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Schedule C Deductions for US Spiritual Businesses: The 2026 Complete List

Schedule C deductions for astrologers, tarot readers, and coaches in 2026. Software, Section 179 $1.25M, mileage 72.5c, home office, SEP-IRA rules.

Every dollar you deduct on Schedule C reduces your net profit - and that net profit is the base for both income tax and self-employment tax (15.3% on 92.35% of net SE earnings). A $3,000 deduction for equipment does not just save income tax; it cuts SE tax by roughly $424 (at 14.13% effective SE rate on net profit). That is money that would otherwise go to Social Security and Medicare.

This guide lists the deductions available to US spiritual practitioners - astrologers, tarot readers, energy healers, numerologists, coaches - reporting on Schedule C as sole proprietors or single-member LLCs.

The "Ordinary and Necessary" Standard

All Schedule C deductions must meet the IRS "ordinary and necessary" test. An expense is:

- Ordinary: common and accepted in your field
- Necessary: helpful and appropriate for your business, even if not strictly required

For spiritual practitioners, astrology software is ordinary and necessary. A professional camera for creating online course content is ordinary and necessary. A personal vacation that happens to include one meditation retreat is not deductible - the personal portion is not a business expense.

Keep receipts for all business expenses. The IRS recommends retaining records for at least three years from the date you filed the return.

Source: sdocpa.com schedule-c-deductions (2026); unclekam.com schedule-c-deductions-list-2026.

Software and Subscriptions

Fully deductible as a business expense:

Software / Subscription

Deductible use case

Astrology software (Solar Fire, Astro Gold, Sirius)

Core practice tool

Tarot app subscriptions

Practice reference

Email marketing platform (Mailchimp, ConvertKit)

Client communication and marketing

CRM / scheduling tool (Acuity, Calendly)

Client booking

Website hosting and domain registration

Business web presence

Design tools (Canva Pro, Adobe)

Marketing materials, report templates

Course platform subscription (Teachable, LearnWorlds)

Digital product delivery

Cloud storage (Google Workspace, Dropbox)

Business file storage

AI writing or image tools used for business content

Content creation

Subscriptions that mix personal and business use (Netflix sometimes used for research, Spotify sometimes playing during sessions) are partially deductible - claim the business-use percentage and document it.

Source: sdocpa.com schedule-c-deductions 2026; carry.com learn/tax-deductions-every-freelancer.

Home Office

Two methods, both deductible:

Method

Deduction

Notes

Simplified

$5 per sq ft, max 300 sq ft = $1,500 max

No Form 8829; reported on Schedule C Line 30

Actual expense

Business-use % x rent/mortgage interest/utilities/insurance

Requires Form 8829

The actual expense method produces larger deductions when your rent or mortgage interest is significant relative to the size of the dedicated space. For a 150 sq ft reading room in a $2,000/month apartment: simplified yields $750, actual expense yields $2,640 (10% of $24,000 annual rent + $240 utilities) - a $1,890 difference.

Space must be used regularly and exclusively for business. See the full analysis at home office deduction for US spiritual practitioners.

Source: irs.gov simplified-option-for-home-office-deduction; sdocpa.com home-office-deduction-guide 2026.

Vehicle and Mileage

For driving to workshops, client meeting locations, supply runs, or other business travel:

Standard mileage rate 2026: 72.5 cents per mile. Verify the current rate at irs.gov before filing - the IRS publishes the rate annually, typically in December.

Miles driven for business

Deduction at 72.5 cents/mile

500 miles/year

$362.50

1,000 miles/year

$725.00

2,000 miles/year

$1,450.00

Alternative: actual vehicle expenses (gas, insurance, registration, depreciation, repairs) multiplied by the business-use percentage. The standard mileage rate is simpler and often produces a comparable or better deduction for low-mileage situations.

Keep a mileage log: date, destination, business purpose, miles driven. Contemporaneous records are required to substantiate vehicle deductions.

Source: sdocpa.com schedule-c-deductions 2026; jcbfs.com tax-deductions-for-freelancers-2026.

Equipment: Section 179 in 2026

Section 179 lets you deduct the full purchase price of qualifying business equipment in the year of purchase instead of depreciating it over years.

2026 Section 179 limit: $1,250,000 (deduction begins to phase out at $3,130,000 in qualifying purchases). Verify the current limit at irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p946.pdf before filing - the limit adjusts annually for inflation.

For a solo spiritual practitioner, the phase-out threshold is not a concern - typical equipment purchases are a small fraction of $3,130,000.

Equipment

Typical cost

Section 179 deductible

Laptop or desktop computer

$1,200-$2,500

Yes, business use %

Camera for course content

$500-$1,500

Yes, business use %

Microphone and audio gear

$100-$400

Yes, business use %

Ring light

$50-$150

Yes, business use %

Oracle decks and tools used in practice

$50-$300

Yes, as business supplies

Equipment used for both personal and business purposes is deductible at the business-use percentage. A computer used 80% for business and 20% personally: deduct 80% of the cost.

Section 179 applies to the tax year in which the equipment is placed in service - meaning purchased and used for business in 2026. Equipment ordered in December but not received and put in use until January 2027 is a 2027 deduction.

Source: sdocpa.com schedule-c-deductions 2026; unclekam.com schedule-c-deductions-list-2026.

Professional Development and Education

Fully deductible when the education maintains or improves skills required in your current practice:

- Tarot certification programs
- Astrology school tuition and course fees
- Human Design practitioner training
- Business and marketing courses for practitioners
- Numerology certification fees
- Conference and workshop registration fees
- Books and reference materials used in practice

Note: education that qualifies you for a new career is not deductible as a business expense (though it may qualify for education tax credits separately). Training that deepens skills you already use in your practice is deductible.

Source: carry.com learn/tax-deductions-every-freelancer; jcbfs.com tax-deductions-for-freelancers-2026.

Professional Services

Fully deductible:

- Accountant or CPA fees
- Tax preparation fees specifically for your business Schedule C
- Attorney fees for business matters (contracts, business formation)
- Web developer fees for your business site
- Graphic designer fees for business materials
- Business coach fees

Personal legal or financial fees (estate planning, personal tax advice) are not deductible as business expenses.

Advertising and Marketing

Fully deductible:

- Social media advertising (Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest ads for your practice)
- Paid search advertising
- Canva Pro subscription (when used for marketing materials)
- Email marketing platform fees
- Copywriting or content writing hired for your business
- Photography for business headshots or product images

Source: sdocpa.com schedule-c-deductions 2026.

Business Insurance

Business insurance premiums are fully deductible on Schedule C. Relevant for practitioners:

- Professional liability (errors and omissions) insurance
- General liability for home-based client visits
- Business equipment insurance

Personal health insurance is handled differently - see below.

Retirement Contributions: SEP-IRA and Solo 401(k)

Retirement contributions reduce both income tax and the SE tax base, making them particularly effective for self-employed practitioners.

SEP-IRA: contributions of up to 25% of net self-employment income are deductible. The dollar cap is adjusted annually for inflation - the IRS publishes the confirmed limit for each tax year in Publication 560 and at irs.gov/retirement-plans. Check those sources for the confirmed 2026 figure before filing.

Solo 401(k): combines employee and employer contribution components. Limits are higher than SEP-IRA at the same income level for practitioners with lower net SE income. Contribution deadline is the tax filing deadline (including extensions).

Both accounts allow tax-deferred growth. Unlike IRA contributions which reduce only income tax, SEP-IRA and Solo 401(k) contributions reduce net Schedule C profit, which lowers your SE tax base.

Note: The specific dollar caps for 2026 are published at irs.gov/retirement-plans. Confirm the current limits there before making contributions, as they change annually.

Source: sdocpa.com schedule-c-deductions 2026; carry.com learn/tax-deductions-every-freelancer.

Business Meals

50% deductible when:
- There is a documented business purpose (a meeting with a potential collaborator, a client consultation over lunch)
- The attendees are documented
- The receipt or expense record is retained

Meals that are entirely personal - dinner alone, eating while working alone at home - are not deductible even if you reviewed business materials.

Platform Fees Are Deductible

Fees paid to Gumroad, Payhip, NowPayments, or other platforms for processing your sales are deductible business expenses on Schedule C. These go under commissions and fees or other expenses, depending on the Schedule C line that matches.

Self-Employed Health Insurance (Not Schedule C - But Deductible)

Health insurance premiums paid for yourself, your spouse, and your dependents are deductible - but not on Schedule C. They go on Form 1040 Schedule 1, Line 17, as an above-the-line deduction. This reduces your AGI but does not reduce SE tax. Still valuable - a $5,000 annual health insurance premium reduces your income tax by approximately $1,100 at a 22% marginal rate.

You cannot deduct health insurance premiums if you or your spouse are eligible for employer-subsidized coverage through a W-2 job.

Source: sdocpa.com schedule-c-deductions 2026.

Schedule C at a Glance: Deduction Summary

Deduction category

Schedule C line

Fully or partially deductible

Advertising

Line 8

Fully

Car and truck expenses

Line 9

Business-use %

Insurance (not health)

Line 15

Fully

Legal and professional services

Line 17

Fully

Office expenses

Line 18

Fully

Rent (separate office or studio)

Line 20b

Fully

Repairs and maintenance

Line 21

Fully

Supplies

Line 22

Fully

Software subscriptions

Line 27a (other expenses)

Fully

Home office

Line 30

Simplified or Form 8829

Equipment (depreciation/Section 179)

Part III / Form 4562

Business-use %

Frequently Asked Questions

Are oracle decks and tarot cards deductible?

Yes, if they are used as tools in your practice. Decks you actively use for client readings, personal study directly tied to your professional development, or in course content are ordinary and necessary supplies. A practitioner who collects decks primarily as personal items has a weaker case - document business use.

Can I deduct my entire astrology software subscription if I also use it for personal charts?

Deduct the business-use percentage. If you use astrology software 90% for client work and 10% for personal charts, deduct 90%. Keep a usage log if your personal use is significant enough to matter.

My net Schedule C profit went negative after deductions. What happens?

A Schedule C net loss can offset other income on your Form 1040 - wages, investment income, your spouse's income on a joint return - subject to at-risk and passive activity rules. Most sole-proprietor spiritual practices are active businesses, so the at-risk rules apply in a straightforward way: you can deduct losses up to the amount you have at risk. A loss that exceeds other income creates a net operating loss that may carry forward.

When should I consider forming an LLC or S-Corp instead of operating as a sole proprietor?

An LLC as a sole proprietor is a pass-through entity - for federal income tax, it is treated identically to a sole proprietorship. An S-Corp election can reduce SE tax when your net profit is high (roughly $50,000+ annually) by allowing you to split income into salary and distribution. This is a tax planning question for a CPA familiar with self-employed professionals, not a decision to make from a general guide.

See also: US quarterly estimated taxes for spiritual practitioners - Home office deduction for US spiritual practitioners - 1099-K threshold for spiritual practitioners 2026