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Is Professional Liability Insurance Tax Deductible? Yes — Here's How to Claim It

100%

Deductible

Line 15

Schedule C

Insurance (not health)

Category

$500–$2,500/yr

Typical cost

Professional liability insurance and errors & omissions (E&O) coverage protect your business from costly lawsuits—and the premiums are fully deductible. Whether you're a freelancer, consultant, or single-member LLC, these insurance costs reduce your taxable business income dollar-for-dollar. This guide shows you exactly how to claim this deduction on your tax return.

Who qualifies?

Self-employed individuals, sole proprietors, freelancers, and single-member LLCs filing Schedule C can deduct professional liability and E&O insurance premiums. The policy must cover your business activities; personal or health insurance does not qualify.

How to claim it

  1. 1 Gather your annual professional liability and E&O insurance premium statements and receipts.
  2. 2 Report the total annual premium amount on Schedule C, Line 15 (Insurance—not health).
  3. 3 Attach documentation to your tax return if filing electronically, or keep receipts on file if filing by mail.

Pro tip

Track your insurance renewal dates and costs in a dedicated spreadsheet throughout the year. If you pay quarterly or monthly, total all payments to ensure you claim the full annual deductible amount—don't miss partial-year premiums or mid-year policy changes.

Source: IRS Publication 535: Business Expenses

Judy automatically tracks Professional Liability / E&O Insurance

Connect your business bank account and Judy categorizes Professional Liability / E&O Insurance charges to Insurance (not health) (Line 15) — no spreadsheets, no manual entry. Get a free 30-day audit first, then subscribe.

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