The IRS does not audit self-employed filers at a higher rate than W-2 employees because it assumes freelancers are cheating. It does so because the structure of self-employment creates more room for error, more opportunity for misreporting, and less automatic third-party verification. An employee's income shows up on a W-2 filed by their employer. A freelancer's income shows up wherever the freelancer decides to report it. The IRS knows this asymmetry exists, and it allocates audit resources accordingly.
Most of the mistakes that attract scrutiny are not intentional fraud. They are errors of ignorance, overclaiming, or sloppy recordkeeping. Understanding which practices raise red flags is valuable whether you have been filing incorrectly for years or are preparing your first Schedule C.
Why Self-Employed Filers Are Audited More
Self-employed income is less reported by third parties. An employer files a W-2 and the IRS automatically sees that income. A client may or may not file a 1099-NEC, and the threshold for required 1099 filing means some payments go unreported at the payor level. The IRS relies on the filer to self-report accurately, and historically the audit rate on Schedule C returns has reflected the fact that not everyone does.
Self-employed filers also claim more deductions than W-2 employees. That is appropriate -- running a business creates legitimate business expenses. But deductions are also the primary mechanism for understating taxable income, so the IRS pays more attention to them for self-employed filers.
Finally, self-employment creates opportunities for misclassification -- calling personal expenses business expenses, calling employees contractors, calling hobbies businesses -- that simply do not exist in the same way for a W-2 employee. These are the areas the IRS is specifically trained to look for.
Home Office Deduction: The Most Misunderstood Deduction
The home office deduction is legitimate and useful. It is also one of the most commonly misclaimed deductions and one of the most reliably scrutinized. The IRS requires that the space claimed as a home office be used regularly and exclusively for business. Not primarily for business. Exclusively.
A room that doubles as a guest bedroom does not qualify. A kitchen table where you work in the morning does not qualify. A dedicated room with no other use qualifies. The exclusive use requirement is strict and it is the test that most home office claims fail if examined closely.
The second common error is calculating the deduction incorrectly. The deduction is based on the square footage of the office as a percentage of the total square footage of the home. Deducting a percentage of your entire home's costs when the office is a 150-square-foot room in a 2,000-square-foot house is not 50% -- it is 7.5%.
Vehicle Expense: The 100% Business Use Problem
Claiming 100% business use of a personal vehicle is one of the highest-risk deduction positions on a Schedule C. The IRS expects most people to use their personal vehicle for at least some personal driving. A claim of 100% business use in a vehicle that is also your personal car is a red flag that will draw scrutiny if your return is examined.
The IRS requires a contemporaneous mileage log -- a record kept at the time of each trip, not reconstructed at year-end. The log must show the date, destination, business purpose, and mileage for every business trip. If you cannot produce this log during an audit, your vehicle deduction can be disallowed entirely.
The simpler and more defensible approach for most self-employed people is to use the standard mileage rate (67 cents per mile in 2024) and keep a contemporaneous log, rather than trying to claim actual vehicle expenses with a high business-use percentage.
Consistent Business Losses: The Hobby Loss Problem
The IRS has a rule called the hobby loss rule. If your business loses money in three or more of five consecutive years, the IRS may presume you are not actually running a business with a profit motive. Activities without a profit motive are hobbies, and hobby expenses are not deductible against other income under the post-2017 tax rules.
If your business consistently shows a loss, you need documentation of your profit motive: business plans, records of efforts to improve profitability, evidence that you are treating the activity in a businesslike manner. An advisor can help you document this correctly before you face questions about it.
Meals and Entertainment: The 50% Rule and Its Limits
Meals that are genuinely business-related are 50% deductible. The key word is genuinely. The IRS requires a business purpose for each meal and documentation of who was present and what was discussed. Deducting personal meals as business meals is one of the most common and most flagged errors on Schedule C returns.
Entertainment expenses were eliminated entirely as a deduction by the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Tickets to sporting events, concerts, or other entertainment are no longer deductible, even if business was discussed. Many self-employed filers are still claiming these incorrectly.
Not Reporting All Income
The IRS receives copies of 1099-NEC forms filed by businesses that paid you $600 or more during the year. It also receives copies of 1099-K forms from payment processors like PayPal, Venmo, Stripe, and Square if you received more than the applicable threshold. All of this income must be reported on your return. The IRS matches what it receives against what you report.
Income that does not come with a 1099 is still taxable and still must be reported. Cash payments, barter income, foreign income -- all of it goes on your return. The fact that you did not receive a form does not mean the IRS does not know about it, especially if the other party deducted the payment as a business expense.
Misclassifying Employees as Independent Contractors
The IRS uses a multi-factor test to determine whether a worker is an employee or an independent contractor. The core factors are behavioral control (do you control how they do the work), financial control (do you control the economic aspects of their work), and type of relationship (is there a written contract, do you provide benefits, is the relationship ongoing). If someone works primarily for you, on your schedule, using your tools, doing the core work of your business, they are probably an employee, not a contractor.
Misclassifying an employee as a contractor means you avoided withholding income taxes, Social Security, and Medicare on their compensation. If the IRS reclassifies that worker as an employee, you owe back payroll taxes, interest, and penalties. The cost of getting this wrong is substantial, and the IRS has been aggressive about enforcement in this area.
What to Do if You Are Audited
First: do not panic and do not respond immediately without understanding what you are responding to. The IRS conducts several types of audits. A correspondence audit is conducted by mail and typically involves a specific question about a specific item on your return -- it is the most common and the least serious. An office audit requires you to bring documents to an IRS office. A field audit is conducted at your place of business.
Second: gather your records. Before you respond to anything, compile the documentation that supports the positions being questioned. Bank statements, receipts, contracts, mileage logs, invoices -- whatever is relevant to the issue.
Third: get professional representation. For anything beyond a simple correspondence audit, working with a CPA, enrolled agent, or tax attorney who handles IRS representation is strongly advisable. They understand the process, know how to respond without making things worse, and can often resolve issues that would be much more costly to handle without professional help.
The accountability a human tax advisor provides extends to audit situations. An AI-generated answer carries no weight with the IRS. A qualified enrolled agent representing you does.
For the broader picture of tax strategy, read The Complete Guide to Tax Planning for Business Owners. For the specific risks of relying on AI for tax guidance, read Why You Should Never Ask ChatGPT for Tax Advice.
