Key Takeaways

  • Schedule C reports profit/loss from a sole proprietorship or single-member LLC.
  • Trade or business requires continuity, regularity, and profit motive.
  • IRS uses Control Test (behavioral, financial, relationship) for worker classification.
  • Small business taxpayers (under $30M gross receipts) can use cash method.
  • Statutory employees report W-2 income on Schedule C but no SE tax.
  • Employee vs. Contractor classification has significant tax consequences.
Last updated: January 2026

Schedule C Overview

Why This Matters for the Exam

Schedule C is central to Part 2. The exam tests who files Schedule C, the employee vs. contractor distinction, and small business accounting rules.

Exam Note: For the May 2025 - February 2026 testing window, you are tested on sole proprietorship rules as of December 31, 2024 (Tax Year 2024).

Expect at least 3-4 questions on Schedule C basics.

Who Files Schedule C?

Entity TypeFile Schedule C?
Sole proprietorYes
Single-member LLC (default)Yes (disregarded entity)
Independent contractorYes
Statutory employeeYes (but no SE tax)
Partner in partnershipNo (K-1 to Schedule E)
S corp shareholderNo (K-1 to Schedule E)

Trade or Business Standard

To file Schedule C, the activity must be a "trade or business":

RequirementDescription
ContinuityOngoing activity
RegularityConsistent effort
Profit motivePrimary purpose is income

Employee vs. Independent Contractor

This is a high-yield exam topic. Classification determines who pays FICA and where expenses are deducted.

FactorEmployeeIndependent Contractor
Reporting formW-21099-NEC
FICA taxesEmployer withholdsSelf-employment tax
Expense deductionGenerally noneSchedule C
ControlEmployer controlsWorker controls

The Control Test (Three Categories)

CategoryKey Questions
BehavioralDoes company control when, where, how work is done?
FinancialDoes worker have unreimbursed expenses? Significant investment? Profit/loss potential?
RelationshipWritten contract? Employee benefits? Permanency?

Statutory Employees

FeatureRule
W-2 Box 13"Statutory Employee" checked
Income reportingSchedule C (not Schedule E)
ExpensesDeductible on Schedule C
SE taxNO (FICA already withheld)

Examples: Full-time life insurance agents, certain drivers, traveling salespeople.

Small Business Taxpayer Rules (Tax Year 2024)

Taxpayers with average gross receipts ≤ $30 million (3-year average) qualify for simplifications:

SimplificationBenefit
Cash methodEven with inventory
Inventory exceptionTreat as non-incidental materials
§263A exemptionNo UNICAP required

Inventory for Small Taxpayers

MethodDescription
Non-incidental materialsDeduct when provided to customer OR paid, whichever later
Financial accountingFollow book treatment
BenefitNo LIFO/FIFO required for tax

Real-World Scenario

Scenario: A graphic designer works from home, sets their own hours, uses their own computer, and has 10 clients. They receive 1099-NEC forms totaling $80,000.

  • Classification: Independent contractor (controls work, owns tools, multiple clients).
  • Reporting: Schedule C.
  • SE Tax: Yes, self-employment tax applies.
  • Expenses: Deductible on Schedule C.

On the Exam

Expect 3-4 questions on Schedule C basics, typically:

  1. Filing Questions: "Who files Schedule C?"
  2. Classification Questions: "Employee or contractor based on these facts?"
  3. Statutory Employee Questions: "How are statutory employees taxed?"
  4. Accounting Questions: "What is the gross receipts threshold for cash method?"

The key is to remember: Sole proprietor/SMLLC = Schedule C. Control test determines classification. Statutory employees = Schedule C income, no SE tax. Small business ($30M) can use cash method.

Test Your Knowledge

Which taxpayer would file Schedule C?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

Worker is given tools by company, works specific hours, and receives health insurance. Classification?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

What is the Tax Year 2024 gross receipts threshold for cash method?

A
B
C
D