1: Chase asks for the nature of the business, estimated annual revenue, and estimated monthly spend.
2: I don't think there are any IRS rules forbidding it*, but it will make defending your Schedule C deductions more complicated.
3: No, only the
intent for profit, as I understand it**.
I work in a very regulated business and if you put anything (no matter how small) on a work card and don’t quickly declare it as accidental personal spending (I.E you used the Lyft app and it defaulted to your corporate card) then you could get fired.
Semi-related story: I started working at the University back when phone calls were billed individually. After a few months, the lab adminsitrator came by with some phone bills.
Lab admin: "You haven't marked these up yet?"
Me: "What do you mean?"
LA: "You have to identify which calls are personal, so that they can be deducted from your check."
Me, realizing we are talking about at most a few bucks for a PITA monthly task: "Every single phone call I ever make is personal. Deduct them all. Never ask me about this again."
And, more on my weirdness: I do not claim a home office deduction on my Schedule C. It would be easily justifiable, given the nature of my side gig. But, I don't have a space I use
solely for work, and I don't want to have to be in a position to lie about that. For me, personally, a sound night's sleep is worth the few dollars it migth cost me. If someone else could sleep soundly while still claiming it, well---Adler would remind me that
that is not my task.
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*: IANAA. I am not an accountant.
**: IANAL either.