How Rising Corporate Security Costs Could Affect Your 2025 Taxes

MFS Tax Insight • 2025 Planning Guide

Security spending has expanded across industries—covering cybersecurity, physical security upgrades, and executive protection. For small businesses, the tax impact comes down to one question: is the cost a deductible expense, a depreciable asset, or taxable compensation?

Best for: Small business owners • Professional firms Year: 2025 planning Focus: Deductions • Depreciation • Fringe benefits
Important: This is general information, not tax or legal advice. Tax treatment depends on facts, documentation, and business purpose.

The trend: security spending is no longer optional

A Wall Street Journal report describes how security budgets have expanded following heightened concerns around executive protection, physical security upgrades, and cybersecurity. While the story focuses on large companies, the same spending categories show up in small businesses—just at a different scale.

  • Hiring security consultants or risk assessors
  • Installing cameras, access control, monitoring, or alarm systems
  • Paying for cybersecurity software, monitoring, or incident response support
  • Meeting insurance-related compliance or vendor requirements tied to security controls

Primary source

Wall Street Journal: How corporate security has changed (WSJ)

How the IRS looks at security costs

Most security spending falls under the general rule for business deductions: expenses must be ordinary and necessary to be deductible. In plain English, the expense should be common in your industry and helpful to your business operations.

Good news

Many security and cybersecurity costs are ordinary operating expenses and can be deductible in the year paid.

What causes issues

Misclassifying equipment as an expense, failing to document business purpose, or treating personal protection like a business cost.

IRS references

Business expenses (Pub. 535): IRS Publication 535
General business expense overview: IRS: Deducting Business Expenses

1) Deductible security expenses (most common)

Many security-related services are typically deductible when they support business operations, including:

  • Contracted security services and guard services
  • Cybersecurity subscriptions, monitoring, and managed security services
  • Risk assessments and security consulting
  • Alarm monitoring and response services

Planning note

Keep invoices, contracts, and a short internal memo showing why the expense is business-related. Good documentation lowers audit risk.

2) Capitalized security costs (timing matters)

When security spending creates or improves an asset, it may need to be capitalized and recovered through depreciation rather than deducted immediately. Common examples include cameras, access control systems, and physical infrastructure upgrades.

  • Surveillance camera systems
  • Secure access installations
  • Reinforced doors or controlled-entry infrastructure

Why small businesses get stuck

They expense everything in the year paid without separating equipment (asset) from monitoring/service (expense). That can create reclassifications later.

Depreciation reference

Depreciation rules (Pub. 946): IRS Publication 946

3) Executive security can trigger taxable income

This is where many businesses make avoidable mistakes. If security is provided primarily for personal protection, the IRS may treat it as a taxable fringe benefit to the individual—similar to additional compensation.

More likely taxable

Personal bodyguards without a documented business risk, security tied to lifestyle, or no policy/risk assessment supporting necessity.

More defensible

Documented business-related security need, company policy, and independent risk assessment supporting the business necessity.

Fringe benefits reference

Fringe benefit rules (Pub. 15-B): IRS Publication 15-B

4) Cybersecurity costs and 2025 compliance reality

Cybersecurity is one of the most common “security spend” categories for small businesses. Tax treatment often depends on what you’re purchasing:

  • Software subscriptions and monitoring: typically operating expenses
  • Breach response and remediation services: often deductible (facts matter)
  • Hardware/system upgrades: may require capitalization and depreciation

Quick win

Ask your bookkeeper to separate “Cybersecurity (software/services)” from “IT equipment (assets)” so tax reporting is clean at year-end.

2025 planning checklist for small businesses

Before filing your 2025 return, confirm these items are handled correctly:

  • Security costs are split correctly between expense vs. depreciable asset
  • Any owner/executive security has documented business justification
  • Depreciation elections are aligned with cash flow and taxable income
  • Cybersecurity costs are classified consistently (software vs hardware vs improvements)
  • Payroll/fringe benefit rules are considered where security could be personal

Not sure if your security spend is deductible—or creating payroll exposure?

Security costs can lower taxable income, but the classification and documentation have to be clean. If you want a quick review, we can help you separate expenses vs assets, flag any fringe benefit risk, and set up categories that make your 2025 filing smoother.

In a short call, we can:
identify what’s deductible now vs depreciable,
reduce audit and reclassification risk,
and clean up bookkeeping categories for 2025.

Best for: owners, professional firms, closely held companies, and businesses with upgraded systems or executive protection spending.

Tip: bring a year-to-date P&L, details on security/cyber vendors, and any invoices for equipment installs.

FAQ: Security Costs and Small Business Taxes

Quick Answers
Are cybersecurity subscriptions deductible in 2025?

Often yes. Subscription-based cybersecurity tools and monitoring services are commonly treated as ordinary operating expenses when they support business operations.

If I install cameras and access control, can I deduct it right away?

It depends. Equipment and installations may need to be capitalized and depreciated, while monitoring and service components are often deductible. The invoice breakdown matters.

Can executive protection be treated as a business expense?

Sometimes. If it’s primarily personal protection without documentation, it may be treated as taxable compensation. Strong business-purpose documentation and policies improve defensibility.

What documentation should I keep for security expenses?

Keep vendor contracts, invoices, proof of payment, and a short internal memo describing the business reason for the security measure. For executive security, a risk assessment or policy helps.

Do breach response costs have a different tax treatment?

Many breach response and remediation services are treated as business expenses, but facts vary. Separate these costs from equipment upgrades for cleaner reporting.

What’s the biggest mistake small businesses make with security spending?

Mixing everything into one bookkeeping category. Separating services (expense) from equipment/installs (asset) and documenting business purpose prevents year-end surprises.

Sources used in this guide

WSJ (trend context): Wall Street Journal article
IRS Pub. 535 (business expenses): irs.gov/publications/p535
IRS Pub. 946 (depreciation): irs.gov/publications/p946
IRS Pub. 15-B (fringe benefits): irs.gov/publications/p15b
IRS business expense overview: irs.gov business expenses page
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