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Updated January 2026

IRS Schedule C 2026: Complete Filing Guide for Self-Employed Workers

Schedule C is the IRS form that self-employed workers, freelancers, and sole proprietors use to report their business income and expenses. It determines your net profit — the number that drives both your self-employment tax and your income tax. Getting it right is essential.

What Is Schedule C?

Schedule C (officially "Profit or Loss From Business") is an IRS form filed as part of your Form 1040 personal tax return. It is the document where you report all income earned from your self-employment activities and subtract all allowable business expenses, arriving at your net profit (or loss).

Who files Schedule C?
  • Freelancers and independent contractors
  • 1099-NEC recipients
  • Gig workers (rideshare, delivery, etc.)
  • Sole proprietors with a formal business
  • Single-member LLCs (disregarded entities)
  • Side hustlers with any self-employment income
Who does NOT file Schedule C?
  • W-2 employees (your employer handles taxes)
  • Partners in a partnership (use Schedule E)
  • S-Corp shareholders (use Schedule E for distributions)
  • C-Corporation owners (corp files its own return)
  • Rental property owners (use Schedule E)

Why Schedule C Matters

The net profit figure on Schedule C, Line 31 is critically important because it flows directly to two places on your tax return:

  • Schedule SE: Your net profit is the basis for calculating your self-employment tax (15.3% on 92.35% of net profit).
  • Form 1040, Schedule 1: Net profit increases your gross income, which determines your income tax bracket.

Accurately deducting all legitimate business expenses on Schedule C is one of the most impactful ways to reduce your overall tax burden.

Who Must File Schedule C?

You are required to file Schedule C if any of the following apply:

  • Your net self-employment income is $400 or more for the year
  • You received a 1099-NEC form from any client or platform
  • You received a 1099-K from a payment platform (PayPal, Venmo, Stripe, etc.) for business payments
  • You operated a business — even informally, without a formal legal structure — and had income from it
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The $400 threshold is for SE tax — not for filing. Even if you earned less than $400, you may still need to file Schedule C to report the income and claim any business losses. If you received a 1099, always report it regardless of the amount.

Do Not Wait for a 1099

Many self-employed workers believe they only need to report income if they received a 1099 form. This is incorrect. All self-employment income is taxable regardless of whether you receive a 1099. Cash payments, PayPal transfers, Venmo payments, and direct client payments are all reportable, even without a form.

Schedule C Line-by-Line Walkthrough

Schedule C is organized into several parts. Here is a walkthrough of the most important lines:

Part I — Income

Line Description Notes
Line 1 Gross receipts or sales Total income from all clients, platforms, and sources. Must match or exceed your 1099 totals.
Line 2 Returns and allowances Refunds paid to clients or customers that reduced your income.
Line 4 Cost of goods sold For businesses that sell products. Service-only businesses usually leave this blank.
Line 7 Gross income Line 1 minus Lines 2 and 4. This is your gross business income before expenses.

Part II — Expenses (Key Lines)

Line Expense Category What Qualifies
Line 9 Car and truck expenses Business mileage at $0.70/mile (2026 standard rate) or actual vehicle costs. Requires mileage log. Cannot use both methods.
Line 10 Commissions and fees Payments to subcontractors, sales reps, referral fees, and platform fees.
Line 13 Depreciation Depreciation on business assets. Attach Form 4562. Includes Section 179 expensing for equipment purchased during the year.
Line 14 Employee benefit programs Health insurance, retirement plans, and other benefits for employees (not you — your own health insurance is deducted on Schedule 1).
Line 15 Insurance (other than health) Business liability insurance, professional liability (E&O), property insurance for business assets.
Line 16 Interest Interest on business loans and business credit cards. Personal mortgage interest goes on Schedule A, not here.
Line 18 Office expense Postage, printing, office supplies used directly in business operations.
Line 22 Supplies Materials consumed in delivering your service or product. Distinct from office supplies (Line 18).
Line 25 Utilities Utilities for a dedicated business space (not home office — that goes on Line 30). Separate phone/internet: deduct the business-use percentage.
Line 28 Total expenses Sum of Lines 8 through 27a. This is your total deductible business expenses.
Line 30 Home office deduction Either the simplified method ($5/sq ft, max 300 sq ft = $1,500 max) or actual expenses via Form 8829. Space must be used regularly and exclusively for business.
Line 31 Net profit or loss Gross income minus total expenses and home office deduction. This is the crucial number that drives your SE tax and income tax.

Part IV — Vehicle Information

If you claim vehicle expenses on Line 9, you must complete Part IV. This requires:

  • Date vehicle was placed in service for business
  • Total miles driven during the year
  • Business miles driven
  • Whether you have documentation (mileage log)
  • Whether you have another vehicle available for personal use

A contemporaneous mileage log (recorded at or near the time of each trip) is your best defense in an audit. Use a mileage tracking app like MileIQ, Everlance, or a simple spreadsheet.

Common Schedule C Mistakes to Avoid

Only expenses that are "ordinary and necessary" for your specific business are deductible. Deducting personal expenses as business expenses is a major audit red flag and can result in penalties and back taxes. Maintain a separate business bank account and credit card to keep records clean. When an expense is partly personal and partly business (like a cell phone), deduct only the business-use percentage.

The IRS requires "adequate records" to substantiate vehicle deductions. A mileage log should record: date, destination, business purpose, and miles driven for each trip. Without this, your vehicle deduction may be disallowed entirely in an audit. Use an app or a spreadsheet — just be consistent. You cannot reconstruct a year's worth of mileage from memory retroactively.

All self-employment income is taxable — whether paid in cash, by check, via Venmo, PayPal, Zelle, or any other method. The IRS receives copies of all 1099 forms and matches them to your return. Underreporting income is one of the most common causes of IRS notices and audits. Report all income on Line 1 of Schedule C, even if you did not receive a 1099 form for it.

Claiming 100% business use of a vehicle or home office is one of the most scrutinized deductions on Schedule C. The IRS knows that most people use their car and home for personal purposes too. Only claim the actual business-use percentage. For a home office, the space must be used regularly and exclusively for business — a guest bedroom that doubles as an office does not qualify.

The SE tax deduction — 50% of your SE tax — is not taken on Schedule C. It is an above-the-line deduction on Schedule 1, Line 15. Many first-time filers miss this. Similarly, the self-employed health insurance deduction and retirement account contributions are deducted on Schedule 1, not on Schedule C. These deductions reduce your income tax but not your SE tax.

Schedule C vs. Schedule C-EZ

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Schedule C-EZ Has Been Eliminated. The IRS discontinued Schedule C-EZ beginning with the 2019 tax year. Everyone who files self-employment income now uses the standard Schedule C, regardless of the simplicity of their situation. There is no simplified version — just use the full Schedule C form.

The full Schedule C is not as intimidating as it looks. For a simple freelance business with no employees, no inventory, and no vehicle expenses, you may only need to fill in a handful of lines: gross income (Line 1), a few expense lines in Part II, and net profit (Line 31). The form is designed to accommodate all types of businesses — you simply skip the lines that do not apply to yours.

When to Attach Supporting Forms

Depending on your deductions, you may need to attach additional forms to your Schedule C:

Form 8829 — Home Office

Required if you claim the home office deduction using the actual expenses method. Calculates the deductible portion of rent, mortgage interest, utilities, and other home costs based on the percentage of your home used exclusively for business. The simplified method ($5/sq ft) does not require Form 8829.

Form 4562 — Depreciation

Required when you purchase business assets (computers, equipment, furniture) and claim depreciation or Section 179 expensing. If you claim the standard mileage rate for vehicles, Form 4562 is not required for the vehicle — but you still need Part IV of Schedule C.

Form 4797 — Sale of Business Property

Required if you sell, trade, or otherwise dispose of business assets (equipment, vehicles, etc.) that you previously depreciated. The gain or loss on these sales is reported on Form 4797, not Schedule C directly.

Schedule SE — Self-Employment Tax

Always required when you have Schedule C net profit of $400 or more. This is where your SE tax is calculated. It is not attached to Schedule C but is a separate schedule filed with your Form 1040.

Find All Your Tax Deductions

Use our free tax deductions calculator to discover commonly missed deductions for self-employed workers.

Tax Deductions Calculator →
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Frequently Asked Questions

If your net self-employment income is $400 or more, you must file Schedule C and pay self-employment tax. "Net" means after business expenses. Even if your gross income is below $400, you should still file Schedule C if you want to claim business expenses or report income shown on a 1099. Always report 1099 income regardless of the amount to avoid IRS matching discrepancies.

Yes, absolutely. Having a W-2 job has no effect on your obligation to file Schedule C for self-employment income. Both sources of income appear on the same Form 1040. One important note: if you have both W-2 income and self-employment income, your combined taxable income determines your tax bracket. The W-2 withholding may not be enough to cover your SE income, so you may owe additional taxes — or need to make quarterly estimated payments.

Gather the following before preparing Schedule C:

  • All 1099-NEC and 1099-K forms received
  • Invoices, bank statements, and payment records for all income
  • Receipts for all business expenses (credit card statements, paper receipts)
  • Mileage log if claiming vehicle expenses
  • Square footage of home and home office if claiming home office
  • Records of business asset purchases for depreciation
  • Prior-year tax return (for carryforward amounts if any)

Schedule C is for active business income from sole proprietorships, freelancing, and contracting — work you perform yourself. The net profit is subject to self-employment tax. Schedule E is for passive income — primarily rental real estate, and income from partnerships, S-corporations, estates, and trusts where you are not materially participating in the business. Rental income on Schedule E is not subject to self-employment tax. If you are a freelancer or independent contractor, you use Schedule C.

Yes, with limits. In your first year of business, you can immediately deduct up to $5,000 in startup costs. Any startup costs beyond $5,000 must be amortized over 180 months (15 years). If your total startup costs exceed $50,000, the $5,000 immediate deduction phases out dollar-for-dollar. Startup costs are expenses incurred before your business officially opened — including market research, travel to find locations, training, legal fees, and similar pre-opening expenses. They are distinct from regular business expenses incurred after you open.

Educational Use Only: This guide provides general information about IRS Schedule C for 2026. Tax situations vary; specific deductibility of expenses depends on facts and circumstances. Consult a qualified tax professional for your specific situation.