Digital Nomad Tax Deductions: Airbnbs for Remote Work

Digital Nomad Tax Deductions: Airbnbs for Remote Work
Updated on April 25, 2024

As a digital nomad, have you stayed in an Airbnb for months at a time and wondered about the legality of writing off your housing as a business expense?  Let’s dive into the details to see if Airbnb rent is a digital nomad tax deduction.

That Digital Nomad Lifestyle

According to the State of Independence in America research brief

conducted by MBO partners in 2018, 4.8 million US independent workers describe themselves as digital nomads, and an additional 17 million aspire to someday become nomadic on top of that. The benefits are appealing: a work-life balance and the chance to immerse yourself in various cultures, to name a few. Technological advances, the rise of affordable temporary housing through apps like Airbnb, and the growth of online marketplaces have made opportunities for digital nomads possible.

A digital nomad’s lifestyle can result in a fair share of expenses, including travel, lodging, meals, and other housing expenses. What are the tax ramifications of these expenses for the US taxpayer? Are they deductible as business expenses? How does the housing exclusion come into play for the international traveler? To determine the answers, one needs to look into the location of their tax home.

Is There Really an Airbnb Tax Deduction?

For tax purposes, Airbnb rent is considered a travel expense. The IRS grants tax deductions for travel expenses when you are traveling away from your tax home for business purposes. They include expenses that are common, accepted, helpful, and appropriate in one’s line of trade or business. If you travel outside the US, these expenses must generally be allocated between time spent for business and pleasure, when it comes to Airbnb tax deductions.

Where Is Your Tax Home?

So, as a digital nomad, how do you determine where your tax home is to figure out if your Airbnb expenses are tax deductible?

  • Generally, your tax home is your regular place of business, regardless of the location of your family home, or
  • It is the location of your main place of business when you have several places of business, or
  • It is where you live if you don’t have a main place of business due to the nature of your work, or
  • If you don’t have a regular place where you live or a main place of business, you are considered an itinerant, and your tax home is where you work. In this situation, as you are considered never to be away from your tax home, and travel expenses are not a business deduction. Avoid this if possible.

Your tax home does not change for a temporary assignment (generally defined as one year or less) at a single location, and business-related travel expenses are deductible in this case. However, this changes if the location of your new assignment is expected to last over one year; travel expenses will not be deductible.

So, Is My Airbnb Rent a Tax Deduction?

Keeping in mind that your tax home is where you work and you can only deduct travel expenses outside your tax home, most digital nomads won’t be able to take Airbnb rent as a tax deduction. That is, unless you generally live in one location (your tax home) and are traveling temporarily for work while staying in an Airbnb—but this isn’t the case for the majority of nomads who are traveling full-time.

For the international digital nomad who realizes that his tax home is where they work, there may be a silver lining. Spending over 12 months backpacking through Europe, sightseeing in Japan, and trekking in Africa qualify for a tax home outside the US, meaning you could qualify for the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (which allows you to exclude up to $120,000 of income in the 2023 tax year), with the housing exclusion available for Airbnb expenses, or a portion deductible as home office expenses. But keep in mind: you can’t have an abode in the US!

Let Greenback Handle Your Digital Nomad Taxes

Digital nomad tax deductions can be tricky, but Greenback can help. Get started with us today.

Confused about when you need to file? We can help.

When you live in the US, tax day is simple: April 15th! When you move abroad, it’s not so straightforward! Learn about all the expat deadlines and extensions you need to know to file.

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