Yes, many self-employed workers can deduct health insurance premiums if they meet IRS rules about business income and eligibility.
When you run your business, insurance bills hit your bank account before tax, so it makes sense to ask which premiums the tax rules let you write off.
This article explains how self-employed insurance deductions work under United States tax rules.
Are Insurance Premiums Tax Deductible For Self-Employed? Basic Rule
Insurance premiums for self-employed workers can be deductible, but it depends on what the policy covers. For tax purposes, think in two groups.
One group covers you and your family. Health, dental, vision, some long-term care policies, and certain Medicare premiums may qualify for an adjustment to income as self-employed health insurance. The other group covers business risks. Policies that protect your work, tools, or clients are usually business expenses on Schedule C.
Some premiums do not qualify. Life insurance where you or your business is the beneficiary, disability policies that replace your own wages, and personal coverage with no tie to your trade generally stay nondeductible.
Tax-Deductible Insurance Premiums For Self-Employed Workers Today
Health Insurance For You And Your Family
Many sole proprietors and partners can claim an adjustment to income for medical coverage they buy for themselves. The IRS handles this through the self-employed health insurance deduction, which you figure using the Form 7206 instructions and then report on Schedule 1 of Form 1040.
Qualifying premiums can include medical, dental, and vision policies for you, your spouse, your dependents, and children under age twenty-seven who are on your plan. Some Medicare premiums can also count when they relate to self-employment income. In general you need net profit, the deduction cannot exceed that profit, and you cannot claim it for months when an employer plan was available to you or your spouse.
Long-Term Care Insurance And HSAs
Qualified long-term care insurance premiums can also fit under the self-employed health insurance deduction, but only up to age based dollar limits that the IRS sets each year. Those limits, along with current Health Savings Account deduction amounts, appear on the IRS page that lists eligible long-term care premium caps and HSA limits.
Business Insurance That Protects Your Work
Most policies that protect your trade or business are treated as ordinary and necessary expenses. The IRS small business guide explains that premiums for fire, theft, flood, hazard, credit, liability, malpractice, workers’ compensation, business interruption, and similar coverage are usually deductible on Schedule C as insurance expenses rather than as personal medical costs.
You can see the official list in IRS Publication 334 for small businesses, which lays out common deductible insurance types for sole proprietors and statutory employees.
Vehicle insurance follows a special rule. If you use actual expenses for a car or truck, you can deduct the business share of premiums. If you use the standard mileage rate, car insurance is already built into that rate, so you do not deduct the premium separately.
| Insurance Type | Where It Is Deducted | Key Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Individual health, dental, vision | Self-employed health insurance deduction on Schedule 1 | Must have net profit and no access to employer plan for those months |
| Medicare Part B, Part D, Advantage | Self-employed health insurance deduction | Applies when you are self-employed and pay premiums yourself |
| Qualified long-term care insurance | Self-employed health insurance deduction | Subject to age based dollar caps and earned income limit |
| Liability and malpractice coverage | Schedule C insurance expense | Policy must relate directly to your trade or business activity |
| Property or renter coverage for business assets | Schedule C insurance expense | Covers tools, inventory, or workspace used in your business |
| Workers’ compensation insurance | Schedule C or payroll expense | Required by many states when you have employees |
| Business interruption insurance | Schedule C insurance expense | Replaces lost business income during covered shutdowns |
| Auto policy for mixed personal and business use | Schedule C or mileage method | Deduct only business share if using actual expenses |
Insurance Premiums That Usually Are Not Deductible
Self-employed taxpayers often assume every policy tied to their name should lower tax, but some coverage stays personal in the eyes of the IRS even when you run a business.
Life Insurance Where You Or The Business Is Beneficiary
Premiums for life insurance, endowment contracts, or similar policies are generally not deductible when you are directly or indirectly the beneficiary. That includes key person coverage owned by the business on you or a partner. Even though the policy protects the business against loss, the premium normally stays nondeductible, and the eventual payout is usually tax free.
Disability Policies That Replace Personal Wages
Premiums for policies that replace your own income during illness or injury are usually not deductible. In many cases the tradeoff is simple: when premiums stay nondeductible, any benefits you receive during a claim can be tax free.
Self-Insurance Reserves And Personal Policies
Amounts you set aside in a savings account to cover your own losses, even if you label it an insurance reserve, do not create a deduction. The IRS guidance on small business insurance mentions these self-insurance funds in the list of nondeductible items. Purely personal coverage with no tie to your trade, such as a homeowners policy for your main residence when you claim no home office deduction, also stays outside your business write-offs.
How The Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction Works
The self-employed health insurance deduction is an adjustment to income on Form 1040. That means it lowers adjusted gross income instead of appearing among itemized medical expenses.
The current instructions for Form 7206 describe the calculation step by step. In short, you start with net profit from Schedule C, Schedule F, or partnership income where you pay self-employment tax. You subtract the deductible part of self-employment tax and certain retirement plan contributions. Then you compare what is left with the health insurance premiums you paid for eligible months. The deduction is limited to the smaller of your eligible premiums or that adjusted business income figure.
If your business shows a loss for the year, you generally cannot take the deduction, though the premiums may still count as itemized medical expenses on Schedule A if you itemize.
Claiming Insurance Premiums Correctly As A Self-Employed Taxpayer
Getting the write-off is not just about knowing it exists. You also need to place each deduction in the right spot on the return so it matches the IRS instructions. A simple three step process can help.
Step One: Sort Premiums By Type
Print a list from your bank or card and label each insurance payment as health and dental, long-term care, or business coverage.
Step Two: Match Each Group To A Tax Line
Health, dental, and qualifying long-term care premiums for you and your family usually belong on Form 7206 and then on Schedule 1 as the self-employed health insurance deduction. Business coverage, such as liability and property insurance, belongs on Schedule C in the section for expenses. Mixed policies may require you to split the cost.
Long-term care insurance and HSA contributions use their own limits and lines. The IRS small business resource guide that replaced the old Publication 535 includes links to the current forms and worksheets that handle those adjustments.
Step Three: Keep Proof For Every Policy
Keep copies of policy documents, renewal notices, and every premium bill that shows who is covered, the coverage period, and how much you paid. Save statements that show you were not eligible for an employer plan during months when you claim the self-employed health insurance deduction.
| Task | What To Record | Tax Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Track monthly health premiums | Date, amount, person covered, months with no employer plan | Feeds Form 7206 self-employed health insurance deduction |
| List business insurance policies | Type of coverage, policy number, business purpose | Supports Schedule C insurance expense entries |
| Separate mixed personal and business policies | Business use percentage and method used | Prevents overstating deductions for auto and home coverage |
| Review earned income from self-employment | Net profit after half of self-employment tax and plan contributions | Sets the ceiling for health insurance deduction |
How Retirement Plan Contributions Interact With Insurance Deductions
Many self-employed people also fund a SEP, SIMPLE, or solo 401(k). IRS guidance on self-employed retirement plans, including Publication 560 on small business retirement plans, explains how to compute the deductible share of plan contributions based on net earnings from self-employment and how those contributions reduce the income that supports the health insurance deduction.
Practical Tips To Make The Most Of Self-Employed Insurance Deductions
Keep business and personal bank accounts separate. Pay business policies such as liability and property coverage from the business account, and pay personal health premiums from the account you use for owner draws. That separation makes it easier to show which deductions relate to your trade.
Document eligibility for the self-employed health insurance deduction every year. Save letters from former employers that show when coverage ended. If a spouse has a job with benefits, keep plan documents that show whether self-only or family coverage was available, since that can limit your deduction for certain months.
Tax rules change over time. The IRS pages that cover self-employed health insurance and small business expenses are updated more often than printed booklets. Before filing, review the current IRS guide to business expense resources and the latest overview page for Form 7206 so you are working from current instructions.
This article gives general education on how self-employed insurance deductions work under United States federal rules. It is not personal tax advice. For choices on your own return, work directly with a qualified tax professional who can look at your full situation.
References & Sources
- Internal Revenue Service.“Instructions for Form 7206, Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction.”Explains who can claim the self-employed health insurance deduction.
- Internal Revenue Service.“Eligible Long-Term Care Premium Limits and HSA Deduction Limits.”Shows age based long-term care premium limits and current HSA amounts.
- Internal Revenue Service.“Publication 334, Tax Guide for Small Business.”Summarizes deductible and nondeductible business insurance premiums.
- Internal Revenue Service.“Publication 560, Retirement Plans for Small Business.”Covers how self-employed retirement plan contributions are calculated.
- Internal Revenue Service.“Guide to Business Expense Resources.”Links to current IRS resources on deductible business expenses.
- Internal Revenue Service.“About Form 7206, Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction.”Gives an overview of the form and where the deduction appears on Form 1040.
