Audio tax write-off


Hello,

I have a company that produces documentaries and podcasts on personal and commercial histories. I have needed to acquire computer equipment to do my work, and I've borrowed some equipment from my 2-channel system, such as headphones, as well. My question is, do any of you write off home audio audio acquisitions for your business? Do you know the tax rules on this? Does it have to be branded  as "pro" gear to qualify? Thinking I need a better DAC and studio monitors. If I bought a component called "Schiit," would the tax auditor go "nnnnnnnnnnoooooo?" 

Thanks for your input.

Paul


paulburnett
For instance we report computers as an expendable asset if they cost under $5000. Life expectancy isn't the only variable in the equation. 
It’s what we set as the capital assets threshold, if it cost $5000 or more life expectancy more than a year it's depreciated,  under it's expense in that year.
You can't only use life expectancy, a stapler last more than a year, that's why you use  a capital threshold. This is basic stuff. 
You don't set a dollar threshold.  Whether it cost $1,000 or $20,000, it is still subject to the rules of depreciation and is not an expendable asset.  You may be confusing an expendable asset with a section 179 deduction.