Using your business account to pay your personal credit card: the mistake that can cost you tax deductions (and how to fix it)

A lot of small business owners make this move without thinking twice:

They use the business bank account to pay their personal credit card, where they have a mix of family expenses, groceries, subscriptions, travel… and a few business expenses like gas, Costco, tools, or materials.

Convenient? Yes.
Smart for your business, taxes, and legal protection? No.

In this article, we’ll break down why you should never mix personal and business funds, how this impacts your tax deductions, and what you can do to keep clean, audit-proof books.


Why you should NOT pay your personal credit card from your business account

If your business pays a credit card that is under your personal name, the IRS and your books don’t see that as a regular business expense.

From an accounting and tax perspective, it usually looks like:

➡️ Owner’s Draw / Distribution, not an operating expense.

This creates several problems:

If you want real liability protection and clean financials, your business must look and operate like a separate entity—not like your personal wallet.


“But some of those charges ARE business expenses…”

Totally valid—and those can still be deducted if handled correctly.

If you use your personal credit card for business expenses (fuel for a work truck, supplies, inventory, etc.), here’s how to do it right:

  1. Identify which charges are truly business-related.

  2. Keep receipts or statements, clearly marking the business expenses.

  3. Your business can then:

    • Reimburse you for those business expenses, or

    • Record them as business expenses paid by the owner, treated as an Owner Contribution.

In both cases, the expenses can still be tax-deductible, as long as they are:

📌 Key idea: Documentation + separation = protection + deductions.


Best practices to separate personal and business finances

If you’re a small business owner, contractor, freelancer, or run an LLC/S-Corp, these simple habits will save you money and stress:

1. Don’t use your business account to pay personal debt

Avoid paying:

directly from your business bank account.

These should be paid from your personal account.

2. Use a dedicated card for business expenses

For better control and easier bookkeeping:

This helps:

3. Keep proof of your business expenses

4. Live by the golden rule

Business money is for the business.
Personal money is personal.

It sounds simple, but it’s one of the most important rules for tax planning, asset protection, and professional bookkeeping.


What if you’ve already been mixing everything?

You’re not alone—this is extremely common.

If your business has already been paying your personal credit card:

The sooner you clean this up, the easier it is to protect your numbers, support your deductions, and avoid issues with the IRS or state.


Final thoughts

Keeping your business and personal finances separate is not just an accounting preference—it’s a key strategy to:

If you’re not sure whether you’re doing it right or suspect you’ve been mixing funds, this is the perfect time to adjust your system and get professional guidance. A few small changes today can prevent big (and expensive) problems later.