing potential markets for a new product or service.

To be eligible as an “organization expense,” an expense must be related to establishing a corporation or partnership. Some examples of organization expenses are legal and accounting fees for services related to organizing a new business and filing fees paid to the state of incorporation.

Plan Now

If you have start-up expenses that you’d like to deduct this year, you need to decide whether to take the election described above. Recordkeeping is critical.

 

As always, please do not hesitate to call our offices  about your start-up plans. We can help with the tax and other aspects of your new business.

 

© 2021

 

Related Insights

Milestone moments: How age affects certain tax provisions | CPA in Bel Air MD | Weyrich, Cronin & Sorra

Tax Prep, Planning & Strategy

Milestone moments: How age affects certain tax provisions

They say age is just a number — but in the world of tax law, it’s much more than that. As you move through your life, the IRS treats you…
Startup costs and taxes: What you need to know before filing | business consulting services in elkton md | Weyrich, Cronin & Sorra

Management Advisory Services & Business Consulting

Startup costs and taxes: What you need to know before filing

The U.S. Census Bureau reports there were nearly 447,000 new business applications in May of 2025. The bureau measures this by tracking the number…
What the new tax law could mean for you | accounting firms in baltimore | Weyrich, Cronin & Sorra

Tax Prep, Planning & Strategy

What the new tax law could mean for you

As 2025 began, individual taxpayers faced uncertainty with several key provisions of the tax law that were set to expire at the end of the year.…

Connect with us

Use the form below to send us an email. WCS responds directly to all inquiries and general questions within 24 hours of posting.

This contact form is deactivated because you refused to accept Google reCaptcha service which is necessary to validate any messages sent by the form.