Business Equipment Write-Off 2026: Section 179, Bonus Depreciation & Smart Expensing Guide
Bought a new laptop, camera, desk, or specialized tool for your freelance business? Under IRS rules, you can often deduct the full cost in the year of purchase rather than spreading it over years. This guide explains Section 179 expensing, 2026 bonus depreciation rules, and how self-employed workers can maximize equipment deductions on Schedule C.
Three Ways to Deduct Business Equipment
The IRS provides three methods to deduct business equipment and property:
| Method | How It Works | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Section 179 | Deduct full cost in year of purchase (up to annual limit) | Moderate equipment purchases, immediate deduction |
| Bonus Depreciation | Deduct a percentage in year 1 (60% in 2026) | Large purchases, can create a loss |
| MACRS Depreciation | Spread cost over IRS recovery period (5-7 years typical) | Assets you want to depreciate over time |
Section 179 Expensing
Section 179 (IRC ยง179) allows you to deduct the full cost of qualifying business property in the year you place it in service, rather than depreciating it over multiple years.
2026 Section 179 Limits
- Annual deduction limit: $1,220,000 (indexed for inflation)
- Phase-out threshold: Begins when total property placed in service exceeds $3,050,000
- Business income limitation: Section 179 deduction cannot exceed your net taxable income from active business โ it cannot create a loss
What Section 179 Covers
- Tangible personal property (computers, equipment, machinery)
- Off-the-shelf software
- Qualified improvement property (some business real property improvements)
- Certain vehicles (subject to luxury auto limits)
Bonus Depreciation in 2026
Bonus depreciation (IRC ยง168(k)) allows an additional first-year deduction on eligible property. Under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act phase-down schedule:
| Year | Bonus Depreciation Rate |
|---|---|
| 2022 | 100% |
| 2023 | 80% |
| 2024 | 60% |
| 2025 | 40% |
| 2026 | 20% |
| 2027+ | 0% (unless Congress extends) |
For 2026, you can deduct 20% of eligible property cost as bonus depreciation in year 1, with the remaining 80% depreciated over the normal MACRS recovery period.
Regular MACRS Depreciation
If you don't elect Section 179 or bonus depreciation, equipment is depreciated under the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS):
- Computers, laptops, peripherals: 5-year property
- Office furniture, equipment: 7-year property
- Cars (passenger): 5-year, subject to luxury auto limits
MACRS uses a double-declining balance method, so the deductions are front-loaded. Most self-employed workers prefer Section 179 for immediate simplicity.
What Equipment Qualifies for 1099 / Self-Employed Workers?
โ Clearly Deductible
- Laptop, desktop, tablet used for business
- Camera, lighting, audio equipment (photographers, videographers, content creators)
- Business phone (business use portion)
- Specialized tools and machinery for trade work
- Office furniture (desk, chair, monitor โ home office must qualify)
- Software subscriptions and off-the-shelf software
- Professional equipment specific to your trade
โ ๏ธ Partially Deductible
- Computer used for both business and personal purposes โ deduct business use % only
- Home internet โ prorate business use
- Smartphone โ business call/use percentage
โ Not Deductible as Equipment
- Personal clothing (unless a specialized uniform required for work)
- Home furniture used primarily for personal purposes
- Commuting vehicles (personal commute is not a business expense)
Mixed Personal/Business Use Property
If you use a computer 70% for business and 30% for personal use, you can only deduct 70% of its cost. You must track actual usage to substantiate your business use percentage, especially if the IRS audits your return.
Business use: 75%
Deductible amount: $1,800 ร 75% = $1,350
For "listed property" (computers and vehicles), IRS listed property rules apply if business use falls below 50% โ you'd lose Section 179 and bonus depreciation eligibility and must use straight-line depreciation.
Real Calculation Examples
Example 1 โ Freelance Video Editor
Alex is a freelance video editor. In 2026 he bought:
- High-end editing workstation: $4,200 (100% business)
- External hard drives: $380 (100% business)
- Video editing software (annual sub): $600 (expensed as operating cost, not depreciated)
Software subscription: $600 operating expense (Schedule C)
Total equipment deduction year 1: $5,180
Net profit before equipment: $52,000
Net profit after deductions: $52,000 โ $5,180 = $46,820
SE tax savings: $5,180 ร 14.13% โ $732 saved in SE tax alone
Example 2 โ Freelance Photographer
Maria bought a $3,500 camera in October 2026. She uses it 80% for client work, 20% personal.
Section 179 deduction: $2,800 (deducted in 2026)
Remaining personal portion: not deductible
Best Strategy for Self-Employed Workers
- Use Section 179 for most equipment โ simple, immediate, no loss creation risk.
- Use bonus depreciation if income is low โ to carry forward a loss if needed (consult CPA).
- Don't depreciate cheap items โ items under the de minimis safe harbor ($2,500 for non-AFS taxpayers) can be expensed immediately without formal depreciation elections.
- Document everything โ receipts, business use logs, software screenshots of work done on the equipment.
- Time purchases strategically โ equipment placed in service before Dec 31 qualifies for the current tax year.
FAQ
Can I deduct a computer I bought last year?
You can only claim depreciation deductions for the year the property was "placed in service." If you bought it in a prior year and didn't deduct it, you'd need to amend that year's return or claim remaining MACRS depreciation on this year's return.
Is software deductible?
Yes. Off-the-shelf software (and SaaS subscriptions) used for business are deductible. Annual subscriptions are typically expensed directly on Schedule C; purchased software may qualify for Section 179.
What's the bonus depreciation rate for 2026?
20% for 2026 under the TCJA phase-down schedule. Check IRS updates for any legislative extensions.