Home Office Tax Deductions for Nevada Freelancers in 2026
Nevada freelancers can deduct home office expenses on federal taxes via the simplified method ($5/sq ft, capped at 300 sq ft) or actual-expense method (Form 8829). Nevada has no state personal income tax, so home office deductions reduce only your federal AGI; no state benefit applies.
Do you qualify for the home office deduction in Nevada?
The IRS requires the home office be used regularly and exclusively for your business per IRS Publication 587. Nevada largely follows federal rules, with one notable variation:
Nevada has no state personal income tax. Home office deductions reduce only your federal AGI; no state benefit applies.
- Regular use: the space must be used on a continuing basis (monthly or weekly), not occasional.
- Exclusive use: the space must not be used for personal purposes (no kid's homework area on the same desk).
- Principal place of business: the home office must be your principal place of business OR a place where you meet clients.
Federal home office deduction: simplified vs actual
Two methods to calculate; you pick whichever produces the larger deduction:
| Method | How it works | Maximum | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simplified | $5 per sq ft of dedicated office space | $1,500 (300 sq ft cap) | Small home offices; minimal recordkeeping |
| Actual expenses | Pro-rata share of mortgage interest, property tax, utilities, repairs, depreciation, etc. | No cap (limited by business income) | Large home offices, high mortgage/utility costs, depreciation worth claiming |
Per the IRS, taxpayers using the actual-expense method file Form 8829 (Expenses for Business Use of Your Home) alongside Schedule C.
Nevada state tax treatment
Nevada has a top marginal income tax rate of 0% for 2026 per the Nevada Department of Revenue. Home office deductions reduce both federal AGI and Nevada taxable income (when Nevada conforms to federal AGI starting points), creating a combined deduction value of approximately 22% of the federal deduction amount.
Nevada has no state income tax form for personal income (no state income tax form). Federal Form 8829 is your only home office deduction surface.
What home office equipment qualifies as a separate deduction
Equipment used for your home office is deductible separately from the home office space itself, under Section 179 expensing or standard depreciation per IRS Publication 946. Common qualifying purchases:
- Desk, ergonomic chair, monitor arms
- Computer, monitors, peripherals
- Webcam, microphone, lighting (for video-call-heavy businesses)
- Bookshelves, filing cabinets used exclusively for business
- Office software subscriptions used for business
For a complete buyer's guide to ergonomic home office setups that qualify as Section 179 deductions, see our sister-site DeskDeploy: the best home office ergonomic setup for 2026 →
Calculate your Nevada home office deduction
Use the CeoCult Tax Set-Aside Calculator to estimate your federal + Nevada tax liability with home office deductions factored in:
Open the full calculator →
Recordkeeping requirements for Nevada
The IRS recommends retaining records for 3 years from the filing date or 2 years from the tax payment date, whichever is later, per IRS recordkeeping guidance. Nevada no state recordkeeping requirement.
Keep:
- Square footage measurements (photo + diagram for actual-expense method)
- Receipts for all claimed equipment + utilities + repairs
- Calendar evidence of business-use days (if home office isn't 100% year-round)
- Form 8829 worksheet copies
Frequently asked questions about Nevada home office deductions
Can I deduct my entire mortgage payment if I have a home office?
No. Only the business-use percentage of mortgage interest (not principal) is deductible via Form 8829. If your home office is 10% of your home's square footage, you can deduct 10% of the mortgage interest on your Schedule C.
Does Nevada require a separate home office form?
Nevada has no state income tax form for wages or freelance income, so no separate state form is needed. Use federal Form 8829 for your home office deduction.
Can W-2 employees in Nevada deduct home office expenses?
For tax year 2026, W-2 employees cannot deduct unreimbursed home office expenses on federal returns under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (in effect through 2025; pending reauthorization in 2026). Some states allow miscellaneous itemized deductions even when federal does not; Nevada has no state income tax; only federal TCJA limitation applies..
What's the difference between depreciating my home and the simplified method?
The actual-expense method (Form 8829) lets you depreciate your home over 39 years for the business-use portion. The simplified method does NOT include depreciation. If you sell your home later, depreciation claimed under Form 8829 must be recaptured at sale; the simplified method has no recapture obligation. For most freelancers staying under the $1,500 simplified cap, the simplified method is the right choice.
Can I claim home office deductions if I rent in Nevada?
Yes. Renters can deduct the business-use percentage of rent + utilities + renter's insurance via Form 8829, the same as homeowners can deduct mortgage interest + property taxes. Nevada renters use the same federal calculation; state treatment follows the federal AGI deduction.