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I'm from N. Fl and I've never heard of this except as an ethical and safety point of view. I'm willing to bet that's what the instructors are talking about, cause facts are, and you are right if you can go to someone's home and do it w/ out these standards being met, then they can't enforce it in the Therapists own home.
Plus this sounds rather unenforceable to me.
Actually, IRS doesn't enforce business regulations; they merely verify business usage for tax deduction purposes. Meaning, that they don't concern themselves with entrances, except that--I'll get to that in a moment.
IRS permits a percentage formula: you compute total cost of maintaining the home office, then decide how much usage you and your family make of the room. If you have a computer in the office that you play games on or the kids do homework on, then obviously the room is not used for your business 100% of the time. Say you had the room painted, nice curtains hung, a new stationary massage table and an exclusively business telephone line installed, and used it 90% of the time for your business, and 10% family usage. If the total cost of the room--rent or mortgage, maintenance, everything combined-- is, say, $1,000 per year, you can deduct 90% from your business earnings as a legitimate business deduction.
Now, I haven't worked in the field for many years, but it's unlikely the above IRS regulation has changed very much.
Now, back to the private entrance. A private entrance would probably be viewed by the IRS as prima facie evidence of business use.
It's usually the city or county laws that determine whether you can have a home practice and if so, what other requirements there is. One exception might be Vermont, where home practices in massage are protected under state law. Wish that were true in all states.
If you look at the makeup of your city council or county board, you will probably find that many of them are land developers. Why would a land developer condone a home practice when they have office space to rent?
In many ways, the home is an ideal place for a massage practice. It's usually quieter, you control he space, and some clients find it more comfortable. It saddens me that more states do not protect home practices.
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