Net Operating Losses (NOLs) are a powerful tax tool that allows you to use business losses from one year to reduce taxes in future years. Understanding how NOLs work, how to calculate them, and how to use them strategically can save you thousands of dollars in taxes. This comprehensive guide explains everything freelancers need to know about Net Operating Losses in 2026.
What Is a Net Operating Loss?
Understanding the definition:
Definition
Net Operating Loss (NOL) = Business loss that exceeds your other income
How it works:
- If business loss is larger than other income (W-2, investments, etc.)
- Excess loss becomes NOL
- Can carry forward to future years
Real Example
Scenario:
- W-2 job: $30,000
- Freelance business: Loss $50,000
- Total: -$20,000
NOL: $20,000 (excess loss after offsetting W-2 income)
Can carry forward: $20,000 to future years
How NOLs Work
Understanding the mechanism:
Step 1: Calculate Total Income
Add all income sources:
- W-2 income
- Business income (or loss)
- Investment income
- Other income
Example:
- W-2: $40,000
- Business: Loss $25,000
- Investments: $5,000
- Total: $20,000
Step 2: Calculate NOL
If total is negative (loss exceeds other income):
- NOL = Amount of loss
If total is positive:
- No NOL (loss offset other income, but no excess)
Example:
- W-2: $20,000
- Business: Loss $35,000
- Total: -$15,000
- NOL: $15,000
Step 3: Carry Forward
NOL can be carried forward:
- To future years
- Offsets future income
- Saves taxes in future years
2026 rules: Can carry forward indefinitely (but can't carry back)
Calculating Your NOL
Understanding the calculation:
The Formula
NOL = Business loss - Other income (if result is negative, that's your NOL)
Or: NOL = Excess of business loss over other income
Real Calculation Examples
Example 1:
- W-2: $50,000
- Business loss: $30,000
- Total: $20,000
- NOL: $0 (loss didn't exceed other income)
Example 2:
- W-2: $20,000
- Business loss: $35,000
- Total: -$15,000
- NOL: $15,000 (excess loss)
Example 3:
- No W-2, no other income
- Business loss: $40,000
- Total: -$40,000
- NOL: $40,000 (entire loss is NOL)
Carrying NOLs Forward
Understanding carryforwards:
How Carryforwards Work
If you have NOL:
- Can carry forward to future years
- Offsets future taxable income
- Reduces future taxes
2026 rules:
- Can carry forward indefinitely
- Can't carry back (previous years)
Using NOLs in Future Years
When you have income in future year:
- Apply NOL carryforward
- Reduces taxable income
- Saves taxes
Example:
- 2025: NOL of $20,000
- 2026: Income $60,000
- Apply NOL: $60,000 - $20,000 = $40,000 taxable
- Tax saved: ~$6,000 (from NOL)
2026 NOL Rules
Understanding current rules:
Carryforward Rules
2026: NOLs can be carried forward indefinitely
Previous years: Could carry back (but 2026 rules don't allow carryback)
Use: Can use NOL to offset up to 80% of taxable income in future years (with some exceptions)
80% Limitation
General rule: Can use NOL to offset up to 80% of taxable income
Exception: First $250,000 (single) or $500,000 (married) can offset 100%
Example:
- Taxable income: $100,000
- NOL: $50,000
- Can use: $50,000 (under $250,000 threshold, so 100% allowed)
- Taxable after NOL: $50,000
Example:
- Taxable income: $300,000
- NOL: $200,000
- Can use: $240,000 (80% of $300,000, but NOL is only $200,000, so use $200,000)
- Taxable after NOL: $100,000
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How to Use NOLs
Understanding the strategy:
Automatic Application
NOLs are applied automatically:
- When you file return with income
- Reduces taxable income
- Saves taxes
You don't need to do anything special: Just report NOL on return
Tracking NOLs
Keep track of:
- NOL amount
- Year it was created
- How much you've used
- Remaining balance
Why: Need to track for future years
Real Usage Example
Scenario:
- 2024: NOL of $15,000 (created)
- 2025: Income $40,000, use $15,000 NOL
- Taxable: $25,000
- NOL used up: $0 remaining
Tax saved: ~$3,750 (from $15,000 NOL)
Real Examples and Scenarios
Let's work through scenarios:
Example 1: Creating an NOL
Scenario:
- W-2 job: $30,000
- Freelance business: Loss $45,000
- Total: -$15,000
NOL created: $15,000
Current year tax: $0 (loss offset all W-2 income)
Future benefit: Can use $15,000 NOL in future years
Example 2: Using an NOL
Scenario:
- 2025: NOL of $20,000 (from previous year)
- 2026: Income $80,000
2026 tax calculation:
- Income: $80,000
- NOL carryforward: -$20,000
- Taxable income: $60,000
- Tax: ~$9,000
Without NOL: Would pay tax on $80,000 = ~$12,000 Savings: $3,000 (from NOL)
Example 3: Large NOL
Scenario:
- 2025: NOL of $50,000
- 2026: Income $100,000
2026 tax calculation:
- Income: $100,000
- NOL carryforward: -$50,000
- Taxable income: $50,000
- Tax: ~$5,000
Without NOL: Would pay tax on $100,000 = ~$15,000 Savings: $10,000 (from NOL)
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Learn from others' mistakes:
Mistake #1: Not Tracking NOLs
The problem: You have NOL but don't track it, don't use it in future years
The solution: Track NOLs, use them in future years (saves taxes)
Mistake #2: Not Claiming Losses
The problem: You have business loss but don't claim it, missing NOL
The solution: Claim business losses (creates NOL if loss exceeds other income)
Mistake #3: Not Understanding Rules
The problem: You don't understand NOL rules, don't use them correctly
The solution: Understand NOL rules, use them strategically
Frequently Asked Questions
What Is an NOL?
Net Operating Loss = Business loss that exceeds other income. Can be carried forward to future years.
How Long Can I Carry Forward NOLs?
2026 rules: Indefinitely (no expiration). Can carry forward until used up.
Can I Carry Back NOLs?
2026 rules: No carryback allowed. Can only carry forward.
How Much Can NOLs Save Me?
Depends on future income and tax bracket. Every $1,000 in NOL saves ~$220-$370 in future taxes (depending on bracket).
Bottom Line: Your NOL Strategy
NOLs are valuable tax tools. Here's your strategy:
Immediate Actions
- Claim business losses (if legitimate, creates NOL if loss exceeds other income)
- Track NOLs (keep records of NOL amounts, years created)
- Use NOLs in future years (apply to future income, save taxes)
- Understand rules (80% limitation, carryforward rules)
Ongoing Actions
- Track NOL balance (how much you've used, how much remains)
- Apply to future returns (use NOLs when you have income)
- Maximize benefit (use NOLs strategically)
Key Takeaways
✅ NOLs are business losses that exceed other income (can be carried forward)
✅ Can carry forward indefinitely (2026 rules - no expiration)
✅ Can't carry back (2026 rules - forward only)
✅ 80% limitation (can offset up to 80% of taxable income, with exceptions)
✅ Track NOLs (keep records, use in future years)
✅ Saves taxes in future years (offsets future income, reduces taxes)
Final Thought
Net Operating Losses are a valuable tax tool that allows you to use business losses from one year to reduce taxes in future years. The key is claiming business losses (if legitimate), tracking NOLs, and using them strategically in future years when you have income. Don't let business losses go to waste—they can save you thousands of dollars in future taxes. Track them, use them, and maximize the benefit.