Tax Deductions for Small Business Owners in Florida: What You Can Claim in 2026

Don't leave money on the table. This guide covers every tax deduction small business owners in Florida can claim — and how WeDo makes sure none are missed.
tax deductions small business

Most small business owners in Florida pay more in taxes than they need to. Not because they’re doing anything wrong — but because nobody told them what they could actually deduct.

Every year, thousands of Florida freelancers, LLC owners, sole proprietors, and small business operators file their returns and leave real money sitting on the table. A deduction they didn’t know about. A credit they forgot to claim. An expense they paid out of pocket without realising the IRS would have let them subtract it from their taxable income.

The tax deductions available to small business owners are genuinely one of the most powerful tools in the US tax code. But they only work if you know about them — and if your books are clean enough to support the claim. This guide covers every major tax deduction small business owners in Florida can use in 2026, who qualifies for each, and how WeDo’s bilingual accounting and tax team makes sure none of them get missed on your return.

Why Florida Is One of the Best States for Small Business Tax Savings

Before we get into the deductions themselves, it’s worth understanding the Florida advantage — because it significantly amplifies what you keep after taxes.

No State Income Tax

Florida has no personal state income tax. That means the deductions you claim reduce your federal taxable income — and unlike business owners in California, New York, or Georgia, Florida small business owners don’t then turn around and pay 5–10% of that same income to the state. Every dollar of federal deductions is a dollar of real savings, not partially clawed back by state tax.

No State Business Income Tax for Pass-Through Entities

Sole proprietors, single-member LLCs, partnerships, and S-Corps are all pass-through entities — their income flows through to the owner’s personal return. In Florida, that income is not subject to state income tax. Only C-Corps pay Florida’s 5.5% corporate income tax. For the vast majority of Florida small businesses, this is a genuine structural advantage.

Strong Self-Employment Community

Florida has one of the largest self-employed and gig worker populations in the country — driven by no state income tax, a business-friendly environment, and the massive service economy of South Florida. If you’re running a business in Miami, Coral Gables, Doral, or anywhere in Florida, the tax and insurance services available through WeDo are specifically designed for business owners like you — handling your taxes, your bookkeeping, and your insurance in one coordinated place.

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The Complete Tax Deductions Small Business Owners Can Claim in Florida

Here are the most impactful tax deductions for small business owners in Florida — from the ones almost everyone knows about to the ones most people miss entirely.

1. Home Office Deduction

If you use a dedicated space in your home exclusively and regularly for business — even just one room, or a portion of a room set aside as a workspace — you can deduct a portion of your home expenses against your business income.

There are two methods:

  •   Calculate the percentage of your home used for business (square footage of office ÷ total square footage) and apply that to all home expenses: rent or mortgage interest, utilities, insurance, repairs, depreciation. More work, potentially higher deduction.Regular method
  •   $5 per square foot of dedicated workspace, up to 300 square feet, for a maximum deduction of $1,500. Less paperwork, lower potential savings.Simplified method

Important: the space must be used exclusively and regularly for business. A dining table you also eat at doesn’t qualify. A dedicated room used only as your office does.

2. Vehicle and Mileage Deduction

If you use your car for business — driving to client meetings, picking up supplies, visiting job sites, making deliveries — every business mile is deductible. The IRS standard mileage rate for 2024 is $0.67 per mile. Drive 10,000 business miles and that’s a $6,700 deduction.

Alternatively, you can deduct the actual vehicle expenses: gas, insurance, registration, repairs, and depreciation — prorated for the percentage of business use. Keep a mileage log year-round. Estimated mileage doesn’t hold up to IRS scrutiny.

3. Self-Employed Health Insurance Premium Deduction

This is one of the most valuable and most commonly missed tax deductions for small business owners in Florida. If you’re self-employed and paying for your own health insurance — medical, dental, and vision — you can deduct 100% of those premiums directly from your federal taxable income as an above-the-line deduction. No itemising required.

This applies to coverage for you, your spouse, and your dependents. A self-employed Florida business owner paying $400/month in health insurance premiums has a $4,800 annual deduction. At a 22% federal tax bracket, that’s over $1,000 back on their return from this one deduction alone.

Because WeDo offers bilingual tax services alongside health insurance enrollment, this deduction is coordinated automatically for clients who use both — the insurance team finds your plan, the tax team makes sure the premium lands correctly on your return.

4. Business Equipment and Technology (Section 179 and Bonus Depreciation)

Equipment, tools, computers, phones, furniture, and machinery purchased for your business can often be deducted in full in the year of purchase rather than depreciated over multiple years. Section 179 allows businesses to deduct up to $1,160,000 in qualifying purchases in a single tax year (2024 limit). Bonus depreciation allows additional first-year deductions for qualifying assets.

This includes computers, printers, professional cameras, tools of your trade, business vehicles (with limits), and most tangible property used in business. Keep all purchase records and receipts — this is a deduction that requires documentation.

5. Business Meals

Meals with clients, business partners, or prospective customers are 50% deductible — when the business purpose is clear and documented. To claim this deduction: keep the receipt, note who was present, and write down what business was discussed. A lunch you ate alone at your desk while working doesn’t qualify. A lunch with a client where you discussed a project does.

Entertainment expenses (sporting events, concerts) are no longer deductible under current tax law — but meals associated with a business meeting still qualify.

6. Professional Services — Including Your Accountant

Any professional fees directly related to your business are 100% deductible: accountants, bookkeepers, lawyers, business consultants, financial advisors. This means the cost of tax preparation florida services — including WeDo’s fees for preparing your business return — is itself a business deduction. The money you spend on professional tax help reduces your taxable income, which reduces your tax bill. It pays for itself in more ways than one.

7. Business Insurance Premiums

The premiums you pay for business insurance are fully deductible as a business expense. This includes general liability insurance, professional liability (errors and omissions), commercial property insurance, commercial auto insurance, and business interruption coverage. If you pay for these personally through your business, keep the payments separate from personal expenses and document them clearly.

This is separate from the self-employed health insurance deduction — that applies to personal health coverage. Business insurance premiums go on Schedule C as a business expense.

8. Retirement Contributions

Contributing to a retirement account as a self-employed business owner does two things simultaneously: it builds your financial future and reduces your taxable income today. The options available to Florida small business owners include:

  •   Contribute up to 25% of net self-employment income, maximum $69,000 in 2024. Simple to set up, high limits, very popular for higher-income self-employed individuals.SEP-IRA
  •   Contribution limits up to $69,000 in 2024 ($76,500 with catch-up contributions for 50+). More complex but allows Roth contributions and loans.Solo 401(k)
  •   For businesses with up to 100 employees. Employee contributions up to $16,000 in 2024.SIMPLE IRA
  •   Up to $7,000 in 2024 ($8,000 if 50+). Lower limits but widely available.Traditional IRA

Unlike most deductions, retirement contributions can be made after the tax year ends — SEP-IRA contributions for 2024 can be made as late as October 2025 if you file an extension. This makes them one of the few deductions where last-minute tax planning still works.

9. Education and Professional Development

Courses, certifications, books, seminars, and training programs that maintain or improve skills required for your current business are fully deductible. The key word is ‘current’ — education that qualifies you for a new career or business is not deductible.

A graphic designer taking an advanced Photoshop course: deductible. An accountant getting their CPA continuing education credits: deductible. A construction business owner taking a project management certification: deductible. Someone in a completely different field studying to become a graphic designer: not deductible as a business expense.

10. Marketing, Advertising, and Software

Every dollar you spend attracting customers to your business is deductible. This includes website hosting and design, online advertising (Google Ads, Facebook Ads, Instagram), business cards and printed materials, social media management tools, and any other promotional expense directly related to your business.

Software subscriptions used for business — QuickBooks, Adobe Creative Cloud, Zoom, Slack, project management tools, CRM platforms — are also 100% deductible in the year you pay for them. Keep records of what each subscription is used for in case of an audit.

11. Phone and Internet (Business Portion)

If you use your personal phone and home internet for business — which most self-employed people do — you can deduct the percentage attributable to business use. Most small business owners reasonably claim 50–80% of their monthly phone and internet bills, depending on how heavily they’re used for work. Document your reasoning and be consistent year over year.

Want to make sure you’re claiming every deduction you qualify for? Contact WeDo’s tax team for a free consultation — we review your business situation and identify every deduction you’re entitled to before filing. Available in English and Spanish.

Tax Deductions Small Business Owners Can Claim — At a Glance

Deduction What Qualifies Estimated Annual Value
Home Office (Regular Method) Square footage of dedicated workspace ÷ total home sq ft × all home expenses $1,500–$5,000+ depending on home size and expenses
Home Office (Simplified Method) $5 per square foot, up to 300 sq ft Up to $1,500 — less paperwork
Vehicle / Mileage Business driving at $0.67/mile (2024 IRS rate) $6,700 per 10,000 business miles
Health Insurance Premiums 100% of premiums for self-employed owner + family $3,000–$15,000+ depending on plan
Equipment & Tech (Section 179) Computers, phones, tools, machinery purchased for business Up to $1,160,000 in the year of purchase
Business Meals 50% of meals with clients or business discussions Varies — requires documentation
Professional Services Accountants, lawyers, consultants, bookkeepers 100% deductible
SEP-IRA Contributions Up to 25% of net self-employment income Up to $69,000 (2024 limit)
Business Insurance Premiums Liability, commercial auto, property, E&O coverage 100% deductible as business expense
Education & Training Courses, books, certifications related to your business 100% deductible if maintains/improves current skills
Travel Expenses Airfare, hotel, car rental for business trips 100% deductible — keep all receipts
Marketing & Advertising Website, ads, business cards, social media tools 100% deductible
Software Subscriptions QuickBooks, Canva, Zoom, Adobe, CRMs, etc. 100% deductible
Phone & Internet (Business Portion) Percentage of bill used for business Typically 50–80% of the bill

Stop Leaving Money on the Table. Let WeDo Find Every Deduction You Qualify For.

WeDo’s bilingual licensed tax team reviews your business situation, identifies every applicable deduction, and files your return accurately and completely. Free consultation — available in English and Spanish — at offices across Miami, Fort Myers & Louisville.

 

Trust line: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 4.9/5 from 221+ Google reviews · Licensed Tax Professionals · English & Spanish

 

The Tax Deductions Small Business Owners Most Commonly Miss

The deductions above are the standard ones — most tax guides cover them. Here are the ones that consistently get overlooked in our WeDo consultations, even by business owners who’ve been filing for years:

The Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction

Already covered above — but worth repeating because it’s the most consistently missed deduction we see. If you’re paying for your own health insurance and you’re self-employed, 100% of those premiums reduce your federal taxable income. Not 50%, not a partial credit — 100%. It requires no itemising. It has no income phase-out for most self-employed individuals. And most people filing on their own miss it.

Business Use of a Vehicle You Also Use Personally

Many business owners assume that because they use their car for personal errands too, they can’t deduct the business portion. You absolutely can — you just have to track business miles separately from personal miles. A mileage tracking app running in the background all year costs nothing and can produce thousands of dollars in deductions.

Business Insurance as a Business Expense

General liability, professional liability, and commercial auto insurance premiums paid by your business are 100% deductible. Many business owners confuse this with the health insurance deduction and either double-count or miss one entirely. WeDo’s tax and insurance services team coordinates both — making sure the right insurance expenses are claimed on the right lines of your return.

Startup Costs — Even From Before You Opened

If you started your business within the last few years, you may be able to deduct up to $5,000 in startup costs in your first year of operation — and amortise the rest over 15 years. This includes legal fees for forming your business, market research, advertising before you opened, and any other costs incurred before your first day of business.

Bad Debt From Unpaid Invoices

If you use accrual accounting and a client never paid an invoice you already reported as income, you may be able to deduct that bad debt as a business loss. This doesn’t apply to cash-basis businesses (you never reported the income, so there’s nothing to deduct) — but for accrual-basis businesses, unpaid invoices can become deductible losses.

What You Need to Keep to Claim These Deductions

Knowing the deductions is half the battle. The other half is having the records to back them up. Here’s what your books need to contain for every major deduction category:

  •   Digital photos stored in a business expenses folder are fineReceipts for every expense
  •   Date, destination, business purpose, and miles for every business tripMileage log
  •   Separate business account makes this dramatically easierBank statements
  •   Square footage of workspace and total home areaHome office measurements
  •   Who attended, what was discussed, receipt includedBusiness meal documentation
  •   Monthly statements or annual summary from your insurerInsurance premium records
  •   Statements from your SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k), or SIMPLE IRA custodianRetirement contribution confirmations
  •   Billing statements showing business useSoftware and subscription records

The single most important thing you can do for your tax deductions is maintain a separate business bank account and business credit card. When business and personal finances are mixed, tax preparation florida becomes a reconstruction exercise — and legitimate deductions get missed because the records aren’t there to support them. WeDo’s bookkeeping team maintains clean, audit-ready records year-round so your deductions are always documented.

Bilingual Tax Services for Miami's Small Business Community

Miami’s small business community is one of the most diverse in the country — and a significant portion of Florida’s entrepreneurs are more comfortable navigating complex tax topics in Spanish. WeDo’s bilingual tax services serve both English and Spanish-speaking business owners with the same licensed expertise — no jargon, no confusion, no getting lost in translation.

Whether you’re looking for insurance miami fl residents and business owners trust, or a tax team that understands both the numbers and the community, WeDo brings both to the same table. Our bilingual tax services are available in English and Spanish at every office location across Miami-Dade.

How WeDo Makes Sure You Never Miss a Tax Deduction

If you’re looking for the right choice for tax and insurance services as a Florida small business owner, the key question is: does your tax preparer know your full financial picture? At WeDo, the answer is yes — because we handle your books, your insurance, and your taxes in one coordinated place.

Year-Round Bookkeeping Feeds a Complete Return

When WeDo maintains your monthly books, every deductible expense is already categorised and documented before tax season begins. Tax preparation becomes a review, not a reconstruction. The tax preparation florida process at WeDo starts with clean books — which means every deduction is captured, supported, and applied correctly on your return.

Insurance and Tax Coordination

The self-employed health insurance deduction, business insurance expense deduction, and vehicle deduction all require coordination between what you’re paying and how it’s reported on your return. Because WeDo is an america insurance and tax service — meaning we handle insurance and taxes in the same agency — these connections are made automatically for every WeDo client.

Licensed Professionals Who Ask the Right Questions

Most missed deductions aren’t the result of complicated tax situations — they’re the result of nobody asking the right questions. Did you buy any equipment this year? Use your car for business? Work from home? Pay for professional development? WeDo’s licensed tax preparers go through every applicable category with every client — because the questions you don’t get asked are the deductions you don’t receive.

Find Tax and Insurance Help Near You

If you’ve been searching for insurance and taxes near me in Florida, WeDo has offices across Miami-Dade — Coral Gables, Bird Road, Brickell, Flagler, and Doral — plus Fort Myers FL and Louisville KY. Every office offers complete tax preparation, bookkeeping, and insurance services in English and Spanish.

Not sure where to start? The easiest step is to call or contact WeDo for a free initial consultation — we’ll review your business situation, identify the deductions you’re currently missing, and tell you exactly what we need from you to file a complete, accurate return. Available in English and Spanish, year-round.

As the right choice for tax and insurance services in Florida, WeDo’s all-in-one model is built specifically for small business owners who need their books, their taxes, and their insurance handled by one coordinated, bilingual, licensed team. Find your nearest office — or book a remote appointment.

Frequently Asked Questions

The most valuable tax deductions for small business owners include the home office deduction, vehicle and mileage deduction, self-employed health insurance premium deduction, Section 179 equipment deduction, and retirement contributions (SEP-IRA or Solo 401(k)). For Florida small business owners specifically, these deductions reduce federal taxable income with no state income tax on top — making each dollar of deduction more valuable than in most other states. WeDo’s tax preparation florida team reviews every applicable deduction for every business client.

Yes — if you’re self-employed, you can deduct 100% of your health, dental, and vision insurance premiums from your federal taxable income as an above-the-line deduction. This applies to coverage for you, your spouse, and your dependents. It requires no itemising and has no income phase-out for most self-employed individuals. Because WeDo offers bilingual tax services alongside health insurance enrollment, we coordinate this deduction automatically for clients who use both services.

WeDo Insurance & Taxes has offices across Miami-Dade — Coral Gables, Bird Road, Brickell, Flagler, and Doral — offering complete tax preparation, bookkeeping, and insurance services for small businesses and individuals. If you’ve been searching for insurance and taxes near me, visit wedoinsuranceandtaxes.com/locations/ for full office addresses and contact information. Remote appointments are also available for clients across all of Florida and the United States.

For every tax deduction small business owners claim, you need documentation: receipts for all expenses, a mileage log for vehicle deductions, bank statements from a dedicated business account, home office measurements, business meal records noting who attended and what was discussed, insurance premium statements, and retirement contribution confirmations. WeDo’s bookkeeping team maintains these records year-round so they’re always available and organised when tax time comes.

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Picture of Stephanie Mesa
Stephanie Mesa
Licensed Insurance Agent· Helping Florida families and businesses find the right coverage.
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