Stop manually categorizing expenses into IRS Schedule C lines. Vuuv tracks your income and expenses all year, automatically maps them to the correct Schedule C categories, and generates your tax report instantly.
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Schedule C (Form 1040: Profit or Loss from Business) is the IRS form that self-employed individuals use to report business income and expenses. It calculates your net profit or loss, which then flows to your personal tax return. If you received any 1099 income or operate a business as a sole proprietor or single-member LLC, you need Schedule C.
Schedule C takes your gross income (all the money you earned) and subtracts your business expenses to find your taxable profit.
The net profit from Schedule C gets added to your personal income on Form 1040. This is how the IRS knows how much you earned from self-employment.
Your Schedule C profit determines your self-employment tax (Social Security + Medicare), which is calculated on Schedule SE.
If you're self-employed or run a business, Schedule C is required
If you work as a consultant, designer, writer, developer, or any type of independent contractor receiving 1099 income, you need Schedule C to report this income and deduct your business expenses.
Examples:
Drivers, delivery workers, and anyone earning through gig platforms must file Schedule C. This includes ride-share drivers, food delivery, task services, and online sellers.
Examples:
Sole proprietors and single-member LLC owners report their business income on Schedule C. This applies whether your business is full-time or a profitable side hustle.
Examples:
Every expense category in Vuuv corresponds directly to Schedule C line items
| IRS Schedule C Line | Category | Vuuv Tracking |
|---|---|---|
| Part I, Line 1 | Gross Receipts | Income transactions |
| Part II, Line 8 | Advertising | Marketing & ads |
| Part II, Line 9 | Car & Truck Expenses | GPS mileage + vehicle costs |
| Part II, Line 11 | Commissions & Fees | Contractor payments |
| Part II, Line 13 | Depreciation | Asset depreciation schedules |
| Part II, Line 17 | Legal & Professional | Accountant, lawyer, consultant fees |
| Part II, Line 18 | Office Expense | Supplies, equipment, software |
| Part II, Line 20a | Rent (Vehicles, Equipment) | Equipment rental expenses |
| Part II, Line 21 | Repairs & Maintenance | Equipment & property repairs |
| Part II, Line 22 | Supplies | Business supplies & materials |
| Part II, Line 24a | Travel | Airfare, hotels, transportation |
| Part II, Line 24b | Meals (50% deductible) | Business meals & entertainment |
| Part II, Line 25 | Utilities | Phone, internet, electricity |
| Part II, Line 27a | Other Expenses | Custom categories you create |
Automatic categorization
Vuuv learns from your categorization patterns and automatically assigns Schedule C line items to new expenses. You can always customize categories or create your own.
Vuuv handles the bookkeeping so you can focus on your business
Every expense is automatically mapped to the correct IRS Schedule C line item. No tax knowledge required - Vuuv knows where everything goes.
See your net profit at any time. Track income vs expenses throughout the year so you always know your Schedule C bottom line.
Vuuv calculates how much you should pay in quarterly estimated taxes based on your Schedule C profit, preventing underpayment penalties.
Snap photos of receipts and attach them to expenses. If you're ever audited, you'll have every receipt organized by Schedule C category.
GPS automatically tracks business miles. At 72.5¢/mile for 2026, this can be your largest Schedule C deduction. Vuuv makes it effortless.
Export your complete Schedule C report, mileage log, receipt images, and all supporting documents in one click. Your accountant will love you.
The average self-employed person misses over $3,000 in legitimate deductions each year. Vuuv ensures you capture every deductible expense throughout the year, not just the ones you remember at tax time.
Annual Schedule C deductions
Tax savings: ~$4,600 (at 35% combined rate)
Schedule C (Form 1040) is the IRS tax form used by sole proprietors and single-member LLCs to report business income and expenses. It calculates your net profit or loss, which gets added to your personal income tax return. If you're self-employed, freelance, or run a small business, you'll need to file Schedule C annually.
You need Schedule C if you're self-employed as a sole proprietor, work as a freelancer or independent contractor (receiving 1099-NEC or 1099-MISC income), operate a side business, or run a single-member LLC. Even small gig work like Uber, Etsy sales, or consulting requires Schedule C if your net earnings are $400 or more.
Common deductions include: vehicle expenses (either actual costs or standard mileage rate at 72.5¢/mile for 2026), home office deduction (simplified or actual method), advertising and marketing costs, office supplies and equipment, software and subscriptions, professional services (legal, accounting), business insurance, business meals (50% deductible), travel expenses, continuing education, and phone/internet expenses (business portion only).
Schedule C is due with your personal tax return on April 15 (or the next business day if it falls on a weekend). If you're self-employed, you also need to make quarterly estimated tax payments: April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15 of the following year. Vuuv helps you calculate these quarterly payments so you avoid underpayment penalties.
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