Free for Electricians

Wire Buildings All Day. Your Bookkeeping Shouldn't Take All Night.

The free bookkeeping tool that helps self-employed electricians organize ordinary and necessary business expenses for Schedule C.

60+
Business Types
6 Tabs
Per Template
500+
Transaction Rows
$0
Completely Free

Tax Deductions You May Be Missing

These are common Schedule C business expenses that electricians may be able to claim under IRC Β§162. Our template has them pre-loaded.

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Wire & Supplies

Line 22

Wire, conduit, breakers, outlets, switches, connectors.

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Service Van

Line 9

Gas, diesel, oil, tires, van maintenance.

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Insurance & Bond

Line 15

General liability, workers comp, vehicle, bond.

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Tools & Equipment

Line 13

Multimeter, wire strippers, conduit bender, power tools.

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License & Permits

Line 23

Electrical license, contractor license, building permits.

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Equipment Rental

Line 20a

Lift rental, trencher, generator.

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Advertising

Line 8

Google ads, Yelp, Angi, van wrap, website.

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Safety & Training

Line 27

Safety gear, OSHA training, code books, IBEW dues.

How It Works

1

Download

Pick your business type. Get a free template. No signup.

2

Categorize

Enter your bank transactions. Pick from the dropdown. ~30 min.

3

Review

Schedule C summary auto-calculates your income, expenses, and tax.

4

File

Hand it to your Enrolled Agent. Or let Arc & Ledger prepare your return from $300.

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Get Your Free Electrician Template

We'll email your template directly β€” open it in Excel or upload to Google Sheets. No software to install.

What's Inside

βœ“ Start Here tab with step-by-step instructions
βœ“ Business Info tab β€” your details, ready for filing
βœ“ Expense categories pre-loaded for your industry
βœ“ 500-row transaction tracker with dropdown categories
βœ“ Schedule C summary β€” auto-calculates your totals
βœ“ Monthly summary for quarterly estimated taxes

We'll email your template directly. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

ENROLLED AGENT TAX SERVICES

Too Busy to DIY?
We'll Handle Everything.

Arc & Ledger is a tax and bookkeeping firm led by Enrolled Agents β€” authorized to prepare your return and represent you directly before the IRS. Over 10 years helping self-employed professionals like you.

βœ“ Schedule C tax preparation from $300
βœ“ Monthly bookkeeping from $200/mo
βœ“ S-Corp election & tax planning
βœ“ Authorized to represent you before the IRS
βœ“ Enrolled Agents β€” pass rigorous IRS exam
βœ“ 10+ years serving self-employed professionals
arcandledger.com | (310) 876-0249
bookkeeping@arcandledger.com | Culver City, CA

Get Your Price in 30 Seconds

Question 1 of 4

What income did you have in 2025?

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Need to File for Free? The IRS Can Help.

If you earned under $84,000, you may qualify for IRS Free File β€” free tax preparation software provided through an IRS partnership. No cost, no catch.

βœ“ IRS Free File β€” guided software for income under $84,000
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Visit IRS Free File Options β†’

Our free template works alongside any filing method β€” use it to organize your expenses first, then file however works best for you.

Common Questions

What Schedule C deductions can electricians claim?+
Self-employed electricians may deduct ordinary and necessary business expenses under IRC Section 162. Commonly claimed deductions include wire and supplies (Line 22), service van expenses (Line 9), insurance and bonds (Line 15), tools and equipment (Line 13), licenses and permits (Line 23), and advertising (Line 8). Your tax situation may vary, so consult a qualified tax professional.
What is Schedule C?+
Schedule C (Form 1040) is the IRS form where sole proprietors report business income and expenses. It calculates your net profit or loss, which flows to your Form 1040. Self-employed electricians use Schedule C to report service income and deduct business expenses. Our free template is an organizational tool that categorizes expenses by the correct Schedule C line numbers.
How much tax do self-employed electricians pay?+
Self-employed electricians generally pay both income tax and self-employment tax (15.3% for Social Security and Medicare) on net profit. Your income tax rate depends on your total taxable income and filing status. The self-employment tax applies to net earnings over $400. Consult a qualified tax professional to understand your specific tax obligations.
Do I need to file quarterly estimated taxes as an electrician?+
If you expect to owe $1,000 or more in federal tax for the year, the IRS generally requires quarterly estimated tax payments. Deadlines are typically April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15. Underpayment may result in penalties. Our template helps you track income and expenses so you can better estimate what you may owe.
Are IBEW union dues deductible for self-employed electricians?+
Union dues and professional memberships may be deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses on Schedule C Line 27. This may include IBEW dues, NECA memberships, and required safety training. Keep records of all payments. Your tax situation may vary, so consult a qualified tax professional.
Should I hire an Enrolled Agent or do my own taxes?+
An Enrolled Agent (EA) is a tax professional who has passed a rigorous IRS exam and is authorized to represent taxpayers directly before the IRS. Unlike other preparers, EAs must pass a rigorous exam and complete continuing education annually. For self-employed electricians with vehicle expenses, tool depreciation, and licensing costs, an EA can help ensure compliance. Arc & Ledger's team of Enrolled Agents specializes in Schedule C businesses.

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