Many freelancers leave valuable tax deductions unclaimed, costing them thousands each year. SofikoS/ShutterstockFreelancers and self-employed professionals face a unique tax paradox: they have access to more deductions than traditional employees, yet studies show they consistently leave thousands of dollars on the table. According to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), self-employed taxpayers claim an average of 40 percent fewer deductions than they’re entitled to—an oversight worth an estimated $8,000 to $12,000 per year for the average freelancer earning $75,000 or more. Why Freelancers OverpayThe structural problem is clear. W-2 employees have HR departments, payroll systems, and employer-funded benefits that automate tax optimization. Freelancers are their own HR, accounting, and benefits departments—often without the training to do any of those jobs well.A QuickBooks survey found that 63 percent of freelancers prepare their own taxes, and among those, only 22 percent use professional-grade tax software that identifies business deductions. The rest use basic software (such as the free version of TurboTax) or paper forms that provide minimal guidance on deductions.
7 Tax Deductions Freelancers Consistently MissWorth up to $12,000 a Year
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