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February 3, 2026 · 6 min read

DJ Tax Deductions: 15 Things You Can Write Off

Every euro you legitimately deduct is a euro you keep. Most DJs overpay tax by thousands because they don't track expenses or don't know what's deductible. This is not tax advice — talk to an accountant — but here's the checklist of categories professional DJs claim in most jurisdictions.

Equipment and Gear

Controllers, CDJs, mixers, headphones, laptops used for performance, cases, cables. Anything over the small-asset threshold (varies by country, typically €500–€1,500) is depreciated over several years rather than expensed in one hit.

Travel and Transport

Mileage to and from gigs (keep a log), flights for touring, taxis, parking at venues, car insurance proportionate to business use, train tickets. If you drive to gigs frequently, a small van or wagon purchase is often deductible.

Music and Subscriptions

Beatport / Bandcamp / Traxsource purchases, Rekordbox or Serato licenses, streaming services used to find music for sets, SoundCloud subscriptions, promo pool memberships. Spotify Premium is usually deductible if you use it for research.

Software and Tools

Booking management (GigComs subscription), accounting software, contract signing tools, invoicing tools, cloud storage, email marketing. The full annual cost is deductible.

Home Studio

If you have a dedicated room for practice and set prep, you can often deduct a proportion of rent/mortgage interest, utilities, and internet based on the square meters used. Keep photos and a floor plan.

Marketing and Promotion

Photography, videography, graphic design, website hosting, domain names, Instagram/Meta ads, business cards, flyers. Anything that promotes you or your brand.

Professional Development

Music production courses, DJ skill workshops, industry conference tickets, music books, mentorship sessions. If it makes you better at your craft, it's usually deductible.

Insurance and Fees

Public liability insurance (often required by venues), equipment insurance, professional body memberships (DJ Mag subscription, PPL/PRS fees), bank fees on your business account.

Track expenses in real time, not at year-end. Take a photo of every receipt, tag it with the category, and store it in a folder named for the tax year. GigComs tracks bookings, contracts, and invoice payments automatically, which simplifies the income side of the ledger — leaving you more time to track what leaves your account.

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DJ Tax Deductions — 15 Write-Offs Every DJ Should Claim — GigComs | GigComs