jklcpa Posted Friday at 06:50 PM Report Posted Friday at 06:50 PM 10 minutes ago, Lee B said: This discussion is now to the point where I have a huge smile on my face I'm waiting for it to go to a second page! 1 1 Quote
DANRVAN Posted Friday at 06:52 PM Report Posted Friday at 06:52 PM And I have been looking at this from the perspective of my personal OIH as well, and admit I have been doing it wrong. There is no way I can justify allocating a personal expense. 1 Quote
Slippery Pencil Posted Friday at 08:59 PM Report Posted Friday at 08:59 PM 3 hours ago, DANRVAN said: I have referred to the code throughout this thread which refers to an "allocable" expense. You referred to the code once, then I asked about it. In your response to that question, you referred to a pub, not the code. Based on your answer, your conclusion, "Bottom line, water is not a cost of using a OIH so it is not allocable", doesn't logically flow from your premises. 14 hours ago, DANRVAN said: On the other hand, how much water is used as an ordinary and necessary expense in a home office? How much gas is used as an ordinary and necessary expense in a home office? Most of a house's gas is used to heat water for showers and laundry, to cook, and to heat the rest of the house 8760 hours a year compared to 2000 hours the home office is used. Yet the gas is allocated based on floor space. A 150 sq ft office in a 3000 sq ft home doesn't use 5% of the gas, yet 5% gets allocated to it. Same with electricity. How much electricity is used by the washer, dryer, oven, fridge, kids gaming computers, etc compared to a home office. Stop taking water & sewer on your clients' home offices if you want, but please don't choose this hill to die on. Unless something like a pool was involved, the irs has not disallowed water & sewer deduction for a home office, so why would you? 1 Quote
BulldogTom Posted Friday at 09:54 PM Report Posted Friday at 09:54 PM 16 hours ago, DANRVAN said: Unlike electricity, gas, or heating oil, water is not allocable to an area used exclusively to the home office. There is direct benefit from the the utilities used to power, heat or cool the home office as ordinary and necessary expenses; the home office consumes a portion of those utilities and they are rightfully allocated per the code section. On the other hand, how much water is used as an ordinary and necessary expense in a home office? Notice that pub 587 does not include water as a utility allocable to a OIH: Utilities and services. Expenses for utilities and services, such as electricity, gas, trash removal, and cleaning services, are primarily personal expenses. However, if you use part of your home for business, you can deduct the business part of these expenses. Generally, the business percentage for utilities is the same as the percentage of your home used for business. Bottom line, water is not a cost of using a OIH so it is not allocable. Without water, how does a client flush the toilet when they go to the restroom? Just asking for a friend. Tom Longview, TX 2 3 Quote
Lion EA Posted Friday at 10:05 PM Report Posted Friday at 10:05 PM A client walks through the livingroom to get to the OIH, but we can't use the sq' of the LR as part of OIH. Regular and exclusive. My clients can use my hall bath, but it's not part of my OIH, so I wouldn't allocate the bathroom part of my water to my OIH. I keep changing sides on this. Probably 'cause I'm too sleepy to read the code. 2 2 Quote
Margaret CPA in OH Posted Friday at 10:47 PM Report Posted Friday at 10:47 PM Who could imagine this would get into such detail? Thanks, Catherine, for providing this 'fun' diversion in these last grueling days of the season. It's certainly led us into some interesting rabbit holes (just in time for Easter)! 2 2 Quote
BulldogTom Posted Friday at 10:57 PM Report Posted Friday at 10:57 PM Is it "ordinary and necessary" to "do your business" during working hours? Asking for another friend. Tom Longview, TX 5 Quote
Lee B Posted Saturday at 12:49 AM Report Posted Saturday at 12:49 AM 1 hour ago, BulldogTom said: Is it "ordinary and necessary" to "do your business" during working hours? Asking for another friend. Tom Longview, TX Only if you keep a contemporaneous log 6 Quote
BulldogTom Posted Saturday at 01:23 AM Report Posted Saturday at 01:23 AM 33 minutes ago, Lee B said: Only if you keep a contemporaneous log Good thing there is a handy supply of paper right there to document your business purpose... Tom Longview, TX 5 Quote
Margaret CPA in OH Posted Saturday at 09:20 AM Report Posted Saturday at 09:20 AM Okay, now we're getting silly but isn't this a fun 'relief' at this season's point? 4 2 Quote
Catherine Posted yesterday at 12:57 AM Author Report Posted yesterday at 12:57 AM On 4/11/2025 at 2:50 PM, jklcpa said: I'm waiting for it to go to a second page! Your post did it! 1 1 Quote
Catherine Posted yesterday at 01:00 AM Author Report Posted yesterday at 01:00 AM For reference, this home based business does use water, including a steamer table that uses quite a bit. 2 Quote
Jim Oh Bkkr Posted yesterday at 11:55 AM Report Posted yesterday at 11:55 AM 10 hours ago, Catherine said: Your post did it! I started to accuse her of "post counting" 3 Quote
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