Is interest expense tax deductible?
Operating costs are the day-to-day expenses a business incurs to keep running. They include everything required to maintain operations — from rent and salaries to marketing and utilities. Operating costs are reported on the income statement and are essential for calculating a company’s operating profit.
What is interest expense?
Interest expense represents the cost a business pays to borrow money — for example, through loans, credit cards, or equipment financing. It’s recorded on the income statement as a non-operating expense, since it’s not tied directly to producing goods or delivering services but rather to financing the business.
How to categorize interest expense
- Record as Interest Expense under Non-Operating Expenses on your income statement.
- Use a “Loan Interest” or “Bank Interest” account in your chart of accounts.
- Include interest from business loans, credit lines, equipment financing, or mortgages on business property.
- Exclude personal loan or credit card interest; only business-related interest is deductible.
- Separate principal payments (not deductible) from interest payments (deductible).
Examples of deductible interest expenses
- Interest on business loans or lines of credit.
- Mortgage interest on commercial property.
- Interest on equipment or vehicle financing.
- Business credit card interest for operational purchases.
- Late payment interest on business accounts payable.
Tax implications for interest expense
- Business-related interest is tax-deductible as long as the borrowed funds are used for business activities.
- The deduction is limited to the business interest expense deduction cap (generally 30% of adjusted taxable income for larger businesses).
- Small businesses (under $27 million in average annual gross receipts as of 2025) are exempt from this limitation.
- Interest on personal loans, tax penalties, or capitalized construction interest is not deductible.
- Deduct business interest on Schedule C (for sole proprietors) or under “Interest Expense” on your business tax return.
- Maintain loan agreements, amortization schedules, and payment records as proof of the business purpose of the debt.







