Occupation Tax

Handyman Tax Help

Use this Handyman hub to move between deductions, quarterly-tax, Schedule C, and self-employed pages built for this line of work.

How this work usually gets taxed

These pages work best when you separate how the money comes in from how the records are tracked and how the return is filled out.

Income usually shows up as
  • Small repair jobs
  • Project deposits
  • Materials reimbursements
  • Marketplace leads
Records worth keeping
  • Job estimates and invoices
  • Tool receipts
  • Material purchases
  • Vehicle mileage logs
Costs people usually separate
  • Tools and repairs
  • Safety gear
  • Truck or van costs
  • Supplies and hardware
Where people get stuck
  • Mixing reimbursed materials with profit
  • Forgetting mileage
  • Treating tools and materials as the same bucket

Start here

Use this Handyman hub to move between deductions, quarterly-tax, Schedule C, and self-employed pages built for this line of work.

Related pages

Sources and authority

Sources 7/3 Strong source coverage Checked May 2026 Updated May 2026

This page combines official IRS small-business guidance with the forms and filing resources most likely to matter for this occupation.

Action plan

Work-specific planning checklist

Keep occupation-specific deductions, records, and quarter planning in one place so the tax workflow matches the way the work is actually done.

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Know the angle

Income usually shows up as

Records worth keeping

Costs people usually separate

Where people get stuck

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Next best action

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