Introduction
Blockchain Tribalism
Blockchain tribalism is the phenomenon in the cryptocurrency and blockchain community where individuals develop fierce and often blind loyalty to a specific blockchain, cryptocurrency, or project, while actively dismissing, disparaging, or showing hostility toward rival technologies or communities.
How does it work and what harm does it cause??
*It has compmnonets and looking at those components allows us to understand why blockchain tribalism hurts the cryptocurrency community, and slows it's growth, development and global acceptance.
Maximalism:
This is the most extreme form.
A "maximalist" believes that their chosen asset (e.g., Bitcoin maximalists, or "Ethereans" for Ethereum) is the only necessary or valid digital asset, and that all others are scams, inferior, or destined to fail.
Ideological Alignment:
Loyalty often stems from differing philosophical or ideological beliefs about the purpose of money and decentralization.
Bitcoin Purists may prioritize immutable security, scarcity, and a rejection of the traditional financial system.
Ethereum Supporters
These coiners often emphasize flexibility, smart contract programmability, and building a "world computer."
Echo Chambers:
Discussions primarily happen within insular online communities (e.g., specific subreddits, Discord groups, or Twitter circles), leading to an "echo chamber effect."
This reinforces biases and makes objective evaluation of rival technology difficult.
Financial Incentive:
This tribalism is often driven by monetary incentive.
Since an individual's financial investment is tied to the success of their favored project, they are strongly incentivized to defend it, promote its virtues ("shill"), and attack competitors (FUD - Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt) in hopes of increasing their own asset's value.
Toxicity and Hostility:
The behavior can manifest as aggressive rhetoric, insults, or online attacks against critics, skeptics, or members of rival "tribes."
Common phrases include "Have fun staying poor (HFSP)" directed at non-believers.
📉 Impact on the Ecosystem
Positive Effects
(Argued by Adherents)
Negative Effects (Observed by Critics)
Drives Passion & Adoption:
Creates a strong sense of community, shared purpose, and dedicated advocates who actively promote the technology.Hampers
Collaboration:
Creates barriers between communities, stifling constructive dialogue and slowing down industry-wide progress.
Provides Resilience:
Fierce loyalty helps projects maintain support and commitment, especially during prolonged bear markets and periods of negative news.
Stifles Innovation:
Promotes a lack of critical evaluation, leading to dogmatic adherence and a potential reluctance to adopt superior new technologies from competitors.
Creates Brand Identity:
Helps new projects quickly establish a distinct narrative and strong cultural identity to attract early users and investment.
Creates Negative Public Perception:
Makes the entire crypto space look divided, hostile, and overly focused on infighting, which can deter mainstream adoption.
Last Words...
Blockchain tribalism is a complex, deeply human social phenomenon within a hyper-financialized, technologically innovative space.
It is a dual-edged sword that fuels passion but often sacrifices objectivity.
✍️ About the Author & The INLEO Community
🙋♂️ Author: Shortsegments
This post was written by @Shortsegments, an author who has been covering cryptocurrency, blockchain technology, decentralized finance, Bitcoin, Ethereum, and digital ledgers for seven years.
- Read More: Find all of his articles on his blog: Link to his blog.
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Executive Summary: Tax Deductions for a Business 
This document has been rewritten for a business with a gross income of $345,000, focusing on the concept of business deductions and how they affect taxable income versus tax liability.
💰 Executive Summary: Tax Deductions for a Business
For a business with a gross income of $345,000, understanding and maximizing business deductions is the single most critical factor in reducing the taxable income—the base upon which the final tax bill is calculated.
The original document focuses on the S-Corp election, which is a powerful strategy to save on self-employment taxes (a specific type of tax) by converting profit into non-taxable distributions. However, this rewritten response will focus on the broader categories of expenses that reduce the primary income tax liability.
📝 Categories of Business Deductions
Business deductions are the ordinary and necessary expenses a company incurs to generate its gross income. They are subtracted from Gross Income (sales, revenue) to arrive at Net Income/Taxable Income.
Here are the primary categories of deductible business expenses:
- 1. Cost of Goods Sold (COGS): Direct costs of producing the goods or services sold. This includes material costs, direct labor, and overhead. This is often deducted before calculating "gross income" in accounting, but it is effectively a deduction.
- 2. Operating Expenses: Costs related to running the business daily.
- Wages & Benefits: Employee salaries, payroll taxes paid by the employer, health insurance, and retirement contributions.
- Rent & Utilities: Office/facility rent, electricity, water, internet, etc.
- Professional Fees: Accounting, legal, and consulting services.
- 3. Interest Expense: Interest paid on business loans, lines of credit, or credit cards.
- 4. Taxes & Licenses: State and local business taxes, property taxes, and business licenses (but NOT federal income tax).
- 5. Travel, Meals, & Entertainment: Business travel expenses (100% deductible), and business meals (generally 50% deductible).
- 6. Insurance: Premiums for liability, property, and business interruption insurance.
- 7. Depreciation/Amortization: An annual deduction that allows the business to recover the cost of long-lived assets (equipment, vehicles, buildings, or intangible assets like patents) over their useful life, rather than deducting the full cost upfront.
- 8. Section 179 & Bonus Depreciation: Allows for the immediate deduction of the full cost of certain qualified business assets in the year they are placed in service, greatly accelerating the deduction amount.
🚀 Potency of Deductions for Dollar-for-Dollar Reduction
All legitimate business deductions have an equal dollar-for-dollar potency in reducing taxable income because they are all subtracted directly from revenue.
A dollar spent on rent reduces taxable income by exactly one dollar, just as a dollar spent on wages does.
However, from an immediate cash flow and maximizing impact perspective, the following categories are often cited in order of strategic potency due to their ability to accelerate or shield income:
| Potency Rank | Deduction Category | Strategic Advantage |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Section 179/Bonus Depreciation | Allows for the immediate deduction of the full cost of a large asset (e.g., $50,000 piece of equipment) in the year of purchase, rather than spreading it out over many years. This provides the largest single-year reduction in taxable income. |
| 2. | Wages & Employer Contributions | Not only reduces taxable income, but also allows the owner/employees to potentially contribute to tax-advantaged retirement accounts (like a Solo 401(k) or SEP IRA), creating a double tax benefit (deduction for the business, tax deferral/savings for the owner). |
| 3. | Ordinary Operating Expenses (Rent, COGS, Utilities) | These are essential, non-discretionary costs of doing business. They are powerful because the business must incur them to generate the $345,000 in gross income, making them unavoidable and fully deductible. |
🎯 Items That Reduce Taxable Income vs. Items That Reduce Taxes
It is crucial to distinguish between items that reduce the base you are taxed on (taxable income) and items that reduce the final amount of tax you owe (tax liability).
1. Items That Reduce Taxable Income
These are known as Deductions and Exclusions.
- What they are: Deductions are expenses subtracted from gross income. Every $$1$ in deduction removes $$1$ from your taxable income.
- How they work: The true value of a deduction is Tax Rate $\times$ Deduction Amount. If a business's tax rate is 21%, a $$100,000$ deduction saves them $$21,000$ in taxes.
- Examples: All the Business Deductions listed above (Wages, Rent, Depreciation), and the Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction (Section 199A), which allows for a deduction of up to 20% of qualified net business income.
2. Items That Reduce Taxes
These are known as Tax Credits.
- What they are: Credits are a direct reduction of your final tax bill.
- How they work: They are the most potent reduction method because they are a dollar-for-dollar offset of the tax liability. A $$1$ credit reduces the final tax bill by exactly $$1$.
- Examples:
- General Business Credit: A non-refundable credit that is a combination of various smaller credits (e.g., the Work Opportunity Tax Credit, or credit for small employer pension plan start-up costs).
- Research and Development (R&D) Credit: A credit for companies that incur expenses for R&D activities.
Analogy: A Deduction is like a coupon that lowers the price of the item before tax is calculated, while a Tax Credit is like cash that you use to pay your final bill.
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This analysis addresses the specific deductions related to your inter-island travel as a physician and strategic investments to reduce your taxable income.
✈️ Chief Deductions for Your Inter-Island Practice
The key to deducting your travel expenses is establishing that the second island location is a temporary work assignment and not your tax home.
1. Business Travel Expenses: The "Tax Home" Test
Your ability to deduct the majority of your expenses hinges on the IRS definition of "Tax Home." Generally, your tax home is the entire city or general area where your main place of business is located. If you maintain a primary residence on one island and your principal place of work is on the other, the IRS will apply rules to determine which is your tax home.
If you meet the requirements for working "away from home" on a temporary basis (generally an assignment expected to last, and does last, for one year or less), your travel costs are deductible.
| Expense Category | Monthly Cost | Annual Cost | Deductibility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Airfare (Round Trip) | $240 per week $\times$ 4.3 weeks | $\approx $12,480$ | Potentially 100% Deductible. This is the cost of traveling away from your tax home to a temporary work location. |
| Car (Lease/Upkeep on the second island) | $$400$ | $$4,800$ | Potentially 100% Deductible if used solely for business travel while away from your tax home. |
| Gasoline | $$100$ | $$1,200$ | Potentially 100% Deductible (business use portion). |
| Car Insurance | $$150$ | $$1,800$ | Potentially 100% Deductible (business use portion). |
| Car Registration | $$500$ per year | $$500$ | Potentially 100% Deductible (business use portion). |
| Car Repairs (Incurred) | N/A | $$4,000$ | Potentially 100% Deductible (business use portion). |
| Groceries | $100 per week $\times$ 4.3 weeks | $\approx $5,200$ | NOT Deductible. Food expenses while away are generally treated as Meals (if away overnight), and groceries are considered non-deductible personal living expenses (unlike the meals portion of the per diem). |
Note on Groceries/Meals: If your assignment requires you to be away from home long enough to require sleep or rest, you may be able to deduct a portion of your non-entertainment-related meals (generally 50% of the cost) based on the IRS per diem rate or actual costs. Simply buying groceries is a personal expense, not a business meal.
🚙 New SUV Purchase & Accelerated Depreciation
Purchasing a heavy-duty SUV for business use can generate a large, immediate deduction under Section 179 and Bonus Depreciation rules. This significantly reduces your taxable income in the year the vehicle is placed in service.
The Vehicle Requirements
To qualify for maximum acceleration, the vehicle must have a Gross Vehicle Weight Rating (GVWR) of over 6,000 pounds and be used for business more than 50% of the time.
The Deduction
For the 2025 tax year (assuming applicable law):
- Section 179 Deduction Cap: A heavy-duty SUV is generally limited to an immediate Section 179 write-off of up to $$31,300$ of the purchase price.
- Bonus Depreciation: For 2025, 100% Bonus Depreciation may be available on the remaining cost of the vehicle after applying the Section 179 cap.
Example Calculation (for a hypothetical $$80,000$ SUV in 2025):
| Deduction Step | Amount | Taxable Income Reduction |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase Price | $$80,000$ | - |
| 1. Section 179 Deduction | $-$31,300$ | $$31,300$ |
| Remaining Cost | $$48,700$ | - |
| 2. Bonus Depreciation (100%) | $-$48,700$ | $$48,700$ |
| Total First-Year Deduction | N/A | $$80,000$ |
This $$80,000$ deduction directly lowers your taxable income.
🧠 Strategic Business Infrastructure Investments
The most potent strategy for a high-income professional like a physician is using the business structure to defer or avoid high-bracket taxes.
| Investment Category | Reduction Type | How It Reduces Taxable Income/Liability |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Maximize Retirement Plans | Deduction (Income) | For self-employed physicians, a Solo 401(k) or Defined Benefit Plan allows for massive pre-tax contributions. A Defined Benefit Plan, in particular, can allow for contributions that exceed the typical annual limits, sometimes resulting in over $$200,000$ in annual deduction, drastically reducing your taxable income. |
| 2. Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction | Deduction (Income) | If your practice is structured as a pass-through entity (e.g., S-Corp or LLC taxed as Sole Proprietor) and your taxable income is below certain thresholds, you may be able to deduct up to 20% of your net business income (though income limits apply for specified service businesses like medicine). |
| 3. Medical Equipment & Software | Deduction (Income) | Purchase and immediately expense new diagnostic equipment, specialized medical furniture, or practice management software using the general Section 179 and 100% Bonus Depreciation. This generates a dollar-for-dollar reduction in taxable income. |
| 4. Home Office Deduction | Deduction (Income) | If you use a portion of your home exclusively and regularly as your principal place of business (e.g., for administrative work, telemedicine), you can deduct a proportionate share of your mortgage interest, property taxes, utilities, and insurance. |
Tax Home
That statement defines the crucial rule for deducting travel expenses for work. It means that the IRS will only let you deduct the costs of being at a second work location (like the second island) if that location is considered a temporary work assignment away from your primary tax home.
Here is a breakdown of what that entire concept means:
1. Defining Your "Tax Home"
The most important concept is the Tax Home, which is not necessarily where you live.
- Tax Home: The entire city or general area where your main place of business or post of duty is located.
- Your Main Place of Business: If you work in more than one place (like two islands), the IRS determines your main place of business by considering three factors, with the first being the most important:
- The total time you ordinarily spend in each place.
- The level of business activity in each place.
- Whether your income from each place is significant or insignificant.
The implication for you: If you spend more time on Island A, then Island A is your Tax Home. Travel and living expenses incurred while working on Island A are not deductible. However, expenses incurred traveling to and working on Island B would be "away from home."
2. The "Temporary" Assignment Requirement (The One-Year Rule)
Even if you are traveling "away from home" (from Island A to Island B), the assignment must be temporary for the expenses to be deductible.
- Temporary Assignment: An assignment at a single work location is considered temporary if it is realistically expected to last (and does in fact last) for one year or less.
- Indefinite Assignment: An assignment is considered indefinite if it is realistically expected to last for more than one year.
What the Rule Means for Your Deductions:
| Assignment Status | Tax Home | Deductibility of Travel Expenses |
|---|---|---|
| Temporary (Expected $\le 1$ year) | Your original Tax Home (e.g., Island A) does not change. | Your travel (airfare), lodging, car, and 50% of qualifying meals on Island B are deductible as business expenses. |
| Indefinite (Expected $> 1$ year) | Your Tax Home shifts to the new location (e.g., Island B). | Your travel and living expenses on Island B become non-deductible personal commuting and living expenses. |
Key Caveat (Change in Expectation):
If your assignment starts with an expectation of being temporary (e.g., 6 months), but later, that expectation changes (e.g., they extend the contract to 18 months), the assignment is considered:
- Temporary up until the date the expectation changes (and expenses are deductible up to that date).
- Indefinite from the date the expectation changes onward (and expenses are not deductible after that date).
In summary, for a physician flying every weekend, you must establish that the island you are leaving is your main tax home and that your work on the second island is not expected to last for more than one year in order to deduct your airfare, the car expenses, and other costs incurred on the second island.
Would you like me to find out the IRS guidelines for establishing a main tax home when a person splits their time between two work locations?
Tax HOme COntinued
This is the crucial and often disappointing outcome of the IRS's "Tax Home" rule for high-income professionals who choose to live away from their primary place of business.
The short answer is: No, the opposite happens.
If your Tax Home shifts to Island B, then your inter-island travel and living expenses suddenly become non-deductible personal expenses in the eyes of the IRS.
Here is a detailed breakdown of what that shift means for your expenses:
🛑 The Impact of Your Tax Home Shifting to Island B
The IRS rule is designed to distinguish between deductible business travel (away from your Tax Home) and non-deductible commuting and personal living expenses (at your Tax Home).
1. Inter-Island Travel (Airfare) Becomes Non-Deductible Commuting
If Island B becomes your Tax Home (because your work assignment there is indefinite—expected to last more than one year):
- Your $240 weekly airfare is no longer a deductible travel expense. The IRS now considers the flights between your personal residence on Island A and your main workplace on Island B to be a form of personal commute, regardless of the distance. Commuting costs are never deductible.
2. Living and Car Expenses on Island B Become Personal
If Island B is your Tax Home, the expenses you incur there are simply your cost of living while working at your main job:
- Car Expenses ($400/month, gas, insurance, repairs): The costs associated with the car you maintain on Island B would be considered your personal transportation costs for your main place of business and would not be deductible, except for the portion used to travel from your main office to other temporary client locations on Island B.
- Groceries/Meals: These remain non-deductible personal expenses, as they are costs incurred at your main post of duty.
3. Maintaining Your Residence on Island A is Irrelevant
This is the hardest pill to swallow:
- The cost of maintaining your personal residence on Island A (rent, mortgage, utilities, etc.) is never deductible because you are choosing to live there for personal reasons, not business reasons.
- The fact that you maintain a home on Island A does not make your Island B work expenses deductible. The only thing that matters is the location of your Tax Home.
| Scenario | Tax Home Location | Island A $\rightarrow$ Island B Airfare | Car/Lodging Expenses on Island B |
|---|---|---|---|
| Current (Temporary) | Island A (Primary Residence) | Deductible (Travel away from home) | Deductible (Expenses while away) |
| Shifted (Indefinite) | Island B (Main Workplace) | Non-Deductible (Personal Commuting) | Non-Deductible (Personal living/commuting expenses at tax home) |
✅ Action to Maintain Deductions: The "Temporary" Status
To maintain the deductibility of your weekly airfare and living/car costs on Island B, your goal must be to ensure your work arrangement on Island B always remains "temporary."
This requires a tax strategy that:
- Establishes Island A as your main Tax Home (e.g., proving you still spend the greatest amount of your total work time or generate the most significant income there).
- Strictly adheres to the one-year rule for the assignment on Island B. If you have been working on Island B every weekend for more than a year, the IRS may automatically view it as indefinite, regardless of your original intent.
You should consult a CPA who specializes in multi-state or multi-location taxation to review your specific time logs and contracts to determine where your Tax Home officially stands and how to best structure your business activities to protect those significant travel deductions.
This is the crucial and often disappointing outcome of the IRS's "Tax Home" rule for high-income professionals who choose to live away from their primary place of business.
The short answer is: No, the opposite happens.
If your Tax Home shifts to Island B, then your inter-island travel and living expenses suddenly become non-deductible personal expenses in the eyes of the IRS.
Here is a detailed breakdown of what that shift means for your expenses:
🛑 The Impact of Your Tax Home Shifting to Island B
The IRS rule is designed to distinguish between deductible business travel (away from your Tax Home) and non-deductible commuting and personal living expenses (at your Tax Home).
1. Inter-Island Travel (Airfare) Becomes Non-Deductible Commuting
If Island B becomes your Tax Home (because your work assignment there is indefinite—expected to last more than one year):
- Your $240 weekly airfare is no longer a deductible travel expense. The IRS now considers the flights between your personal residence on Island A and your main workplace on Island B to be a form of personal commute, regardless of the distance. Commuting costs are never deductible.
2. Living and Car Expenses on Island B Become Personal
If Island B is your Tax Home, the expenses you incur there are simply your cost of living while working at your main job:
- Car Expenses ($400/month, gas, insurance, repairs): The costs associated with the car you maintain on Island B would be considered your personal transportation costs for your main place of business and would not be deductible, except for the portion used to travel from your main office to other temporary client locations on Island B.
- Groceries/Meals: These remain non-deductible personal expenses, as they are costs incurred at your main post of duty.
3. Maintaining Your Residence on Island A is Irrelevant
This is the hardest pill to swallow:
- The cost of maintaining your personal residence on Island A (rent, mortgage, utilities, etc.) is never deductible because you are choosing to live there for personal reasons, not business reasons.
- The fact that you maintain a home on Island A does not make your Island B work expenses deductible. The only thing that matters is the location of your Tax Home.
| Scenario | Tax Home Location | Island A $\rightarrow$ Island B Airfare | Car/Lodging Expenses on Island B |
|---|---|---|---|
| Current (Temporary) | Island A (Primary Residence) | Deductible (Travel away from home) | Deductible (Expenses while away) |
| Shifted (Indefinite) | Island B (Main Workplace) | Non-Deductible (Personal Commuting) | Non-Deductible (Personal living/commuting expenses at tax home) |
✅ Action to Maintain Deductions: The "Temporary" Status
To maintain the deductibility of your weekly airfare and living/car costs on Island B, your goal must be to ensure your work arrangement on Island B always remains "temporary."
This requires a tax strategy that:
- Establishes Island A as your main Tax Home (e.g., proving you still spend the greatest amount of your total work time or generate the most significant income there).
- Strictly adheres to the one-year rule for the assignment on Island B. If you have been working on Island B every weekend for more than a year, the IRS may automatically view it as indefinite, regardless of your original intent.
You should consult a CPA who specializes in multi-state or multi-location taxation to review your specific time logs and contracts to determine where your Tax Home officially stands and how to best structure your business activities to protect those significant travel deductions.
What if my income on Island A exceeds the income from Island B, and the time I spend on Island A exceeds the time I spend on Island B?
That is excellent news for your deductions.
The factors you mentioned—where you spend the most time and where you earn the most income—are the two most important factors the IRS uses to determine your Tax Home when you regularly work in more than one place.
If your income and time on Island A both exceed that of Island B, it strongly establishes Island A as your Tax Home (Main Place of Business).
Here is a breakdown of what that means and how it safeguards your deductions:
🏆 Protecting Your Deductions: Island A as Your Tax Home
The IRS uses three main factors to determine your main place of business:
- Length of time spent at each location (Most Important).
- Degree of business activity in each area.
- Relative significance of the financial return (income) from each area.
Since you spend more time and earn more income on Island A, the IRS will generally conclude that your Tax Home is Island A.
The Result: Deductions are Safe
Because Island B is not your Tax Home, the assignment there is treated as a work assignment away from home. As long as the assignment is also temporary (expected to be one year or less), all the costs of being away are deductible.
| Expense Category | Status (With Island A as Tax Home) | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Airfare ($240/wk) | Deductible | Cost of travel away from your Tax Home to a temporary work location. |
| Car/Lodging Expenses on Island B | Deductible | Necessary costs (car, rent, insurance, gas) for conducting business while away from home. |
| Groceries/Personal Items | Non-Deductible | These are personal expenses everywhere, but you may be able to deduct a portion of the cost of meals (typically 50%) consumed while on business travel away from your tax home. |
⚠️ The Crucial Remaining Step: The "Temporary" Test
While establishing Island A as your Tax Home protects the expenses from being classified as non-deductible commuting, you still must prove the assignment on Island B is temporary.
If you have been working on Island B every weekend for more than one year and you continue to do so with no set end date, the IRS may argue that the assignment is indefinite, even if Island A is your main Tax Home.
How to Manage the Indefinite Risk:
- Contracts: If possible, structure your employment or practice agreements on Island B to be for definite periods of one year or less. Renewing the contract (with a substantial break in between) can help maintain the "temporary" nature.
- Breaks in Service (If Possible): For locum tenens or contract work, having a substantial break (the IRS has accepted 7 consecutive months) between assignments in the same geographic area can "reset" the temporary clock. While difficult for a weekly commute, it highlights the importance of keeping the arrangement non-permanent.
- Documentation: Keep immaculate logs documenting your time spent and income earned on both islands to clearly support your designation of Island A as your main Tax Home.
In summary, your facts strongly support Island A as your Tax Home, which is the key to deducting your $240 weekly flights and the car expenses on Island B. You must now focus on ensuring the Island B assignment does not become "indefinite."
Does this determination change if I eat in a restaraunt while commuting to Island B for work? Groceries/Personal ItemsNon-Deductible
That determination is absolutely critical and it does change the deductibility of your meals, but only if you meet the "away from home" requirements for rest or sleep.
Eating a meal while commuting is always a non-deductible personal expense, but eating a meal while traveling away from your tax home on business is a deductible business expense (generally 50%).
Here is the breakdown for your situation:
1. The "Away From Home" Test (The Key to Meal Deductions)
To deduct meals while traveling, you must meet two conditions:
- You must be away from your Tax Home (Island A, in your case) on business.
- Your duties must require you to be away for a period substantially longer than an ordinary day's work, and you need to get sleep or rest to meet the demands of your work while away.
Since you are flying to Island B every weekend, you are presumably staying overnight (or at least long enough to require rest/sleep) to perform your duties. Because Island B is a temporary work assignment away from your Tax Home (Island A), you meet the test for being "away from home."
✅ Conclusion: Your Restaurant Meals are Deductible (50%)
If you eat a meal at a restaurant on Island B while you are there for the work weekend, or even a meal while traveling between the islands that is necessitated by the trip (e.g., a meal at the airport or near the work site), that expense is generally 50% deductible.
| Expense Scenario | Deductibility | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Airfare/Car to Island B | 100% Deductible | Travel away from Tax Home. |
| Restaurant Meal on Island B | 50% Deductible | A meal consumed while away from Tax Home on business, subject to the $50%$ limitation for personal consumption. |
| Groceries for Home on Island A | 0% Non-Deductible | Personal living expense at your Tax Home. |
| Groceries on Island B | 0% Non-Deductible | Generally treated as non-deductible personal living expenses (unlike a specific business meal or the meal portion of the per diem). |
2. Why the Distinction Between "Groceries" and "Restaurant" Matters
The deduction applies to meals—food purchased while traveling that is necessary due to the business trip.
- Restaurant Meals: These are easy to document and generally qualify as meals consumed while away from home.
- Groceries/Personal Items: When you buy groceries, the IRS generally views this as replacing what you would have spent on food at your Tax Home, making it a non-deductible personal expense. The distinction is that you are not buying the groceries as a meal while you are away, but for consumption over time, like your home kitchen.
To simplify, you have two options for deducting the meal expense portion while away on Island B:
- Actual Cost: Keep the receipts for the meals you buy (like at a restaurant) and deduct $50%$ of the total cost.
- Per Diem: Use the Standard Meal Allowance (Per Diem Rate) set by the IRS for the location of Island B. You would then deduct $50%$ of that daily allowance, which can be simpler than tracking every receipt.
This confirms that because you meet the "away from home" test, your restaurant meals are treated as a business expense, separate from non-deductible personal groceries.
Would you like me to research the current Standard Meal Allowance (Per Diem) rate for the Hawaiian Islands to help you calculate this deduction?
What about pre-pared meals purchased at agrocery store and eaten elsehwere?
That is an excellent question, and it highlights a key distinction the IRS makes: between food purchased for immediate consumption from a vendor and general groceries for a household.
The general rule is that pre-prepared meals purchased at a grocery store and consumed while away from your tax home are generally treated the same as restaurant meals and are 50% deductible.
Here's the breakdown:
🍴 Deductibility of Pre-Prepared Meals
Because you are successfully establishing Island A as your Tax Home and traveling to Island B on a temporary, overnight assignment ("away from home"), you are entitled to deduct your meal expenses.
The IRS allows a deduction for food and beverages consumed while traveling away from home, provided the expense is not lavish or extravagant.
- Restaurant Meals: 50% deductible.
- Pre-Prepared Meals from a Store (Deli/Hot Bar): These are generally treated as a deductible meal and are 50% deductible. The purchase is for food for immediate or close-to-immediate consumption while traveling.
🛑 The "Grocery Store" Exception
The reason the IRS is careful about grocery stores primarily relates to an expired temporary rule (2021-2022) that allowed a 100% deduction for meals purchased only from a restaurant to support the hospitality industry.
Under that temporary rule:
A restaurant was defined as a business that prepares and sells food or beverages for immediate consumption. It specifically excluded businesses that primarily sell pre-packaged food or beverages not for immediate consumption, such as a grocery store or convenience store.
Since the deduction limit has reverted to the standard 50% for all business meals, the distinction between a grocery store deli and a standard restaurant is less critical for your meal deduction. If the purchase is a meal you consume while away for work, it should qualify for the $\mathbf{50%}$ deduction.
📝 Best Practice: Use the Per Diem Method
For a self-employed individual like a physician on a temporary assignment, the simplest and most audit-proof way to handle meal deductions is to use the Standard Meal and Incidental Expense (M&IE) Per Diem Rate set by the federal government for the location you are traveling to (Island B).
How the Per Diem Works:
- Find the Rate: You use the published per diem rate for the location of Island B. For example, the M&IE rate for Oahu is approximately $$72$ per day (as of the most recent GSA data for the location).
- Calculate Deduction: You multiply the per diem rate by the number of days you are away, and then multiply that total by $\mathbf{50%}$.
- Documentation: You do not need to keep receipts for individual meals (restaurant or pre-prepared). You only need records substantiating the time, place, and business purpose of your travel.
If you choose the Per Diem Method, the source of your food (restaurant, pre-prepared from a deli, or basic groceries to eat immediately) becomes irrelevant, as you are deducting a flat rate for meals and incidentals, not the actual cost.
To confirm your exact deduction amount, I would recommend using the per diem method with the official rate for the specific island you travel to.
So in my situation travel expenses and car expenses are still tax deductible and reduce my taxable income?
Yes, based on the information you have provided, your travel expenses and car expenses related to the work on Island B are still tax deductible and reduce your taxable income.
This is a powerful tax advantage that you must protect through proper classification and documentation.
Here is a summary of why your expenses remain deductible:
1. Travel Expenses (Airfare) are Deductible
- Key Status: You have established that Island A is your Tax Home (main place of business) because you spend more time and earn more income there.
- Deduction: The flights to Island B are considered business travel away from your Tax Home to a temporary work location.
- Result: Your $\mathbf{$240}$ weekly airfare is 100% deductible, reducing your taxable income dollar-for-dollar.
2. Car Expenses on Island B are Deductible
Key Status: The car is being used for business purposes (getting around the temporary work location) while you are away from your Tax Home.
Deduction: The maintenance, repairs, gasoline, insurance, and registration for the car on Island B are all deductible.
Method: You can choose between two methods for your car deductions on Island B:
- Standard Mileage Rate: Track your business miles on Island B and multiply them by the IRS's standard rate (e.g., $70$ cents per mile for 2025). This covers depreciation, gas, oil, etc.
- Actual Expenses: Deduct the actual costs of the car's business use: $100%$ of the $$400/$month, $$100/$month for gas, $$150/$month for insurance, the $$4,000$ in repairs, and the $$500$ in registration (assuming $100%$ business use on Island B).
Result: All of these costs significantly reduce your taxable income. Since you are paying high actual costs, the Actual Expenses Method is often more beneficial in your situation.
3. Meals (Restaurant/Prepared) are Deductible
- Key Status: Since your work requires you to be away from home long enough to require sleep or rest, your meals consumed on Island B are deductible.
- Deduction: These meals are $\mathbf{50%}$ deductible. You can use the Actual Expense Method (saving receipts) or the Per Diem Method (saving time).
🛑 Critical Caveat: The One-Year Rule
You must maintain the temporary status of the work on Island B.
- If the assignment is expected to last, or does last, for more than one year, it becomes indefinite, and all of your travel and lodging deductions will be disallowed starting from the date the expectation changes.
You are doing the right thing by tracking your time and income to establish Island A as your Tax Home. Now, be vigilant about the one-year rule for the assignment on Island B.
Would you like me to research the current Actual Expense limits and rules for deducting the car you maintain on Island B so you can optimize that deduction?
research the current Actual Expense limits and rules for deducting the car you maintain on Island B so you can optimize that deduction?
Using the Actual Expense Method for your car on Island B is likely your most beneficial strategy, especially since you had a significant $$4,000$ repair expense. This method allows you to deduct the business-use percentage of all operating costs, including depreciation.
Here are the current rules and limits you need to follow to optimize this deduction for the 2025 tax year.
💰 Actual Expense Method: Key Deductible Costs
You can deduct the business-use percentage of the following costs:
| Expense Category | Your Monthly Costs | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Operating Costs | $$400$ (maintenance, repairs, oil) + $$100$ (gas) | 100% Deductible (based on business use) |
| Ownership Costs | $$150$ (insurance) + $$500$ (registration) | 100% Deductible (based on business use) |
| Major Repairs | $$4,000$ (repairs) | 100% Deductible (based on business use) |
| Depreciation | (Calculated annually on car cost) | 100% Deductible (subject to annual caps) |
| Tolls & Parking | (Any business-related fees) | 100% Deductible (no business-use percentage required) |
Important Note: To claim these expenses, you must track your business-use percentage by keeping a detailed log of your total miles driven and the miles driven for business purposes on Island B.
🚗 Car Depreciation Limits (2025 Tax Year)
The IRS imposes annual limits on the amount of depreciation you can claim for passenger automobiles (most cars, trucks, and vans under 6,000 pounds Gross Vehicle Weight Rating or GVWR).
1. Light Passenger Vehicles (GVWR $\le$ 6,000 lbs)
For a vehicle placed in service in 2025 and eligible for Bonus Depreciation, the maximum deduction is split between regular depreciation and the first-year bonus:
| Tax Year | Depreciation Limit (Includes Bonus Depreciation) |
|---|---|
| 1st Tax Year (2025) | $20,200 |
| 2nd Tax Year | $19,600 |
| 3rd Tax Year | $11,800 |
| Each Succeeding Year | $7,060 |
- If your car cost $$40,000$ and your business use is $80%$, your maximum depreciation deduction in the first year is $80%$ of $$20,200$, or $$16,160$ (assuming you are claiming bonus depreciation).
- The Bonus Depreciation rate is $40%$ for property placed in service during 2025.
2. Heavy SUVs and Trucks (GVWR > 6,000 lbs)
For larger vehicles, such as many full-size SUVs and pickup trucks, you may be able to claim a much larger first-year deduction:
- Section 179 Deduction Cap: The maximum deduction you can claim under Section 179 for a heavy SUV or truck in 2025 is $31,300.
- Bonus Depreciation: If the vehicle's cost exceeds the Section 179 limit, you can also claim $40%$ bonus depreciation on the remaining adjusted basis of the vehicle in 2025.
📝 Critical Record-Keeping Requirements
The IRS is strict about records for vehicle expenses. To avoid having your deduction disallowed, you must be able to prove:
- The Amount of the Expense: Keep all receipts for gas, repairs (especially the $$4,000$ one), maintenance, insurance, and registration.
- The Time and Place: Record the date and location of the expense.
- The Business Purpose: Document why the trip or expense was necessary for your job on Island B (e.g., "Travel from temporary lodging to job site," or "Oil change for work vehicle").
- Proof of Business Use: Maintain a detailed log or contemporaneous record showing:
- Total mileage for the year.
- Total business mileage for the year.
- The date, destination, and purpose for each business trip.
Key Rule: The vehicle must be used more than $50%$ for business to qualify for both the Section 179 deduction and accelerated depreciation (MACRS). Your job on Island B makes this highly likely.
How can I use the 100% depreciation rule for a vehicle I keep on Island A and use for my business there?
To use the 100% depreciation rule for a vehicle you keep on Island A for your business, you must focus on the vehicle's weight class and the acquisition date. Not all vehicles qualify for a full 100% deduction in the first year due to "luxury auto" limits.
The strategy involves combining the Section 179 deduction with Bonus Depreciation and ensuring the vehicle meets the legal requirements.
⚖️ The Two-Tiered Strategy for 100% Depreciation
For the 2025 tax year, 100% Bonus Depreciation has been reinstated for qualified property acquired and placed in service after January 19, 2025.
1. Heavy SUVs, Trucks, and Vans (GVWR > 6,000 lbs.)
This is the class of vehicle that offers the greatest chance for a near-complete or complete first-year write-off.
| Deduction Tool | Limit for Heavy SUVs (2025) | Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Section 179 | Capped at $31,300 | This is the first deduction applied. It is subject to a dollar cap for most SUVs over 6,000 lbs but under 14,000 lbs. |
| 100% Bonus Depreciation | No Dollar Cap | This is applied to the remaining cost of the vehicle after the Section 179 deduction is taken. Since the bonus rate is 100% (if acquired after Jan 19, 2025), you can deduct the entire remaining basis. |
Total Deduction Potential: The combination of Section 179 and 100% Bonus Depreciation allows you to deduct the entire cost of the vehicle (up to your business-use percentage) in the first year, provided it has a Gross Vehicle Weight Rating (GVWR) greater than 6,000 pounds.
2. Passenger Cars and Light Trucks (GVWR $\le$ 6,000 lbs.)
Traditional passenger vehicles (e.g., sedans, smaller SUVs) are subject to Section 280F "Luxury Auto" limits, which prevents a 100% write-off in the first year, even with 100% Bonus Depreciation.
- Maximum First-Year Deduction (2025): The total first-year deduction (combining all depreciation methods, including 100% bonus) is capped at approximately $20,200 (subject to final IRS confirmation).
- Result: The cost exceeding this cap must be depreciated over the vehicle's remaining recovery period (typically 5 years).
🔑 Requirements for All Vehicle Deductions
Regardless of the vehicle's weight, you must meet two main requirements:
- Business Use Must Exceed 50%: You must use the vehicle for business purposes more than 50% of the time. Your deduction (whether it's the full cost or the capped amount) will be limited to this business-use percentage.
- Placed In Service: The vehicle must be purchased and placed in service (ready and available for use in your business) by December 31, 2025.
You must maintain contemporaneous mileage logs showing the date, destination, purpose, and mileage for every business trip to substantiate the business-use percentage. Failure to keep these detailed records can result in the entire deduction being disallowed upon audit.
For a deeper look into the rules governing these immediate deductions, check out this video: Section 179 Explained for Beginners: (Depreciation on Lux Vehicles & More) NEW Rules for 2025.
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Thanks
Welcome
Interesting idea and I hope there's a way to break the cycle
Good point, I think things like the HIveFest with blopckchain mixer meetings are a start.
Quite interesting to be learning about the Blockchain tribalism for the first time if you will ask me actually
I think it has plagued cryptocurrency since the beginning of the second and third projects
It is a fact that whenever we enter this field of blockchain, we will have to learn a lot, especially if our teacher is good, from whom we are learning, then we will become successful quickly. We should always have a teacher. When we try to learn from many people, we will not be able to succeed.
I agree that we can learn from many people and many projects, including crypto projects.
Yeah.
I agree that blockchain tribalism is a big issue , it brings people together but also causes a lot of unnecessary conflict. We’d all benefit more from working together than competing too hard.
Yes, any division can be counterproductive