Here\'s How To Reimburse Partnership Expenses

June 3rd, 2026 at 7:59 AM

Partners in partnerships and members of LLCs taxed as partnerships often pay business-related expenses out of their own pocket. Common examples include meals with prospective clients, vehicle expenses, professional education, subscriptions, and home-office costs.

In many cases, these unreimbursed expenses may be deductible on the partner’s personal tax return—but only if the partnership agreement or firm policy requires the partner to pay them without reimbursement.

This distinction is critical.

If the partnership would reimburse the expense upon request, the expense is not deductible personally. In that case, you should submit the expense for reimbursement instead of attempting to deduct it yourself.

Properly deductible, unreimbursed partner expenses are generally reported on Schedule E of your Form 1040 and may also reduce your self-employment tax liability.

Home-office expenses can be especially valuable. If you regularly and exclusively use part of your home for partnership business and the partnership agreement requires you to maintain the office at your own expense, you may qualify for significant deductions.

One likely significant benefit to having a home office that qualifies as the partner’s principal place of business is that it converts otherwise non-deductible commuting mileage into deductible business mileage.

To protect these deductions, documentation matters. You should maintain detailed records showing the amount, date, and business purpose of each expense. Vehicle deductions require mileage logs or similar records, and home-office deductions require proof of business use.

Equally important, your partnership agreement should clearly state which expenses partners must personally pay and which expenses the partnership will reimburse. A written reimbursement policy can help avoid IRS disputes and support deductions during an audit.

Finally, do not rent your home office to your partnership. In most cases, that arrangement creates taxable rental income without allowing offsetting home-office deductions.

Mark S. Fineberg, CPA

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