Important Disclaimer Before We Dive In
I am a mom blogger, not a CPA. The information here is general education based on IRS publications and reputable small-business resources. Before filing or making major tax decisions, consult a qualified tax professional. Tax laws change, and your situation is unique.
That said, here is what most mom entrepreneurs need to understand to stay out of trouble and not overpay.
📌 Key Takeaway: According to the IRS, self-employed individuals underreport an estimated 56% of their income on average (Tax Gap Report 2024) because they fail to track properly. Strong bookkeeping habits from day 1 typically save mom entrepreneurs $1,000 to $5,000 per year in legitimate deductions they would otherwise miss. For business structure context, see our LLC vs sole proprietorship for mom businesses guide.
Step 1: Track Everything from Day 1
If you take only one thing from this article: open a separate checking account for your business. Even as a sole proprietor with no LLC. Mixing personal and business expenses is the number one reason mom entrepreneurs overpay or get into trouble.
What to Track Monthly
- All business income (PayPal, Stripe, Etsy, sponsored payments, course sales)
- All business expenses (hosting, tools, supplies, mileage)
- Receipts for purchases over $75 (IRS requires)
- Hours worked from home (for home office calculation)
Simple Tools
- Wave Accounting: Free, designed for small businesses
- QuickBooks Self-Employed: $15/mo, integrates with TurboTax
- A spreadsheet: Honestly fine for under $10k/year revenue
- Receipts app: Use your phone to snap and store
Step 2: Common Deductions for Mom Entrepreneurs
Here are the deductions almost every mom business can use:
Step 3: Understand Self-Employment Tax
This trips up almost every new mom entrepreneur. When you are self-employed, you pay both halves of Social Security and Medicare (15.3% total). That is on top of regular income tax.
Total tax burden for a typical mom business:
- Federal income tax: 10-22% depending on bracket
- Self-employment tax: 15.3%
- State income tax: 0-13% depending on state
Set aside 25-30% of every payment received. That is the rough buffer most accountants recommend.
Step 4: Quarterly Estimated Taxes
If you expect to owe over $1,000 in taxes for the year, the IRS requires you to pay quarterly. Missing these triggers an underpayment penalty (small but annoying).
Deadlines
- Q1 (Jan-Mar): April 15
- Q2 (Apr-May): June 15
- Q3 (Jun-Aug): September 15
- Q4 (Sep-Dec): January 15
Pay through IRS Direct Pay — it is free and takes 5 minutes. Use Form 1040-ES.
Estimating What You Owe
Take your net profit (income minus expenses), multiply by 0.30, then divide by 4. That is roughly each quarterly payment. Revisit after each quarter.
Step 5: The Home Office Deduction (Done Right)
The home office deduction is real and legitimate, despite urban legend. The IRS has two methods:
Simplified Method
$5 per square foot, up to 300 sq ft (max $1,500/year). No receipts required.
Actual Expenses Method
Calculate the % of your home used for business. Then deduct that % of:
- Mortgage interest or rent
- Utilities (electric, gas, water)
- Internet and phone
- Home insurance
- Depreciation (if homeowner)
Requirements for either method:
- The space is used regularly and exclusively for business
- The space is your principal place of business
A corner of your bedroom counts. The kitchen table you also eat at does not.
Step 6: When to Get Help
You can DIY taxes if:
- Revenue is under $25,000
- You only have a couple of income sources
- You are willing to learn TurboTax Self-Employed or H&R Block Self-Employed
You should hire a CPA or enrolled agent if:
- Revenue exceeds $50,000
- You have an LLC or S-corp
- You sell physical products across state lines (sales tax complexity)
- You owe money and cannot figure out why
Expect to pay $300 to $800 for a small-business tax return prepared by a CPA. The deductions a good CPA finds usually outweigh their fee.
What NOT to Try to Deduct
The IRS audits or denies these regularly:
- Childcare you would have paid anyway (only the % attributable to specific business work is potentially deductible)
- Clothing not specifically required for business (no, your blogger outfits do not count)
- Meals with family disguised as “business lunches”
- 100% of your phone or internet (it must be the business portion only)
- Travel that was primarily personal with a business meeting tacked on
Quarterly Tax Routine
Set aside 1 hour at the end of each month and 2 hours at the end of each quarter:
Monthly (1 hour):
- Categorize transactions in your accounting tool
- Reconcile your business bank account
- File receipts (digital or physical folder)
Quarterly (2 hours):
- Generate a profit/loss statement
- Calculate estimated tax payment
- Pay via IRS Direct Pay
- Review for any missed deductions
Tax Software That Works for Mom Entrepreneurs
- TurboTax Self-Employed: $129. The easiest interface, good for sole proprietors.
- H&R Block Self-Employed: $115. Slightly cheaper, similar features.
- TaxAct Self-Employed: $94. Best value but less hand-holding.
- FreeTaxUSA: Federal free, state $14.99. Best for confident DIYers with simple businesses.
💡 Further Reading: Round out your business setup with LLC vs sole proprietorship for mom businesses and how to build a business as a mom.
Final Thoughts
Taxes feel scary mostly because we ignore them until April. Switch to monthly bookkeeping and quarterly payments, and the whole system becomes manageable. The mom entrepreneurs who run organized books pay thousands less in taxes than those who scramble at year-end. Build the habit early, even when your business income is tiny.
References
- IRS Publication 334 (2024). “Tax Guide for Small Business.”
- IRS Publication 587 (2024). “Business Use of Your Home.”
- IRS Form 1040-ES (2024). “Estimated Tax for Individuals.”
- SBA.gov (2024). “Small Business Tax Resources.”
- NerdWallet (2024). “Self-Employment Tax Guide.”