Running an LLC comes with many expenses.
You pay for software, internet, marketing, supplies, professional help, equipment, travel, banking, and sometimes even a home office.
The good news is that many of these costs may be tax-deductible if they are directly connected to your business.
A tax deduction reduces your taxable business income. That means you are not paying tax on every dollar your LLC brings in. You are usually taxed on profit, not total revenue.
For example, if your LLC earns $100,000 and has $30,000 in deductible business expenses, your taxable profit may be closer to $70,000 before other adjustments.
That is why deductions matter.
Still, many LLC owners miss deductions because they do not track expenses properly. Others claim personal expenses as business expenses, which can create problems later.
The goal is simple: know what may qualify, keep clean records, and avoid guessing.
This guide explains the top LLC tax deductions you should know in simple English.
What Counts as a Tax Deduction for an LLC?

A tax deduction is a business expense that can reduce your taxable income.
In general, the expense should be:
- Common for your type of business
- Helpful or necessary for running the business
- Directly related to your LLC
- Properly documented
A marketing agency may deduct software, ads, contractors, and website expenses. A cleaning business may deduct supplies, equipment, uniforms, insurance, and mileage.
An ecommerce business may deduct inventory costs, shipping supplies, platform fees, storage, and payment processing fees.
The exact deduction depends on your business type.
A simple rule helps:
If the expense helps your LLC earn income or operate properly, it may be deductible. If it is mainly personal, it probably is not.
Top LLC Tax Deductions You Should Know
1. Startup Costs
Before your LLC officially opens, you may spend money getting ready.
These are called startup costs.
Startup costs may include:
- Market research
- Business planning
- Website setup
- Logo design
- Professional consultation
- Initial advertising
- Travel to meet suppliers
- Training before launch
- Product testing
- Business setup costs
Many first-time founders forget these expenses because they happen before the business starts making money.
Example
You spend money on a website, domain, logo, product research, and advertising before your LLC starts selling.
Those costs may count as startup expenses if they are directly connected to launching the business.
Important Tip
Keep receipts from the beginning, even before your LLC is approved.
Many owners only start tracking after formation. That can cause them to miss early deductions.
2. LLC Formation and Organizational Costs

The money you spend to create your LLC may also be deductible.
These costs may include:
- State filing fees
- LLC formation service fees
- Legal document preparation
- Operating agreement costs
- Business registration fees
- Name reservation fees
- Professional filing help
These are sometimes called organizational costs because they relate to setting up the legal business structure.
Example
If you paid a state filing fee and used an LLC formation service, those costs may be part of your business setup expenses.
Tip
Do not mix formation costs with personal legal expenses.
Only costs connected to creating and organizing the business should be treated as business expenses.
3. Registered Agent Fees
Every LLC needs a registered agent.
If you hire a professional registered agent service, the yearly fee may be deductible because it helps your LLC stay compliant and receive official notices.
Common Registered Agent Costs
Registered agent services often cost around $100 to $300 per year, depending on the provider.
Some LLC formation companies include the first year free and then charge a renewal fee from the second year.
Why This Deduction Matters
Many LLC owners forget renewal fees because they happen once a year. But if the registered agent is used for your business, it should be recorded as a business expense.
4. Business License and Permit Fees
Depending on your business, you may need licenses or permits to operate legally.
These costs may be deductible when they are required for your business.
Examples include:
- Local business licenses
- Sales tax permits
- Professional licenses
- Health permits
- Food service permits
- Contractor licenses
- Zoning permits
- Home occupation permits
Example
If you run a small food business, you may pay for a health department permit. If you run a salon, you may pay for professional licensing. If you run a local service business, your city may require a business license.
These costs are part of doing business.
Tip
Keep renewal notices and payment confirmations. Some licenses renew yearly, and those renewal fees can add up.
5. Home Office Deduction

Many LLC owners work from home.
If you use part of your home regularly and only for business, you may qualify for a home office deduction.
This can apply to:
- Freelancers
- Consultants
- Online business owners
- Coaches
- Designers
- Writers
- Bookkeepers
- Ecommerce sellers
- Small service businesses
What Can Be Deducted?
Depending on the method used, home office costs may include a portion of:
- Rent
- Mortgage interest
- Utilities
- Home insurance
- Internet
- Repairs
- Property taxes
- Maintenance
There is also a simplified method where the deduction is based on the square footage used for business, up to a limit.
Important Rule
Your home office should be used regularly and exclusively for business.
If your dining table is used for business during the day and family meals at night, it may not qualify as an exclusive business space.
Example
You use one spare room only as your office. You meet clients online, manage invoices, handle calls, and do your business work there. That is much cleaner than using a shared living room or bedroom corner.
6. Internet and Phone Expenses
If you use internet and phone service for your LLC, part of those costs may be deductible.
Most small business owners use the same internet and phone for both personal and business use. In that case, only the business portion should be deducted.
Example
You pay $100 per month for internet, and you estimate that 60% of the use is for business.
You may be able to deduct the business portion, not the full bill.
Phone Expenses
If you have a separate business phone line, the deduction is easier to track.
If you use one personal phone for both personal and business calls, keep a reasonable estimate of business use.
Tip
Do not deduct 100% of your phone or internet bill unless it is truly used only for business.
7. Software and Online Tools
Software is one of the most common LLC deductions today.
Many businesses rely on online tools to work, sell, communicate, design, track finances, and manage customers.
Deductible software may include:
- Accounting software
- Project management tools
- Email marketing tools
- CRM software
- Website plugins
- SEO tools
- Design tools
- Cloud storage
- Video meeting software
- Payment tools
- Security software
- AI writing or research tools used for business
Example
If your LLC uses QuickBooks for bookkeeping, Canva for design, Zoom for client calls, and WordPress plugins for your website, those may be business expenses.
Tip
Review your monthly subscriptions every few months.
Many LLC owners pay for tools they no longer use. Cancelling unused software saves money and keeps your books cleaner.
8. Website and Domain Expenses

If your LLC has a website, the related costs may be deductible.
This can include:
- Domain registration
- Web hosting
- Website design
- Website development
- WordPress themes
- Plugins
- Landing page tools
- Website maintenance
- Security tools
- Content writing
- Technical support
Example
An online consulting LLC pays for hosting, a domain, a booking plugin, and a website designer. These expenses are connected to the business and may be deductible.
Why This Matters
Your website is often your online storefront. Whether you sell products, book clients, collect leads, or publish content, website expenses are usually a normal part of doing business.
9. Advertising and Marketing
Marketing costs are usually deductible when they promote your business.
This can include:
- Google Ads
- Facebook Ads
- YouTube Ads
- TikTok Ads
- LinkedIn Ads
- SEO services
- Content writing
- Email marketing
- Graphic design
- Print flyers
- Business cards
- Sponsorships
- Influencer campaigns
- Affiliate commissions
- Promotional materials
Example
If your LLC spends $2,000 on Google Ads to get customers, that is usually a business advertising expense.
If you pay a freelancer to write blog content for your company website, that may also be a marketing expense.
Tip
Keep ad platform invoices and campaign records.
This helps prove that the expense was for business promotion.
10. Office Supplies
Office supplies are small but common deductions.
These may include:
- Pens
- Notebooks
- Printer paper
- Ink
- Folders
- Shipping labels
- Envelopes
- Desk supplies
- Whiteboards
- Business stationery
Example
A consulting LLC buys notebooks, pens, printer ink, and folders for client work. These are normal business supplies.
Tip
Small expenses are easy to forget.
Use a business debit or credit card for office purchases so you do not lose track.
11. Equipment and Furniture
If you buy equipment for your LLC, the cost may be deductible.
This may include:
- Laptop
- Desktop computer
- Printer
- Camera
- Microphone
- Desk
- Office chair
- Monitor
- Tablet
- Business phone
- Lighting equipment
- Tools and machinery
Some equipment may be deducted all at once. Other items may need to be depreciated over time, depending on tax rules and cost.
Example
A YouTube marketing LLC buys a camera, microphone, laptop, and editing software.
A cleaning LLC buys vacuum equipment and cleaning machines.
A construction LLC buys tools and safety equipment.
These items are connected to business operations.
Tip
Keep receipts and note the business use percentage.
If you use a laptop 70% for business and 30% for personal use, only the business portion should be considered.
12. Vehicle and Mileage Expenses
If you use your vehicle for business, you may be able to deduct business mileage or actual vehicle expenses.
Business driving may include:
- Driving to client meetings
- Visiting job sites
- Picking up supplies
- Driving to business events
- Delivering products
- Meeting vendors
- Traveling between work locations
What Is Not Deductible?
Normal commuting from your home to a regular workplace is usually not deductible.
For example, if you drive from home to your office every day, that is generally personal commuting.
Two Common Methods
LLC owners often use one of two methods:
- Standard mileage method
- Actual expense method
The standard mileage method uses a set rate per business mile.
The actual expense method tracks costs like fuel, repairs, insurance, registration, lease payments, depreciation, and maintenance.
Tip
Keep a mileage log.
Your log should include:
- Date
- Starting point
- Destination
- Business purpose
- Miles driven
Guessing at the end of the year is risky.
13. Business Travel
Travel expenses may be deductible if the trip is mainly for business.
Business travel may include:
- Flights
- Hotels
- Rental cars
- Taxis
- Rideshare trips
- Parking
- Baggage fees
- Business meals
- Conference travel
- Trade show travel
Example
You travel to another city for a business conference, client meeting, or supplier negotiation. Your flight, hotel, local transportation, and some meals may be deductible.
Personal Travel Warning
If you add vacation days to a business trip, only the business portion should be deducted.
For example, if you attend a two-day business event and then stay three extra days for personal sightseeing, do not deduct the personal part.
14. Business Meals
Business meals may be partly deductible when they are connected to your business.
This can include meals with:
- Clients
- Prospects
- Vendors
- Business partners
- Employees
- Contractors
Example
You take a potential client to lunch to discuss a project. The meal may qualify as a business meal if it has a real business purpose.
What to Record
For every business meal, keep:
- Receipt
- Date
- Location
- Names of people present
- Business purpose
Important Note
Entertainment is usually treated differently from meals.
A client lunch is not the same as taking someone to a concert or sports event. Be careful when mixing meals and entertainment.
15. Professional Services

Most LLCs need help from professionals at some point.
Professional service fees may be deductible when they are related to your business.
These may include:
- Accountant fees
- Bookkeeping fees
- Attorney fees
- Tax preparation fees
- Business consulting fees
- Marketing consultant fees
- Web developer fees
- HR consultant fees
- Payroll service fees
Example
If you hire a CPA to prepare your LLC taxes, that fee may be deductible.
If you hire a lawyer to review a business contract, that may also be deductible.
Tip
Separate business legal fees from personal legal fees.
A lawyer helping with your LLC agreement is different from a lawyer handling a personal matter.
16. Insurance Premiums
Business insurance may be deductible if it protects your LLC.
Common business insurance types include:
- General liability insurance
- Professional liability insurance
- Errors and omissions insurance
- Commercial property insurance
- Workers’ compensation insurance
- Cyber insurance
- Business vehicle insurance
- Product liability insurance
Example
A consulting LLC may pay for professional liability insurance. A retail LLC may pay for general liability and product liability coverage. A contractor may need commercial auto and workers’ compensation insurance.
Tip
Do not ignore insurance just because it feels like an extra cost.
One claim can cost more than years of premiums.
17. Contractor and Freelancer Payments
If your LLC hires contractors or freelancers, those payments may be deductible.
This may include payments to:
- Writers
- Designers
- Developers
- Virtual assistants
- Editors
- Consultants
- Photographers
- Marketers
- Bookkeepers
- Video editors
- Project-based workers
Example
You hire a freelance designer to create ads for your company. You pay a developer to fix your website. You hire a virtual assistant to manage admin tasks.
These payments are business expenses.
Important Tip
Keep contractor invoices and payment records.
You may also need to issue tax forms to certain contractors if payments cross reporting thresholds.
18. Employee Wages and Payroll Costs
If your LLC has employees, wages are usually deductible business expenses.
Payroll-related deductions may include:
- Salaries
- Hourly wages
- Bonuses
- Payroll taxes
- Employee benefits
- Workers’ compensation
- Payroll service fees
Example
Your LLC hires a customer support assistant and pays monthly wages. Those wages are part of your business expenses.
Tip
Payroll must be handled carefully.
If you have employees, use payroll software or a payroll provider. Mistakes with withholding and payroll taxes can create penalties.
19. Education and Training
Education costs may be deductible if they help you improve skills used in your current business.
This can include:
- Online courses
- Workshops
- Seminars
- Certifications
- Business books
- Industry training
- Webinars
- Conference sessions
Example
A digital marketing LLC owner pays for advanced SEO training. A bookkeeper pays for tax software training. A photographer takes a lighting workshop.
These costs may support the business.
What May Not Qualify
Education that prepares you for a totally new career may not qualify the same way.
For example, if your LLC is a cleaning business and you take a course to become a nurse, that is not clearly connected to your current business.
20. Business Banking and Payment Processing Fees
Banks and payment platforms often charge fees.
These fees may be deductible when they are related to your LLC.
Examples include:
- Monthly bank fees
- Wire transfer fees
- Check fees
- Payment processing fees
- Stripe fees
- PayPal fees
- Shopify payment fees
- Credit card processing fees
- Merchant account fees
Example
Your ecommerce LLC sells products online and pays payment processing fees on each sale. Those fees are part of doing business.
Tip
Connect your business bank account and payment platforms to accounting software. This makes fee tracking easier.
21. Rent and Coworking Space
If your LLC rents office space, studio space, warehouse space, or a coworking desk, the cost may be deductible.
This can include:
- Office rent
- Coworking membership
- Warehouse rent
- Studio rent
- Storage unit for business inventory
- Meeting room rental
Example
A consultant rents a coworking office for client meetings. An ecommerce seller rents storage space for inventory. A photographer rents a studio for shoots.
These may qualify as business expenses.
Tip
The space should be used for business.
If you rent a storage unit for both business inventory and personal items, only the business portion should be considered.
22. Inventory and Cost of Goods Sold
If your LLC sells products, inventory costs are important.
Cost of goods sold, often called COGS, includes the direct cost of products you sell.
This may include:
- Product purchase cost
- Raw materials
- Packaging used for products
- Manufacturing costs
- Freight-in costs
- Direct labor related to production
Example
An ecommerce LLC buys products for $20 each and sells them for $50 each. The $20 product cost is part of COGS.
Important Point
Inventory is not always deducted the same way as regular expenses.
You usually track inventory and deduct the cost when goods are sold. Product businesses should keep very clean records.
23. Shipping and Postage
Shipping costs are common for ecommerce and product-based LLCs.
Deductible shipping expenses may include:
- Postage
- Shipping labels
- Courier fees
- Packaging supplies
- Boxes
- Tape
- Mailers
- Fulfillment fees
Example
Your LLC sells handmade products online and pays for boxes, labels, mailers, and courier pickups. These are business expenses.
Tip
Keep shipping platform records.
Many platforms provide downloadable reports that help with bookkeeping.
24. Dues, Memberships, and Subscriptions
Some professional memberships may be deductible if they relate to your business.
This can include:
- Industry association dues
- Professional memberships
- Trade group fees
- Business publications
- Paid research tools
- Professional communities
- Chamber of commerce membership
Example
A real estate LLC pays for a local real estate association membership. A marketing consultant pays for an industry research subscription.
These costs may help the business operate or grow.
Warning
Social club memberships are usually not treated the same way. Be careful with memberships that are mainly personal or entertainment-based.
25. Interest on Business Loans and Credit Cards
If your LLC borrows money for business purposes, the interest may be deductible.
This can include interest on:
- Business loans
- Business credit cards
- Equipment financing
- Lines of credit
- Business vehicle loans
Example
Your LLC uses a business credit card to buy supplies and pays interest on the balance. The interest connected to business purchases may be deductible.
Tip
Keep business and personal borrowing separate.
Do not use the same credit card for groceries, vacations, and business supplies. It creates messy records and can make deductions harder to prove.
26. Bad Debts
If your LLC uses accrual accounting and a customer does not pay, you may be able to deduct certain bad debts.
This usually applies when income was already recorded but later became uncollectible.
Example
You invoice a client for completed work, record the income, and later determine the client will not pay. Depending on your accounting method, this may become a bad debt issue.
Tip
Bad debt rules can be tricky.
Ask a tax professional before claiming this deduction, especially if you use cash-basis accounting.
27. Repairs and Maintenance
Repairs and maintenance for business property may be deductible.
This can include:
- Equipment repairs
- Office repairs
- Computer repairs
- Machinery maintenance
- Vehicle repairs for business vehicles
- Website maintenance
Example
A cleaning company repairs a business vacuum. A photographer repairs a business camera. A consultant pays for laptop repair.
These costs may be business expenses.
Repair vs Improvement
A repair keeps something working.
An improvement makes it better, larger, or more valuable. Improvements may need different tax treatment.
28. Business Gifts
Small business gifts may be deductible, but limits can apply.
Examples include:
- Client thank-you gifts
- Vendor appreciation gifts
- Referral gifts
- Holiday business gifts
Tip
Keep gift records.
Write down who received the gift and why it was business-related.
Do not treat expensive personal gifts as business deductions.
29. Health Insurance for Self-Employed LLC Owners
Some self-employed LLC owners may be able to deduct health insurance premiums.
This may include premiums paid for yourself, your spouse, and dependents if you qualify.
Important Note
This deduction has specific rules.
It may depend on your LLC tax structure, whether you are eligible for another employer health plan, and your business profit.
Tip
This is an area where a tax professional can help because the rules are not always simple.
30. Retirement Plan Contributions
LLC owners may be able to contribute to business retirement plans and receive tax benefits.
Common options include:
- SEP IRA
- Solo 401(k)
- SIMPLE IRA
- Traditional IRA, depending on eligibility
Why This Matters
Retirement contributions can help you save for the future while also reducing taxable income in some cases.
Example
A profitable single-member LLC owner opens a Solo 401(k) and contributes based on the rules for self-employed individuals.
Tip
Retirement plan rules have limits and deadlines.
Plan early instead of waiting until the last minute.
Deductions LLC Owners Should Be Careful With
Some deductions create more risk because they are often mixed with personal use.
Be extra careful with:
- Home office
- Vehicle expenses
- Meals
- Travel
- Phone and internet
- Gifts
- Large equipment purchases
- Family member payments
This does not mean you should avoid them. It means you should document them properly.
Common LLC Tax Deduction Mistakes
1. Mixing Personal and Business Expenses
Use a separate business bank account.
This makes bookkeeping cleaner and helps show that your LLC is separate from your personal life.
2. Not Keeping Receipts
Bank statements help, but receipts give more detail.
A receipt shows what you bought, when you bought it, and where you bought it.
3. Guessing Business Use
Do not guess wildly.
If something is used partly for business and partly for personal use, use a reasonable method to calculate the business portion.
4. Claiming Everything as a Business Expense
Not everything is deductible just because you own an LLC.
A personal vacation, personal clothing, family meal, or personal phone upgrade is not automatically a business expense.
5. Waiting Until Tax Season
Bookkeeping should happen throughout the year.
If you wait until tax season, you may forget expenses, lose receipts, or misclassify transactions.
Simple LLC Deduction Checklist
Use this list to review possible deductions:
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Startup costs | Research, launch costs, early marketing |
| Formation costs | State fee, LLC service, legal setup |
| Registered agent | Annual registered agent fee |
| Home office | Business-use portion of home costs |
| Internet and phone | Business-use percentage |
| Software | Accounting, CRM, design, SEO, cloud tools |
| Website | Domain, hosting, plugins, maintenance |
| Marketing | Ads, SEO, content, email tools |
| Supplies | Paper, ink, office materials |
| Equipment | Laptop, camera, tools, printer |
| Vehicle | Business mileage or actual expenses |
| Travel | Flights, hotels, transport |
| Meals | Business meals with records |
| Professional help | CPA, lawyer, consultant |
| Insurance | Liability, cyber, workers’ comp |
| Contractors | Freelancers and outside workers |
| Payroll | Wages and payroll taxes |
| Education | Business-related training |
| Banking fees | Payment processing and bank charges |
| Rent | Office, coworking, storage |
| Inventory | Cost of goods sold |
| Shipping | Labels, postage, packaging |
| Interest | Business loan or credit card interest |
| Retirement | Eligible business retirement contributions |
How to Track LLC Tax Deductions Properly?

Good tracking is what makes deductions useful.
Here is a simple system:
- Open a separate business bank account.
- Use a business credit or debit card.
- Save receipts digitally.
- Use accounting software.
- Categorize expenses monthly.
- Keep mileage logs.
- Keep invoices from contractors.
- Review subscriptions every quarter.
- Set aside money for taxes.
- Ask a tax professional before claiming complex deductions.
This may sound boring, but it saves money and stress.
Clean records make tax season easier. Messy records make everything harder.
Final Thoughts
LLC tax deductions can make a real difference in your business finances.
The key is not to chase every possible deduction. The key is to claim the right deductions, keep proper records, and separate business expenses from personal expenses.
Common deductions include startup costs, formation fees, registered agent fees, home office expenses, software, marketing, website costs, supplies, equipment, mileage, travel, meals, professional services, insurance, contractor payments, and banking fees.
Some deductions are simple. Others need more care. Home office, vehicle use, travel, meals, health insurance, depreciation, and retirement contributions should be handled carefully.
A well-run LLC does not wait until tax season to think about deductions. It tracks expenses all year.
If you keep clean records, use a separate business bank account, save receipts, and review your books regularly, tax time becomes much easier.
Your LLC already has expenses. The smart move is to track them properly so you do not miss deductions that could lower your taxable income.