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Q&A

Can you claim postage as an expense in the US if it's for a non-paying market?

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As a writer, there are many things that can be claimed as expenses if they help you to generate income (or try to generate income). Postage is one, but my question is specifically this: Can you claim postage as an expense if you are submitting to a non-paying market?

There are many reasons you'd want to submit work to a magazine or website that doesn't pay for accepted work: exposure, a chance to be featured in an upcoming issue, a chance to promote another work (such as a book you just released), etc. All of those activities can lead toward more income, even though the publication itself won't earn you any money. Does anyone know how the IRS looks at those sort of expenses?

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This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/q/32283. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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Yes, it is a legitimate business expense.

Specifically it is a marketing expense. For example, in my business, I have hired a firm to help me distribute a press release on a new project. They are good at doing this and getting publications to publish the release or review the topic of the press release. But all of that does not directly result in any profit to me, it only results in exposure. Press releases do not "sell" anything or offer to sell anything, the hope is they interest people to contact my firm, and perhaps buy, but really it is just publicity.

Since at this writing it is just after Christmas, I will also use the example of a business donating money to buy Christmas gifts for the kids in Child Protective Service; which does not provide gifts to kids at Christmas. The many that have do not sell a thing, but they are shown on the news, presenting big checks, and that is a business expense too: It generates good will for their restaurant or bank or used car lot, it gets their name out there, and maybe people that could be new customers will think of them kindly. The same is true for sponsoring shows on the Public Broadcasting channel, or offering prizes for a school raffle, etc. There is no direct income from any of those things, it is just exposure and perhaps recognition, precisely what you are getting by submitting to an unpaid publication.

Your postage is a marketing expense intended to get your work and name as an author greater exposure in order to build your reputation as an author with verifiable credits. It is building good will and public awareness.

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