BUSINESS DEDUCTION

Can Freelancers Deduct Accounting Fees?

Yes — fees paid to CPAs, EAs, and bookkeepers for business purposes are fully deductible on Schedule C. Tax preparation fees for the business portion of your return are also deductible.

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Quick answer

Yes. Accounting and professional fees for the business are fully deductible on Schedule C line 17 (legal and professional services). Includes CPA fees, EA fees, bookkeeping software (QuickBooks, Wave, FreshBooks), bookkeeping services, payroll services, and the business portion of your tax preparation fee. Personal tax prep is not deductible.

What qualifies as a deductible accounting fees

Tax preparer fees for the business return (Schedule C and Schedule SE portion). Bookkeeping services. Accounting software subscriptions (QuickBooks Self-Employed, QuickBooks Online, Wave, FreshBooks, Xero). Payroll software fees. CPA consultations on business tax planning. Audit defense services. Annual financial statement prep.

How to claim the deduction

Schedule C line 17 (legal and professional services). Full deductibility for clearly business-related fees. For tax prep fee that covers both business and personal return, allocate by time or by the value of the Schedule C portion. Many CPAs itemize their fee — that itemization is your allocation.

Sample math

ItemAnnual
QuickBooks Online subscription$360
Bookkeeper monthly retainer × 12$1,800
CPA tax preparation (Schedule C portion)$500
S-corp election tax planning consultation$300
Total deduction$2,960

Run your own numbers in the self-employment tax calculator and the quarterly tax calculator for freelancers. The full overview lives at how much tax do I owe self employed. For deductions, see best tax deductions for 1099 workers and the freelancer tax deductions checklist, plus the often-missed self-employed health insurance deduction. The filing walkthrough is at how to file taxes as a freelancer and the form reference at what tax forms do freelancers need. To dodge predictable pitfalls, see common freelancer tax mistakes and how to avoid freelancer tax penalties.

Recordkeeping

Save invoices from every accounting service provider. For tax prep that covers personal and business, ask the preparer to itemize the bill. Software subscription receipts come through email automatically — set up a folder. The deduction is straightforward at audit if you have receipts.

Common mistakes

Deducting personal tax prep on Schedule C (not allowed). Forgetting to deduct accounting software. Missing the prior-year tax-prep fee paid in this tax year. Confusing legal fees (also line 17) with other professional services.

What tax software handles automatically

Most modern tax software — TurboTax Self-Employed, FreeTaxUSA, H&R Block Self-Employed, TaxAct Self-Employed — handles the underlying form mechanics automatically once you indicate self-employment income. You enter income amounts and categorized expenses; the software fills out Schedule C, Schedule SE, Schedule 1, Form 8995 for QBI, and any other forms required. The half-SE deduction flows automatically. Quarterly estimated payment calculations are also automatic once prior-year tax is in. DIY paper filers need to handle each form manually, which is where small errors most often creep in. The recordkeeping side is where the human work happens — tax software cannot infer mileage you did not track, expenses you did not capture, or income you forgot to report. Spend the bookkeeping hour during the year and the tax software hour at filing time becomes mostly data entry rather than reconstruction. For the filing walkthrough see how to file taxes as a freelancer and the form reference at what tax forms do freelancers need.

How this fits into the full tax picture

Federal income tax and the 15.3% self-employment tax are the two halves of the federal freelancer tax bill. Both apply to net Schedule C profit; both can be reduced by legitimate business deductions. State income tax adds on top in 41 states. Quarterly estimated payments cover both federal taxes throughout the year so the April reconciliation is small. The whole system rewards consistent recordkeeping more than any single clever tax strategy — track every legitimate deduction, set aside the right percentage, and pay quarterly through EFTPS automatically. The ranked overview at best tax deductions for 1099 workers shows where the biggest dollars sit; the freelancer tax deductions checklist is the tickable run-through. To avoid the predictable mistakes, see common freelancer tax mistakes and how to avoid freelancer tax penalties.

When professional help is worth it

For straightforward freelance returns — one Schedule C, standard deductions, no entity changes — most freelancers DIY successfully with tax software. Professional help tends to earn its fee in specific situations: S-corp election, multi-state work, large or unusual deductions, an IRS notice you do not understand, or an entity decision you are weighing. The typical fee for a freelance Schedule C return is $300-$800 a year, much of which becomes a Schedule C deduction itself, making the net cost meaningfully lower. Above $100,000 of net SE income, the conversation with a CPA usually pays for itself many times over through better entity structuring and retirement-plan choice. Below that threshold, tax software handles the typical case competently.

Building a year-round tax workflow

The freelancers who feel calm at tax time are the ones who built a simple year-round workflow. The pattern that works for almost everyone: separate business bank account that all client payments hit; weekly 20-minute bookkeeping session that categorizes every expense and reconciles to bank; mileage app running automatically on the phone; folder system for receipts (digital photos count); quarterly review the week before each estimated payment deadline that totals income to-date, recalculates the target safe harbor amount, and submits through EFTPS. None of those steps is hard in isolation; what makes them powerful is that they happen consistently. By the time April rolls around, every number that goes onto Schedule C already exists in your records and the filing session is mostly clicking through screens rather than reconstructing a year. The freelancers who skip this workflow spend the first two weeks of April scrambling through bank statements, miss legitimate deductions because they cannot remember what a charge was for, and finish exhausted with a return that is probably understated on the deduction side. Twenty minutes a week beats two weeks of panic every single year.

What changes as your income grows

At low income (under about $25K of net SE profit), federal income tax is often zero after the standard deduction and QBI, and SE tax is the only federal bill. State tax is the other piece. Quarterly payments matter but the amounts are small. At mid income ($50K-$100K), federal income tax kicks in meaningfully on top of SE tax, the half-SE deduction starts to matter, and the QBI deduction becomes a real number. Retirement contributions (SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k)) become powerful levers. At higher income ($100K-$200K+), the conversation widens — S-corp election, defined benefit plans, accountable plans for reimbursements, larger home office deductions all become worth considering with a CPA. Above $200K of net profit the value of professional tax planning usually beats the fee many times over. The brackets themselves get steeper, the QBI deduction starts to phase out for some specified service businesses, and the Additional Medicare Tax kicks in at $200K (single) / $250K (MFJ). Strategy shifts from "deduct everything legitimate" to "structure the business optimally." Either way, the foundational rules — track every dollar in and out, reconcile to bank, pay quarterly — never change.

The audit-readiness habit

Audit rates for Schedule C filers are low but not zero, and the freelancers who weather an audit calmly are the ones who built audit-readiness into their normal workflow. The principle is simple: assume an auditor will look at every number on your return and ask "how do you know?" Keep contemporaneous records — receipts, bank statements, mileage logs, calendar entries, contracts — so the answer is always documented. Save records for at least three years after filing (six for omitted income over 25%, indefinitely if you never filed). Photograph paper receipts the day you get them; the ink fades, the auditor will not. Use a separate business bank account so the year-end Schedule C is a clean reconciliation. Most audits are mail correspondence audits about one or two specific line items, not full field audits — having a folder labeled with the year that contains the relevant records turns a six-month back-and-forth into a one-week resolution.

Frequently asked questions

Can I deduct my CPA's full fee?

Only the portion related to your business return and business advice. Personal return prep is not deductible for federal.

Is QuickBooks deductible?

Yes — Schedule C line 17 or line 18 (office expense). Either is acceptable.

Can I deduct a bookkeeper hired this year?

Yes — fully deductible on Schedule C line 17.

What about tax prep for last year's return I paid this year?

Deductible in the year you paid (cash basis), even though it relates to a prior year's return.

Where on Schedule C?

Line 17 (legal and professional services) is the standard place.

The bottom line

Yes, accounting fees are fully deductible for the business portion. CPA, EA, bookkeeper, accounting software, and tax prep fees for the Schedule C portion of your return all qualify. Save invoices and itemize when a fee covers both business and personal work. Typical full-time freelancer deduction lands between $300 and $3,000.

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Last updated: May 27, 2026. Disclaimer: Educational guide only. Not tax or legal advice. Confirm specifics with a licensed CPA or Enrolled Agent before filing.