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Get our free list of 75 tax write offs to deduct things with confidence. Some might be a no way, really?! moment.
CLIENT CASE STUDIES
November 19, 2025
Lya Kimbrough, MBA | Lookout Bookkeeping

Let’s start with the real question:
What does it even mean to write something off?
A write-off (or tax deduction) is a business expense the IRS allows you to subtract from your total income so you’re only taxed on what’s left, but it doesn’t mean you get the item for free, and it doesn’t mean the IRS refunds the cost. It simply reduces your taxable income; and the goal is to reduce it with legitimate business expenses.
Quick example:
See? Lower taxable income = lower taxes.
Simple math. Not magic.
But the confusion comes in when people start calling every purchase “a write-off.” So let’s break down the myths…
Reality: The IRS doesn’t care that you paid for it—they care why you paid for it.
To be deductible, an expense must be:
This means the expense must directly support how your business makes money.
People often mix up “I used it while doing business” with “I bought it for the business.”
For example, using your personal phone for a business call doesn’t make your entire phone bill a deduction. Same with clothes; unless it’s a true uniform that can’t double as regular wear, it’s personal.
Examples:
This rule removes anything that is “kind of business, kind of personal.”
Reality: Meals are partially deductible (usually 50%), and entertainment is almost never deductible now.
A meal only qualifies if:
If you and a friend catch up and you casually mention your business? That’s not deductible. If you take a client to lunch to review their proposal? That is.
As for entertainment:
Concerts, shows, sporting events; those used to be deductible, but not anymore. Even if you invited a client. Even if you discussed business before the show. It’s still a no.
Examples:
Meals = sometimes.
Entertainment = almost never.
Reality: You can only deduct the portion of the car used exclusively for business.
The IRS gives you two options:
The only miles that count are the ones that directly support your business.
Examples:
If you’re not tracking miles, you’re either over-deducting (dangerous) or under-deducting (missing money).
Reality: You can only deduct the portion of your home used exclusively and regularly for business.
The home office must be:
The IRS is picky here. If the space doubles as a guest room, gaming room, or storage room—even occasionally—you lose eligibility.
You can deduct a percentage of:
But again, only for the portion that belongs to the business.
Examples:
If your workspace has a day job and a night job, it’s not deductible.
Write-offs are powerful tools, when you actually understand them.
They reduce your taxable income and help you keep more of what you earn.
But making up deductions or stretching the truth can lead to penalties, audits, and unnecessary stress.
If you’re ever unsure, ask yourself:
“Does this expense directly help me run or grow my business?”
If the answer isn’t a confident yes, it probably isn’t deductible.
And if you want help reviewing your expenses—that’s exactly what Lookout Bookkeeping is here for.
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