Some tax deductions are red flags that increase your audit risk. Understanding which expenses are red flags, why they trigger audits, and how to deduct legitimately is critical for staying compliant while maximizing your deductions. This comprehensive guide explains which expenses are red flags for freelancers in 2026 and how to handle them correctly.
Table of Contents
- Understanding Red Flag Deductions
- Red Flag #1: Home Office Deduction
- Red Flag #2: Vehicle Expenses
- Red Flag #3: Business Meals and Entertainment
- Red Flag #4: Travel Expenses
- Red Flag #5: Large Charitable Contributions
- Red Flag #6: Round Numbers Everywhere
- Red Flag #7: Personal Expenses Claimed as Business
- Red Flag #8: Unusually High Deduction Rates
- How to Deduct Legitimately
- Real Examples and Scenarios
- Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Bottom Line: Avoiding Red Flags
Understanding Red Flag Deductions
What makes something a red flag:
What Are Red Flags?
Red flags = Deductions that increase your audit risk
Why they're red flags:
- Frequently abused
- Hard to verify
- Often claimed incorrectly
- IRS knows people make mistakes
Result: Higher audit risk
The Goal
Not to avoid red flags entirely (if legitimate, you should deduct them)
But to: Deduct them correctly, with proper documentation, to reduce audit risk
Red Flag #1: Home Office Deduction
Understanding why it's a red flag:
Why It's a Red Flag
Home office is frequently audited because:
- Many people claim it incorrectly
- Hard to verify (IRS can't easily check)
- Often doesn't meet requirements
Risk level: Medium to High
How to Deduct Legitimately
Meet ALL requirements:
- Exclusive use (space used only for business)
- Regular use (used regularly)
- Principal place of business (or used for client meetings)
Keep documentation:
- Photos showing exclusive use
- Measurements (square footage)
- Floor plan or diagram
Calculate both methods: Simplified and actual expenses (use whichever is larger)
Real Example
Legitimate: 200 sq ft dedicated office, used exclusively for business
- Photos: Show office with no personal items
- Measurements: 200 sq ft office, 1,500 sq ft home
- Deduct: $1,000 (simplified) or more (actual expenses)
- Low risk: If properly documented
Red flag: Claiming home office but space is also used for personal purposes
- High risk: Doesn't meet exclusive use requirement
Red Flag #2: Vehicle Expenses
Understanding why it's a red flag:
Why It's a Red Flag
Vehicle expenses are frequently questioned because:
- Many people include commuting miles (not deductible)
- Hard to verify mileage
- Often unrealistic business use percentages
Risk level: Medium
How to Deduct Legitimately
Keep detailed mileage logs:
- Date, odometer, purpose
- Contemporaneous (written at time of trip)
- Only business miles (not commuting)
Use app: Stride, Hurdlr, etc. (makes it easier)
Document business purpose: For each trip
Real Example
Legitimate: 10,000 business miles, detailed log
- Log: Shows date, odometer, purpose for each trip
- Only business miles (no commuting)
- Deduct: $6,700 (10,000 × $0.67)
- Low risk: If properly documented
Red flag: 15,000 miles claimed, but includes commuting
- High risk: Commuting not deductible, triggers audit
Red Flag #3: Business Meals and Entertainment
Understanding why it's a red flag:
Why It's a Red Flag
Meals are frequently questioned because:
- Many people claim personal meals
- Hard to verify business purpose
- Often claimed at 100% (should be 50%)
Risk level: Medium
How to Deduct Legitimately
Only deduct legitimate business meals:
- Must be business-related
- Document: Who, what, why (business purpose)
- Only 50% deductible (with restrictions)
Keep receipts: With notes about business purpose
Real Example
Legitimate: $200 business meal, documented
- Receipt: Shows $200
- Notes: "Client meeting, discussed project"
- Deduct: $100 (50% of $200)
- Low risk: If properly documented
Red flag: $500 in meals, no documentation, all personal
- High risk: No business purpose, triggers audit
Red Flag #4: Travel Expenses
Understanding why it's a red flag:
Why It's a Red Flag
Travel is frequently questioned because:
- Many people mix personal and business travel
- Hard to verify business purpose
- Often includes vacation time
Risk level: Medium
How to Deduct Legitimately
Only deduct business portion:
- Separate business from personal
- Document business purpose
- Only deduct business days/expenses
Keep records: Receipts, itinerary, business purpose
Real Example
Legitimate: Business trip, 5 days, 3 business days
- Flight: $800 (100% deductible - business trip)
- Hotel: $600 (100% deductible - business trip)
- Meals: $300 (50% = $150 deductible)
- Deduct: $1,550
- Low risk: If properly documented
Red flag: Vacation with some work, deducting entire trip
- High risk: Mixing personal and business, triggers audit
Red Flag #5: Large Charitable Contributions
Understanding why it's a red flag:
Why It's a Red Flag
Large contributions are questioned because:
- May be inflated
- Hard to verify
- Large relative to income
Risk level: Medium
How to Deduct Legitimately
Keep documentation:
- Receipts for all contributions
- Appraisals for large non-cash contributions
- Proper valuation
Be reasonable: Don't inflate values
Real Example
Legitimate: $5,000 charitable contribution, documented
- Receipt: Shows $5,000
- Income: $100,000 (5% of income - reasonable)
- Deduct: $5,000
- Low risk: If properly documented
Red flag: $15,000 contribution, $40,000 income (37.5% of income)
- High risk: Very large relative to income, triggers audit
Red Flag #6: Round Numbers Everywhere
Understanding why it's a red flag:
Why It's a Red Flag
Round numbers suggest estimates, not actual records
IRS knows: If all expenses are round numbers ($100, $500, $1,000), you're probably estimating
Risk level: Low to Medium
How to Avoid
Keep actual receipts: Will have specific amounts ($127.43, not $100)
Don't estimate: Use actual numbers from receipts
Real Example
Legitimate: Expenses from receipts
- Office supplies: $127.43
- Software: $299.99
- Equipment: $1,247.85
- Actual amounts: From receipts
- Low risk: Shows actual records
Red flag: All expenses are round numbers
- Office supplies: $100
- Software: $500
- Equipment: $1,000
- High risk: Suggests estimates, not actual records
Try the tool
Red Flag #7: Personal Expenses Claimed as Business
Understanding why it's a red flag:
Why It's a Red Flag
Personal expenses are red flags because:
- Clearly not deductible
- Shows lack of understanding
- Suggests other problems
Risk level: High
How to Avoid
Only deduct legitimate business expenses:
- Calculate business use percentage accurately
- Don't deduct personal expenses
- When in doubt, don't deduct it
Real Example
Red flag: Deducting entire phone bill when 20% business use
- Should deduct: 20% of bill
- Actually deducting: 100% of bill
- High risk: Clearly wrong, triggers audit
Legitimate: Deducting 80% of phone bill when 80% business use
- Deduct: 80%
- Low risk: Accurate, properly calculated
Red Flag #8: Unusually High Deduction Rates
Understanding why it's a red flag:
Why It's a Red Flag
High deduction rates (80%+ of income) suggest:
- Questionable deductions
- Personal expenses mixed in
- Potential errors
Risk level: High
How to Avoid
Be reasonable:
- Most businesses: 30-50% deduction rate is normal
- Higher rates: May be legitimate (high-expense business) but need to be prepared to defend
Document everything: If deduction rate is high, have good documentation
Real Example
Red flag: $30,000 income, $28,000 deductions (93% rate)
- High risk: Unusually high, likely includes personal expenses
Legitimate: $30,000 income, $15,000 deductions (50% rate)
- Low risk: Reasonable, normal for many businesses
Legitimate but high: $30,000 income, $25,000 deductions (83% rate)
- Medium risk: High but may be legitimate (high-expense business)
- Must document: Everything, be prepared to defend
How to Deduct Legitimately
Here's how to reduce audit risk:
Rule 1: Only Deduct Legitimate Expenses
Only deduct:
- Expenses that are ordinary and necessary
- Expenses used for business
- Business portion of shared expenses
Don't deduct: Personal expenses, even if used for work sometimes
Rule 2: Keep Good Documentation
Document everything:
- Receipts for all expenses
- Mileage logs (if deducting vehicle)
- Photos (if deducting home office)
- Notes about business purpose
Why: Good documentation reduces audit risk and helps you defend if audited
Rule 3: Be Reasonable
Don't have:
- Unusually high deduction rates (unless legitimate)
- All round numbers (suggests estimates)
- Personal expenses (clearly wrong)
Be reasonable: If something seems too good to be true, it probably is
Rule 4: Calculate Accurately
Calculate business use percentages accurately:
- Phone: Actual business use %
- Internet: Actual business use %
- Vehicle: Actual business miles
Don't estimate: Use actual numbers
Real Examples and Scenarios
Let's work through scenarios:
Example 1: Legitimate Home Office
Scenario: 200 sq ft dedicated office, properly documented
Documentation:
- Photos: Show exclusive business use
- Measurements: 200 sq ft office, 1,500 sq ft home
- Deduct: $1,000 (simplified method)
Risk: Low (properly documented, meets requirements)
Example 2: Red Flag Home Office
Scenario: Claiming home office but space used for personal too
Problem: Doesn't meet exclusive use requirement
Risk: High (will trigger audit, deduction will be disallowed)
Example 3: Legitimate Vehicle Expenses
Scenario: 10,000 business miles, detailed log
Documentation:
- Detailed mileage log (app-based, contemporaneous)
- Only business miles (no commuting)
- Deduct: $6,700
Risk: Low (properly documented)
Example 4: Red Flag Vehicle Expenses
Scenario: 15,000 miles claimed, includes commuting
Problem: Commuting not deductible, log shows personal trips
Risk: High (will trigger audit, deduction will be reduced)
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Learn from others' mistakes:
Mistake #1: Claiming Red Flags Incorrectly
The problem: You claim home office, vehicle, etc., but don't meet requirements
The solution: Only claim if you meet ALL requirements, document everything
Mistake #2: Not Documenting
The problem: You claim red flag deductions but can't prove them
The solution: Keep detailed documentation (receipts, logs, photos, etc.)
Mistake #3: Mixing Personal and Business
The problem: You mix personal expenses with business, triggering audit
The solution: Separate business and personal, only deduct business portion
Mistake #4: Being Too Aggressive
The problem: You push boundaries, claim questionable deductions
The solution: Be reasonable, only deduct legitimate expenses
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I Avoid Red Flag Deductions?
No. If legitimate, you should deduct them. Just make sure you:
- Meet all requirements
- Keep good documentation
- Deduct correctly
Don't avoid: Just do it right
How Do I Reduce Audit Risk?
Ways to reduce risk:
- Only deduct legitimate expenses
- Keep good documentation
- Be reasonable (don't push boundaries)
- Calculate accurately
- Separate business and personal
What If I Have High Deductions?
If legitimate: Document everything, be prepared to defend
If questionable: Review, make sure all are legitimate
High deductions: Can be legitimate (high-expense business) but need documentation
Bottom Line: Avoiding Red Flags
Red flag deductions are fine if legitimate. Here's your plan:
Immediate Actions
- Understand red flags (which deductions are frequently audited)
- Only deduct if legitimate (meet all requirements)
- Keep good documentation (receipts, logs, photos, etc.)
- Be reasonable (don't push boundaries)
- Calculate accurately (business use percentages, etc.)
Ongoing Actions
- Document as you go (don't wait until tax time)
- Review deductions (make sure all are legitimate)
- Stay organized (makes documentation easier)
- Be prepared to defend (if audited, you have documentation)
Key Takeaways
✅ Red flag deductions are fine if legitimate (just document properly)
✅ Home office: Frequently audited (make sure you meet all requirements, document)
✅ Vehicle expenses: Frequently questioned (keep detailed logs, only business miles)
✅ Meals and travel: Frequently questioned (document business purpose, separate personal)
✅ Keep good documentation (receipts, logs, photos - reduces audit risk)
✅ Be reasonable (don't have unusually high deduction rates, don't mix personal and business)
✅ Calculate accurately (business use percentages, mileage, etc.)
Final Thought
Red flag deductions don't mean you shouldn't deduct them—they just mean you need to be extra careful. The key is meeting all requirements, keeping excellent documentation, and deducting accurately. Do this, and you can claim red flag deductions legitimately while minimizing audit risk. Don't avoid legitimate deductions out of fear—just do them right.