An elderly client told me her doctor prescribed massage therapy, she did 48 visits last year. Are you comfortable taking that deduction?
medical deduction
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Absolutely. I believe it would be preferable if the massages were performed by a licensed provider, if there even is a licensing requirement, and a written letter or other document from the woman's doctor would also be a good idea. Massage therapy is often recommended for persistent sciatica.Roland Slugg
"I do what I can."Comment
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Medicare does not, just have a client who found out about this and then thought it also could not be deducted. To be clear: Are you saying that even if there is no prescription you would be comfortable to deduct massage if medical is the reason?Comment
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Note OP stated it was prescribed by a doctor, but the standard is usually if prescribed for a specific condition. If someone just decides to go for it for general health reasons, or because they like it, I would not take it as a medical deduction. Sort of like vitamins.Comment
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Probable deduction
The key factor is whether the massage therapy can be interpreted as a medical treatment. If so, it is likely a qualifying Schedule A deduction.
FEComment
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This is a quote from the IRS TAX MAP under "medical therapy"
"You can include in medical expenses amounts you pay for therapy received as medical treatment." I would make sure to keep the doctor's diagnosis report, written prescription and/or letter of recommendation of the therapy in your client file.Believe nothing you have not personally researched and verified.Comment
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