Reviewed by Michael Torres, CPA Updated March 2026 · 10 min read

Home office deduction for online sellers: simplified vs. actual expenses (2026)

If you pack orders, photograph products, or manage your online store from home, you likely qualify for the home office deduction. There are two methods — the simplified method ($5 per square foot, maximum $1,500) and the actual expense method (which can produce a deduction several times larger). Here's how both work and which one is better for your situation.

In this guide

Who qualifies

Self-employed individuals (including online sellers filing Schedule C) who use a portion of their home regularly and exclusively for business. W-2 employees cannot claim this — eliminated by TCJA and made permanent by OBBBA.

Qualifying activities for online sellers: packing/shipping orders, product photography, listing management, customer messages, bookkeeping, inventory storage.

The exclusive use requirement

"Exclusive use" means the space is only for business. A dining table used for packing and eating doesn't qualify.

Exception for inventory storage: If you store inventory in your home and it's your only business location, the exclusive-use test is relaxed. You can deduct the storage portion even if that area serves dual purposes. This is a significant exception for online sellers.

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Method 1: The simplified method

Multiply your office square footage by $5/sq ft, up to 300 square feet max.

Office sizeCalculationAnnual deduction
100 sq ft100 × $5$500
150 sq ft150 × $5$750
200 sq ft200 × $5$1,000
300 sq ft (max)300 × $5$1,500

Pros: No Form 8829. No receipt tracking. No depreciation recapture when you sell.

Cons: $1,500 max. No carryforward. No depreciation.

Get the home office deduction calculator (PDF)

Side-by-side worksheet that calculates both methods for your specific situation — fill in your numbers and see which saves more.

Method 2: The actual expense method

Step 1: Business-use percentage

Office square footage ÷ total home square footage. 200 sq ft office in a 1,600 sq ft home = 12.5%.

Step 2: Apply to actual expenses

Deductible housing expenses: rent or mortgage interest, property taxes, homeowner's/renter's insurance, utilities, internet (business portion), general home repairs (pro-rated), office-specific repairs (100%), depreciation (if you own).

Comparison: simplified vs. actual 200 sq ft office in a 1,500 sq ft apartment. Rent: $1,800/month ($21,600/year). Utilities: $200/month ($2,400/year). Insurance: $180/year. Business-use: 13.3%. Simplified: $1,000. Actual: $3,216. The actual method produces 3× more in this case.

Which method should you choose?

You can switch methods each year. Run both calculations annually.

Online seller spaces that qualify

Multiple areas can be combined. Total can't exceed 300 sq ft for the simplified method.

Depreciation recapture: the hidden cost

If you own your home and use the actual method, you must depreciate the business portion. When you sell, depreciation is recaptured at 25% — even if your gain is excluded under the $250K/$500K home sale exclusion.

Example: $12,000 depreciation over 8 years → $3,000 recapture tax at sale. This is why some homeowners prefer the simplified method.

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