Playbook #57
The 14-Day Tax-Free Playbook™
You didn't know your home was a tax-free ATM — until now. IRC Section 280A gives you a legal, IRS-approved strategy to put thousands back in your pocket.
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The 14-Day Tax-Free Playbook™
Playbook #57 · IRC Section 280A(g) · The Augusta Rule
The tax strategy your accountant probably never told you about

Your Home Is a
Tax-Free ATM.

You Just Needed the Code.

The IRS built a legal provision that lets you rent your own home to your business, collect up to $42,000/year tax-free, and have your business deduct every dollar. It's not a loophole. It's not a trick. It's codified in Section 280A — and 97% of small business owners never use it.

Show Me the Strategy ↓ See Real Savings Numbers
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$0Tax on Rental Income
14Days Per Year
100%Legal & IRS-Approved
$42KMax Annual Tax-Free
1976On the Books Since
The Origin Story

Born in Augusta.
Built for You.

In the 1970s, homeowners near Augusta National Golf Club — home of the Masters Tournament — lobbied Congress for relief. Every April, they'd rent their homes to tournament spectators for enormous sums in just a few days. Congress agreed: if you rent your home for 14 days or fewer, the income is 100% excluded from federal taxes. No reporting. No Schedule E. No tax. That provision became IRC Section 280A(g) — and today, savvy business owners across America use it to legally shift tens of thousands of dollars from their taxable business income into their personal pocket, completely tax-free.

01

Your Business Rents Your Home

Your LLC, S-Corp, or partnership pays you — as the homeowner — a fair market rental rate to use your home for legitimate business purposes. Board meetings, strategy sessions, team retreats, quarterly planning days. Real business. Real rental.

Key: Must be a separate legal entity paying rent
02

You Receive the Rental Income Tax-Free

Under IRC Section 280A(g), if you rent your home for 14 days or fewer in a calendar year, that rental income is completely excluded from your federal gross income. You don't report it. You don't pay tax on it. It lands in your personal account, untaxed.

Do NOT report on Schedule E — it's excluded
03

Your Business Deducts the Full Rental Cost

The same dollars your business pays you become a fully deductible business expense under IRC Section 162 as "ordinary and necessary." Your business lowers its taxable income. You personally receive zero-tax income. This is the "Double Play" that makes this strategy extraordinary.

Business deducts → you receive tax-free = Double Play
S-Corporation Owners
The S-Corp pays you as a shareholder-homeowner. Clean separation of taxpayer entity. Most IRS-favorable structure for this strategy.
LLC Owners (Multi-Member)
Partnerships and multi-member LLCs taxed as partnerships qualify. The entity pays the homeowner-member for venue rental.
C-Corporation Owners
C-Corps can deduct the rental as a business expense. Homeowner receives payment tax-free under 280A(g).
Home-Based Business Owners
If you run a Kangen Water distributorship, a coaching business, a digital products company — your home IS your business venue. Perfect fit.
⚠️
Sole Proprietors (Single-Member LLC)
Generally does NOT work — there's no separate taxpayer entity paying rent. You can't rent to yourself in a disregarded entity structure. You need a formal entity.
⚠️
Primary Home Office Overlap
If you already deduct a home office for the same space, using the Augusta Rule for that same space creates conflicting IRS positions. Use different areas of your home.
The Augusta Rule Math — In Plain English
EXAMPLE: You own an S-Corp. Fair market meeting rate in your area: $1,500/day. You hold 12 monthly strategy meetings at your home. (12 days × $1,500/day = $18,000/year) PERSONAL SIDE: → You receive $18,000 from your S-Corp → Under IRC 280A(g): $18,000 is NOT reported as income → Federal income tax owed: $0 → Self-employment tax owed: $0 BUSINESS SIDE: → S-Corp paid $18,000 in rent → $18,000 is deducted as a business expense → S-Corp taxable income reduced by $18,000 If you're in the 24% tax bracket + 15.3% SE tax: → Normal: $18,000 × ~39% = $7,020 in taxes → Augusta Rule: $18,000 × 0% = $0 in taxes NET TAX SAVINGS: $7,020 every year.
Implementation System

The 7-Step Augusta
Implementation Guide

Follow these steps exactly. This is your done-for-you system to execute the Augusta Rule correctly, legally, and audit-proof.

01

Form a Separate Business Entity

You need a legal entity (S-Corp, LLC taxed as S-Corp, C-Corp, or partnership) separate from your personal taxes. The entity is the "tenant" — it pays you, the homeowner, rent. Without this separation, the IRS will disallow the deduction.

S-Corp is the gold standard for this strategy
02

Establish Fair Market Rental Value

Research what comparable venues charge in your area. Look up hotel conference rooms, coworking event spaces, Airbnb rentals, private event venues. Print or save these comparables. Your rental rate must be reasonable — not what you want, what the market supports. Document your comparables before setting your rate.

Keep printed venue quotes in your tax file
03

Execute a Formal Rental Agreement

Draft a written rental agreement between your business (tenant) and you personally (landlord). Include: property address, rental dates, purpose of use, rental rate, payment method, and signatures. Treat this like a real commercial lease — because to the IRS, it is one.

See the Rental Agreement Template below ↓
04

Hold Legitimate Business Meetings

The meetings must have real business purpose. Strategy sessions, quarterly reviews, product planning, team training, annual board meetings. Potential clients alone don't qualify — focus on existing clients, partners, and your team. The more documented the purpose, the stronger your position.

"Entertainment" purposes do NOT qualify
05

Document Everything — Create Meeting Minutes

For every meeting day you use: write a formal meeting agenda beforehand, keep detailed meeting minutes during, list all attendees, note what decisions were made. The Sinopoli case proved this is non-negotiable — without minutes, the IRS reduced a $290,000 deduction to almost nothing.

See the Meeting Minutes Template below ↓
06

Invoice and Pay — Create a Clean Money Trail

Invoice your business from your personal capacity as landlord. Your business pays you via business check, ACH, or business account transfer. Never pay yourself in cash. The money trail must be clean: business account → your personal account. Record it on your business books as "Rental Expense."

If rent exceeds $600, business issues a 1099-MISC
07

File Correctly — Report Nothing on Personal Return

If you stayed within 14 days, do NOT report this income on Schedule E or anywhere on your 1040. If you received a 1099-MISC, report it on Schedule E and immediately offset it with an equal "non-taxable income under IRC Section 280A(g)" deduction so the net is zero. Your tax preparer must know about this strategy.

Net Schedule E income = $0 if done right
Built-In Tool

Your 14-Day Tracker

Track your Augusta Rule meeting days. Never accidentally cross the 15-day cliff. Click a day to mark it used.

2026 Augusta Rule Day Tracker
Days Used: 0 / 14  ·  Days Remaining: 14
⚠️ STOP! You've used all 14 days. Day 15 makes ALL income taxable!
Real-World Numbers

5 Scenarios That
Will Shock You.

These aren't hypotheticals from a textbook. These are the real numbers your neighbors are using right now — while you're still writing checks to the IRS.

🏡
The Side Hustler with an LLC
Freelancer · Digital Products · Service Business
You run an online business from home. You form an LLC taxed as an S-Corp. Local hotel conference rooms charge $400/day. You hold 12 monthly team/strategy meetings at your home and invoice your S-Corp $400/day × 12 days.
Annual Tax-Free Income
$4,800
+ Business deducts $4,800 from taxable income
💧
The Kangen Water Distributor
Direct Sales · Home-Based Business · Enagic Distributor
You run your Kangen Water distributorship as an S-Corp. You hold monthly team trainings, customer demos, and quarterly business reviews at your home. Fair market venue rate in your city: $800/day. 14 meeting days used.
Annual Tax-Free Income
$11,200
+ S-Corp deducts $11,200 — zero SE tax on this income
⚖️
The LegalShield Associate
Network Marketing · Legal Services · MLM Owner
You run your LegalShield associate business as an LLC. Monthly team meetings, prospect presentations, and quarterly planning days at your home. Local event space rate: $600/day × 12 days.
Annual Tax-Free Income
$7,200
+ Business deducts $7,200 in rental expenses
🏢
The S-Corp Owner / Consultant
Consultant · Agency Owner · High-Income Professional
You run a consulting S-Corp. Local hotel conference rooms: $1,500/day. You hold quarterly off-sites, annual board review, monthly strategy sessions at your home. 12 days × $1,500.
Annual Tax-Free Income
$18,000
+ $18K business deduction saves ~$7K in taxes total
🚀
The Maximum Strategy
High-Income · Premium Home · 14 Full Days Used
Premium home used as executive retreat venue. Local luxury venue comparable: $3,000/day. Full 14 days used for annual board meetings, executive retreats, strategic off-sites, and planning sessions.
Annual Tax-Free Income
$42,000
✦ Zero federal income tax owed on this amount
Audit-Proof Your Strategy

IRS Red Flags —
What NOT to Do.

The Sinopoli v. Commissioner case (2023) is your warning. They tried to deduct $290,900 — the IRS shredded it to almost nothing. Here's exactly what gets you caught, and what keeps you clean.

🚨
Exceeding 14 Days
Day 15 triggers the "15th Day Cliff." ALL rental income for the entire year becomes taxable. There is NO proration — crossing by one hour destroys the entire exemption.
🚨
No Meeting Minutes or Agendas
This is exactly what sank Sinopoli. No written agendas. No meeting minutes. No attendee list. The Tax Court reduced $290K to almost zero. Documentation is not optional.
🚨
Inflated Rental Rates
Charging $3,000/day when comparable venues in your area charge $500/day is a red flag the IRS will immediately challenge. Your rate must be defensible with printed market comparables.
🚨
No Separate Entity Paying Rent
Sole proprietors and single-member LLCs (disregarded entities) cannot use this strategy. There's no separate taxpayer. You cannot rent to yourself. You need a formal corporate structure.
🚨
Entertainment-Only Events
Holiday parties, celebrations, and entertainment events do not qualify as legitimate business meetings. The purpose must be bona fide business. Mixed events are risky without clear business documentation.
🚨
Conflicting Home Office Deduction
If you claim a home office deduction for your primary workspace AND try to use the Augusta Rule for the same space, the IRS sees conflicting positions. Use different areas of your home for each strategy.

✅ Do This Instead — Stay Clean, Stay Protected

Keep a Dated Day Count Log
Maintain a running calendar of every day you use your home under the Augusta Rule. Cap it at 12 if you want a 2-day safety buffer. Never guess.
Always Use a Written Rental Agreement
Execute a formal rental agreement before each meeting day. Include dates, purpose, rate, and signatures from both the business officer and you personally.
Pay via Business Check or ACH
Always pay from your business bank account to your personal account. Create a clean, traceable money trail. Cash payments are a red flag.
Get a Tax Professional Who Knows 280A
Not all CPAs know this strategy. Find one who specializes in small business and S-Corp planning. LegalShield gives you access to a tax attorney for legal review.
Done-For-You Templates

Your Implementation
Toolkit

Copy these. Fill in the blanks. You can implement the Augusta Rule today. These are the exact documents CPAs use to audit-proof this strategy.

📋
Template 1: Home Rental Agreement
HOME RENTAL AGREEMENT IRC Section 280A(g) — Business Venue Rental Date of Agreement: _______________ LANDLORD: [Your Full Legal Name], an individual Address: [Your Home Address] TENANT: [Your Business Name], a [State] [S-Corporation / LLC / C-Corporation] Business Address: [Business Address] EIN: _______________ PROPERTY: The residence located at [Your Home Address], specifically the [living room / dining room / designated meeting space] (the "Premises") RENTAL DATES: The following specific date(s) only: Date 1: _______________ (Purpose: _______________) Date 2: _______________ (Purpose: _______________) [Continue as needed — not to exceed 14 total days per calendar year] RENTAL RATE: $_____________ per day BASIS FOR RATE: Based on comparable venue research showing market rates of $_____________ to $_____________ per day for similar meeting spaces in [City, State] (documentation attached) PURPOSE: The Premises shall be used exclusively for legitimate business purposes including but not limited to: board meetings, strategy sessions, team training, client presentations, and business planning retreats. PAYMENT TERMS: Tenant shall pay Landlord via [check / bank transfer] within 5 business days following each rental date. Total due per this agreement: $__________ LANDLORD REPRESENTATIONS: Landlord represents that (i) the Property is used as a personal residence by Landlord, (ii) the number of rental days under this and all other rental agreements will not exceed 14 days in the calendar year, and (iii) this rental arrangement is made at arms-length fair market value. LANDLORD SIGNATURE: ___________________ Date: ____________ Printed Name: ___________________________ BUSINESS OFFICER SIGNATURE: ___________________ Date: ____________ Printed Name: ___________________________ Title: ___________________________________ --- For educational purposes only. Not legal or tax advice. Consult a qualified professional. Based on IRC Section 280A(g).
📝
Template 2: Meeting Minutes
OFFICIAL MEETING MINUTES [Business Name] — [Type of Meeting] IRC Section 280A(g) Business Meeting Documentation MEETING DATE: _______________ MEETING START TIME: _____ AM/PM MEETING END TIME: _____ AM/PM MEETING LOCATION: Private residence at [Your Address] MEETING TYPE: [Board Meeting / Strategy Session / Team Training / Quarterly Review] ATTENDEES PRESENT: 1. [Full Name] — [Title / Role] 2. [Full Name] — [Title / Role] 3. [Full Name] — [Title / Role] (minimum 2 attendees recommended) CALLED TO ORDER BY: _______________ AGENDA ITEMS DISCUSSED: 1. [Topic] — Duration: ___ min Key points discussed: _________________________________________________ Decision/Action Item: _____________________________ Responsible party: ________________________________ 2. [Topic] — Duration: ___ min Key points discussed: _________________________________________________ Decision/Action Item: _____________________________ Responsible party: ________________________________ 3. [Topic] — Duration: ___ min Key points discussed: _________________________________________________ Decision/Action Item: _____________________________ FINANCIAL ITEMS (if applicable): Revenue reviewed: $___________ Expenses reviewed: $___________ Budget items approved: _____________________________ NEXT STEPS & ACTION ITEMS: [ ] _______________________________ Due: _______ [ ] _______________________________ Due: _______ [ ] _______________________________ Due: _______ NEXT MEETING SCHEDULED: _______________ MEETING ADJOURNED AT: _______ AM/PM MINUTES RECORDED BY: ___________________________ DATE MINUTES APPROVED: _________________________ SIGNATURES: ___________________________ Date: _______ [Officer/Director Name & Title] ___________________________ Date: _______ [Officer/Director Name & Title] --- These minutes are official business records. Retain for minimum 7 years. For educational purposes only. Not legal advice.
🧾
Template 3: Business Invoice for Rental
INVOICE FROM (Landlord/Individual): Name: [Your Full Legal Name] Address: [Your Home Address] Phone: [Your Phone] Email: [Your Email] TO (Business/Tenant): Company: [Your Business Name] EIN: _______________ Address: [Business Address] INVOICE NUMBER: AUG-2026-001 INVOICE DATE: _______________ DUE DATE: _______________ (5 days from meeting) DESCRIPTION OF SERVICES: Venue Rental — Private Residence Meeting Space Location: [Your Home Address] Date(s) of Use: _______________ Meeting Purpose: _______________ Number of Days: ______ × $____________/day SUBTOTAL: $________________ TOTAL DUE: $________________ PAYMENT METHOD: [Business Check / Bank Transfer / ACH] Make payable to: [Your Personal Name] Bank Transfer to: [Account info if ACH] BASIS FOR RENTAL RATE: Per comparable market research, similar meeting venues in [City, State] range from $_____ to $_____ per day. Rate charged reflects fair market value. Comparable venues researched: [Name venues, attach documentation] NOTE: This rental is made pursuant to IRC Section 280A(g). Total days rented in current calendar year including this invoice: _______ (not to exceed 14). Authorized Signature: ___________________________ Date: _________ --- For educational purposes. Consult a tax professional.
Your Audit Shield

The Strategy is Powerful.
The Protection is Essential.

The Augusta Rule is 100% legal. But the IRS audits it. And when they knock — you need an attorney who already knows your file.

LegalShield Partner
An Attorney For Your Augusta Rule — And Your Life.
When you use the Augusta Rule, you're executing a real legal and tax strategy. LegalShield gives you access to a licensed attorney who can review your rental agreements before you sign, advise on your meeting documentation, and stand in your corner if the IRS ever questions your deduction. That's not paranoia — that's smart business. For less than a dinner out each month, you have a law firm on retainer protecting your income strategy.
Get LegalShield Protection →
Also a powerful income opportunity — ask about becoming an associate
⚖️
Tax Attorney AccessGet your Augusta Rule docs reviewed by a real attorney before executing.
🛡️
IRS Audit DefenseIf the IRS inquires, your LegalShield attorney responds and represents you.
📋
Contract ReviewEvery rental agreement, every invoice — reviewed before you sign.
💼
Business Legal SupportEntity formation, operating agreements, and ongoing business legal advice.
💰
Income OpportunityBecome a LegalShield associate — earn $500–$2K/month in residual income.
Double Your Strategy

The Home Business That
Qualifies Perfectly.

To use the Augusta Rule, you need a home-based business with an entity structure. Kangen Water gives you exactly that — and a recurring income stream that funds your lifestyle.

Kangen Water by Enagic
Your Home IS the Business — Use It Like One.
A Kangen Water distributorship is the ideal vehicle for the Augusta Rule. You demonstrate machines in your home. You hold team trainings in your living room. You run strategy sessions from your kitchen table. Every one of those days — at fair market venue rates — can be paid by your business to you, tax-free. While you earn recurring commissions from Enagic, your S-Corp structure lets you layer the Augusta Rule on top for thousands more in tax-free income. Health asset. Income asset. Tax strategy vehicle. All in one.
Home Demo EventsKangen demos held at your home qualify as legitimate business meetings. Document them. Invoice your business.
Team Training DaysMonthly distributor trainings at your home = Augusta Rule rental days. $600–$1,500/day depending on your market.
Quarterly StrategyBusiness planning, income goal reviews, team development — all legitimate. All documentable.
S-Corp StructureRunning your Kangen business as an S-Corp gives you the entity separation required for the Augusta Rule to work.
Own This Strategy.
Own Your Tax Future.

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