How writing income is classified
Most freelance writing is service income โ you write content, the client pays you. But if you retain copyright and license articles for republication, that portion may qualify as royalty income. Book advances and ongoing royalties from international publishers are almost always treated as royalties under tax treaties.
Copyright and work-for-hire
When a client buys your article outright (work-for-hire), you transfer copyright and receive service income. When you license content (granting usage rights while retaining copyright), it's royalty income. The distinction affects which treaty provisions apply and how income is taxed.
Content mill and platform income
Writers using platforms like Medium Partner Program, Substack, or content mills receive income that's typically service or royalty income depending on the arrangement. Each platform has different reporting โ Medium issues 1099s to US writers, while international writers must self-report.
Publication in multiple countries
If your work is published in multiple countries, you may have withholding obligations in each. Syndicated content and international publications often withhold at source. Claim foreign tax credits in your home country to offset this.
Writer-specific deductions
Deduct: writing software (Grammarly, Hemingway, Scrivener), research materials and subscriptions, reference books, professional memberships (freelance writer associations), home office, internet, and travel for research or interviews.