Self-employed individuals pay both the employee and employer portions of FICA taxes — a combined 15.3% rate that can feel like a heavy burden. The good news? The IRS provides a robust set of deductions specifically designed to ease that load. This guide covers every major deduction available to freelancers, independent contractors, and sole proprietors in 2025.
Before diving in, remember: use our self-employment tax calculator to see exactly how these deductions reduce your actual tax bill in real time.
1. The Self-Employment Tax Deduction (50%)
This is the most impactful and often overlooked deduction. Because you pay both halves of FICA as a self-employed individual, the IRS lets you deduct 50% of your total SE tax from your gross income before calculating your AGI. This is an above-the-line deduction — meaning you claim it whether or not you itemize.
[ Insert a worked example here: e.g., "If your SE tax is $8,500, you deduct $4,250 from your gross income. At a 22% marginal rate, this saves you ~$935 in federal income tax." Include the IRS form reference (Schedule 1, Line 15). Add a tip about how this interacts with state income taxes. ]
2. Home Office Deduction
If you use part of your home exclusively and regularly for business, you may deduct home office expenses under IRS Publication 587. There are two methods:
- Simplified Method: $5 per square foot, up to 300 sq ft (max $1,500/year). Simple, no depreciation recapture risk.
- Regular Method: Deduct the actual percentage of home expenses (rent/mortgage interest, utilities, insurance) based on the office's share of total home square footage. Higher deduction potential but more recordkeeping required.
[ Insert content covering: exclusive use test, calculation examples for both methods, which professions most benefit from the regular method vs. simplified, and how the deduction is claimed on Form 8829 / Schedule C. Include a note that the home office deduction cannot create a net loss for the year using the regular method. ]
3. Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction
Under Section 2042 of the Small Business Jobs Act, self-employed individuals can deduct 100% of health, dental, and vision insurance premiums for themselves and their families — as long as they were not eligible for employer-sponsored health insurance through a spouse's plan. This deduction is also above-the-line and reduces your AGI directly.
[ Insert: eligibility requirements, how to handle months when you had other coverage available, the interaction with ACA Marketplace premium tax credits (Form 8962), and the Medicare premium deductibility rules for self-employed individuals age 65+. Include a note about claiming this on Schedule 1, Line 17. ]
4. Retirement Contribution Deductions
Retirement contributions are one of the most powerful tax-reduction strategies for the self-employed. Here are the primary options for 2025:
- SEP-IRA: Contribute up to 25% of net self-employment income, max $70,000 for 2025.
- Solo 401(k): Employee contributions up to $23,500, plus employer contributions up to 25% of net SE income, with a combined cap of $70,000 ($77,500 if age 50+).
- SIMPLE IRA: Up to $16,500 in employee deferrals ($20,000 if age 50+), plus a required employer match.
- Traditional IRA: Up to $7,000 ($8,000 if age 50+), deductibility depends on income limits.
[ Insert: comparison table of SEP-IRA vs. Solo 401(k) with contribution limit examples at $50K, $100K, $150K net income levels. Cover contribution deadlines, how to open each account type, and the tax impact using real numbers. Mention that Solo 401(k) requires a plan to be established by Dec 31 of the tax year. ]
5. Vehicle and Mileage Deductions
If you use your vehicle for business purposes, you can deduct those costs using one of two IRS-approved methods:
- Standard Mileage Rate: 70 cents per mile for 2025 (IRS Rev. Proc. 2024-40). Simplest method — just log your business miles.
- Actual Expense Method: Deduct the business-use percentage of actual costs — gas, insurance, repairs, depreciation, and registration. Often higher for expensive vehicles or high-cost-of-ownership situations.
[ Insert: mileage log requirements, how to calculate the business-use percentage, what trips qualify (client visits, supply runs, travel to temporary work locations), and which method tends to win for typical freelancers. Include a note that commuting miles from home to a regular place of business are NOT deductible. ]
6. Schedule C Business Expenses
Any ordinary and necessary expense for your business is deductible on Schedule C. Common categories include:
- Software subscriptions (design tools, project management, accounting apps)
- Professional development (courses, books, industry events)
- Advertising and marketing (website hosting, paid ads, business cards)
- Professional services (accountant, attorney, business consultant fees)
- Business insurance premiums (general liability, errors & omissions, etc.)
- Office supplies and equipment
- Internet and phone (business-use portion only)
- Business travel (flights, hotels, 50% of meals)
[ Insert: deeper treatment of each category with real-world examples for common self-employed professions (graphic designers, consultants, writers, real estate agents). Cover the 50% meal deduction rule, the Section 179 expensing election for equipment, and tips for substantiating deductions with receipts and records. Mention IRS Publication 535 as the definitive reference. ]
7. Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction
Under Section 199A (extended by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act), many self-employed individuals can deduct up to 20% of qualified business income from their federal income tax. This deduction applies to most sole proprietors, partners, and S-corp shareholders — but phases out for high-income Specified Service Trade or Business (SSTB) owners.
[ Insert: who qualifies, what SSTBs are (law, health, financial services, consulting), the income phase-out thresholds for 2025, and how the deduction interacts with the W-2 wage limitation for higher earners. Provide a concrete example of the calculation. Note that this deduction is claimed on Form 8995 or 8995-A. ]
8. Student Loan Interest
If you have student loans, you may deduct up to $2,500 in student loan interest per year — above-the-line — provided your MAGI is below the phase-out thresholds ($80,000 for single filers, $165,000 for MFJ in 2025).
[ Insert your own analysis and examples here. ]
Summary: Use the Calculator to See the Real Impact
Every deduction listed here directly reduces your taxable income, and many also reduce your AGI — which can unlock further credits and benefits. The best way to understand your actual tax savings is to model them in our self-employment tax calculator.
Simply enter your gross income, expenses, health insurance premiums, and retirement contributions to see your SE tax, estimated federal income tax, and quarterly payment schedule — all in one place.
Enter your income and deductions in our free calculator to see your SE tax, income tax, and quarterly payments side-by-side.
Calculate My 2025 SE Tax →Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. Tax laws are complex and individual circumstances vary. Consult a licensed CPA, Enrolled Agent, or tax attorney for advice specific to your situation. IRS rules cited are based on 2025 figures available as of April 2025.