Publication 463 |
2001 Tax Year |
Reimbursements
This section explains what to do when you receive an advance or are reimbursed for any of the employee business expenses discussed in this
publication.
If you received an advance, allowance, or reimbursement for your expenses, how you report this amount and your expenses depends on whether the
reimbursement was paid to you under an accountable plan or a nonaccountable plan.
This section explains the two types of plans, how per diem and car allowances simplify proving the amount of your expenses, and the tax treatment
of your reimbursements and expenses. It also covers rules for independent contractors.
No reimbursement.
You are not reimbursed or given an allowance for your expenses if you are paid a salary or commission with the understanding that you will pay your
own expenses. In this situation, you have no reimbursement or allowance arrangement, and you do not have to read this section on reimbursements.
Instead, see Completing Forms 2106 and 2106-EZ, later, for information on completing your tax return.
Reimbursement, allowance, or advance.
A reimbursement or other expense allowance arrangement is a system or plan that an employer uses to pay, substantiate, and recover the expenses,
advances, reimbursements, and amounts charged to the employer for employee business expenses. Arrangements include per diem and car allowances.
A per diem allowance is a fixed amount of daily reimbursement your employer gives you for your lodging, meals, and incidental expenses when you are
away from home on business. (The term "incidental expenses" is defined in chapter 1 under Standard Meal Allowance.) A car allowance is
an amount your employer gives you for the business use of your car.
Your employer should tell you what method of reimbursement is used and what records you must provide.
Employers.
If you are an employer and you reimburse employee business expenses, how you treat this reimbursement on your employee's Form W-2 depends in
part on whether you have an accountable plan. Reimbursements treated as paid under an accountable plan, as explained next, are not reported as pay.
Reimbursements treated as paid under nonaccountable plans, as explained later, are reported as pay. See Publication 15, Circular E, Employer's
Tax Guide, for information on employee pay.
Accountable Plans
To be an accountable plan, your employer's reimbursement or allowance arrangement must include all three of the following rules.
- Your expenses must have a business connection -- that is, you must have paid or incurred deductible expenses while performing services
as an employee of your employer.
- You must adequately account to your employer for these expenses within a reasonable period of time.
- You must return any excess reimbursement or allowance within a reasonable period of time.
"Adequate accounting" and "returning excess reimbursements" are discussed later.
An excess reimbursement or allowance
is any amount you are paid that is more than the business-related expenses that you adequately accounted
for to your employer.
The definition of reasonable period of time depends on the facts and circumstances of your situation. However, regardless of the facts
and circumstances of your situation, actions that take place within the times specified in the following list will be treated as taking place within a
reasonable period of time.
- You receive an advance within 30 days of the time you have an expense.
- You adequately account for your expenses within 60 days after they were paid or incurred.
- You return any excess reimbursement within 120 days after the expense was paid or incurred.
- You are given a periodic statement (at least quarterly) that asks you to either return or adequately account for outstanding advances
and you comply within 120 days of the statement.
Employee meets accountable plan rules.
If you meet the three rules for accountable plans, your employer should not include any reimbursements in your income in box 1 of your Form
W-2. If your expenses equal your reimbursement, you do not complete Form 2106. You have no deduction since your expenses and reimbursement are
equal.
If your employer included reimbursements in box 1 of your Form W-2 and you meet all three rules for accountable plans, ask your employer for
a corrected Form W-2.
Accountable plan rules not met.
Even though you are reimbursed under an accountable plan, some of your expenses may not meet all three rules. Those expenses that fail to meet all
three rules for accountable plans are treated as having been reimbursed under a nonaccountable plan (discussed later).
Reimbursement of nondeductible expenses.
You may be reimbursed under your employer's accountable plan for expenses related to that employer's business, some of which are deductible as
employee business expenses and some of which are not deductible. The reimbursements you receive for the nondeductible expenses do not meet rule (1)
for accountable plans, and they are treated as paid under a nonaccountable plan.
Example.
Your employer's plan reimburses you for travel expenses while away from home on business and also for meals when you work late at the office, even
though you are not away from home. The part of the arrangement that reimburses you for the nondeductible meals when you work late at the office is
treated as paid under a nonaccountable plan.
The employer makes the decision whether to reimburse employees under an accountable plan or a nonaccountable plan. If you are an employee who
receives payments under a nonaccountable plan, you cannot convert these amounts to payments under an accountable plan by voluntarily accounting to
your employer for the expenses and voluntarily returning excess reimbursements to the employer.
Adequate Accounting
One of the three rules for an accountable plan is that you must adequately account to your employer for your expenses. You adequately account by
giving your employer a statement of expense, an account book, a diary, or a similar record in which you entered each expense at or near the time you
had it, along with documentary evidence (such as receipts) of your travel, mileage, and other employee business expenses. (See Table 4 in
chapter 5 for details you need to enter in your record and documents you need to prove certain expenses.)
You must account for all amounts you received from your employer during the year as advances, reimbursements, or allowances. This
includes amounts you charged to your employer by credit card or other method. You must give your employer the same type of records and supporting
information that you would have to give to the IRS if the IRS questioned a deduction on your return. You must pay back the amount of any reimbursement
or other expense allowance for which you do not adequately account or that is more than the amount for which you accounted.
Per Diem and Car Allowances
If your employer reimburses you for your expenses using a per diem or a car allowance, you can generally use the allowance as proof for the amount
of your expenses. A per diem or car allowance satisfies the adequate accounting requirements for the amount of your expenses only if all four of the
following conditions apply.
- Your employer reasonably limits payments of your expenses to those that are ordinary and necessary in the conduct of the trade or
business.
- The allowance is similar in form to and not more than the federal rate (defined later).
- You prove the time (dates), place, and business purpose of your expenses to your employer (as explained in Table 4) within a
reasonable period of time.
- You are not related to your employer (as defined under Standard Meal Allowance in chapter 1). If you are related to your
employer, you must be able to prove your expenses to the IRS even if you have already adequately accounted to your employer and returned any excess
reimbursement.
If the IRS finds that an employer's travel allowance practices are not based on reasonably accurate estimates of travel costs (including
recognition of cost differences in different areas for per diem amounts), you will not be considered to have accounted to your employer. In this case,
you must be able to prove your expenses to the IRS.
The federal rate.
The federal rate can be figured using any one of the following methods.
- For per diem amounts:
- The regular federal per diem rate.
- The standard meal allowance.
- The high-low rate.
- For car expenses:
- The standard mileage rate.
- A fixed and variable rate (FAVR).
For per diem amounts, use the rate in effect for the area where you stop for sleep or rest.
Regular federal per diem rate.
The regular federal per diem rate is the highest amount that the federal government will pay to its employees for lodging, meals, and incidental
expenses (or meals and incidental expenses only) while they are traveling away from home in a particular area. The rates are different for different
locations. Your employer should have these rates available. (Employers can get Publication 1542,
which gives the rates in the continental United
States for the current year.)
The standard meal allowance.
The standard meal allowance (discussed in chapter 1) is the federal rate for meals and incidental expenses (M&IE). The rate for most small
localities in the United States is $30. Most major cities and many other localities qualify for higher rates. The rates for all localities within the
continental United States are listed in Publication 1542.
You receive an allowance only for meals and incidental expenses when your employer does one of the following.
- Provides you with lodging (furnishes it in kind).
- Reimburses you, based on your receipts, for the actual cost of your lodging.
- Pays the hotel, motel, etc., directly for your lodging.
- Does not have a reasonable belief that you had (or will have) lodging expenses, such as when you stay with friends or relatives or sleep in
the cab of your truck.
- Computes the allowance on a basis similar to that used in computing your compensation, such as number of hours worked or miles
traveled.
High-low rate.
This is a simplified method of computing the federal per diem rate for travel within the continental United States. It eliminates the need to keep
a current list of the per diem rate for each city.
Under the high-low method, the per diem amount for travel during January through September of 2001 is $201 (including $42 for M&IE) for certain
high-cost locations. All other areas have a per diem amount of $124 (including $34 for M&IE). (Employers can get Publication 1542
(Revised March
2001), which gives the areas eligible for the $201 per diem amount under the high-low method for all or part of this period.)
Effective October 1, 2001, the per diem rates under this method increased. The increased rate for certain high-cost locations is $204 (including
$42 for M&IE). The increased rate for all other locations is $124 (including $34 for M&IE). However, an employer can continue to use the lower
rates described in the preceding paragraph for the remainder of 2001 if those rates and locations are used consistently during October, November, and
December for all employees. Employers who did not use the high-low method during the first 9 months of 2001 cannot begin to use it before 2002. See
Revenue Procedure 2001-47 for more information.
Prorating the standard meal allowance on partial days of travel.
The standard meal allowance is for a full 24-hour day of travel. If you travel for part of a day, such as on the days you depart and return, you
must prorate the full-day M&IE rate. This rule also applies if your employer uses the regular federal per diem rate or the high-low rate.
You can use either of the following methods to figure the federal M&IE for that day.
- Method 1:
- For the day you depart, add 3/4 of the standard meal allowance amount for that day.
- For the day you return, add 3/4 of the standard meal allowance amount for the preceding day.
- Method 2: Prorate the standard meal allowance using any method that you consistently apply and that is in accordance with
reasonable business practice. For example, an employer can treat 2 full days of per diem (that includes M&IE) paid for travel away from home from
9 a.m. of one day to 5 p.m. of the next day as being no more than the federal rate. This is true even though a federal employee would be limited to a
reimbursement of M&IE for only 1 1/2 days of the federal M&IE rate.
The standard mileage rate.
This is a set rate per mile that you can use to compute your deductible car expenses. For 2001, the standard
mileage rate is 34 1/2 cents a mile for all business miles. This rate is adjusted periodically.
Fixed and variable rate (FAVR).
This is an allowance your employer may use to reimburse your car expenses. Under this method, your employer pays
an allowance that includes a combination of payments covering fixed and variable costs, such as a cents-per-mile rate to cover your variable operating
costs (such as gas, oil, etc.) plus a flat amount to cover your fixed costs (such as depreciation (or lease payments), insurance, etc.). If your
employer chooses to use this method, your employer will request the necessary records from you.
Reporting your expenses with a per diem or car allowance.
If your reimbursement is in the form of an allowance received under an accountable plan, the following two facts affect your reporting.
- The federal rate.
- Whether the allowance or your actual expenses were more than the federal rate.
The following discussions explain where to report your expenses depending upon how the amount of your allowance compares to the federal rate.
Allowance LESS than or EQUAL to the federal rate.
If your allowance is less than or equal to the federal rate, the allowance will not be included in box 1 of your Form W-2. You do not need to
report the related expenses or the allowance on your return if your expenses are equal to or less than the allowance.
However, if your actual expenses are more than your allowance, you can complete Form 2106 and deduct the excess amount on Schedule A (Form 1040).
If you are using actual expenses, you must be able to prove to the IRS the total amount of your expenses and reimbursements for the entire year. If
you are using the standard meal allowance or the standard mileage rate, you do not have to prove that amount.
Example 1.
In April, Jeremy takes a 2-day business trip to Denver. The federal rate for Denver is $128 per day. As required by his employer's accountable
plan, he accounts for the time (dates), place, and business purpose of the trip. His employer reimburses him $128 a day ($256 total) for living
expenses. Jeremy's living expenses in Denver are not more than $128 a day.
Jeremy's employer does not include any of the reimbursement on his Form W-2 and Jeremy does not deduct the expenses on his return.
Example 2.
In June, Matt takes a 2-day business trip to Boston. Matt's employer uses the high-low method to reimburse employees. Since Boston is a high-cost
area, Matt is given an advance of $180 a day ($360 total) for his lodging, meals, and incidental expenses. Matt's actual expenses totaled $490.
Since Matt's $490 of expenses are more than his $360 advance, he includes the excess expenses when he itemizes his deductions. Matt completes Form
2106 (showing all of his expenses and reimbursements). He must also allocate his reimbursement between his meals and other expenses as
discussed later under Completing Forms 2106 and 2106-EZ.
Example 3.
Nicole drives 10,000 miles a year for business. Under her employer's accountable plan, she accounts for the time (dates), place, and business
purpose of each trip. Her employer pays her a mileage allowance of 20 cents a mile.
Since Nicole's $3,450 expenses computed under the standard mileage rate (10,000 miles × 34 1/2 cents) are more than her $2,000
reimbursement (10,000 miles × 20 cents), she itemizes her deductions to claim the excess expenses. Nicole completes Form 2106 (showing all
of her expenses and reimbursements) and enters $1,450 ($3,450 - $2,000) as an itemized deduction.
Allowance MORE than the federal rate.
If your allowance is more than the federal rate, your employer must include the allowance amount up to the federal rate in box 12 of your Form
W-2. This amount is not taxable. However, the excess allowance will be included in box 1 of your Form W-2. You must report this part of
your allowance as if it were wage income.
If your actual expenses are less than or equal to the federal rate, you do not complete Form 2106 or claim any of your expenses on your return.
However, if your actual expenses are more than the federal rate, you can complete Form 2106 and deduct those excess expenses. You must report on
Form 2106 your reimbursements up to the federal rate (as shown in box 12 of your Form W-2) and all your expenses. You should be able to prove
these amounts to the IRS.
Example 1.
Laura lives and works in Austin. Her employer sent her to Albuquerque for 2 days on business. Laura's employer paid the hotel directly for her
lodging and reimbursed Laura $40 a day ($80 total) for meals and incidental expenses. Laura's actual meal expenses were not more than the federal rate
for Albuquerque, which is $38 per day.
Table 5. Reporting Travel, Entertainment, Gift and Car Expenses and Reimbursements
Her employer included the $4 that was more than the federal rate [($40 - $38) × 2] in box 1 of Laura's Form W-2. Her employer
shows $76 ($38 a day × 2) in box 12 of her Form W-2. This amount is not included in Laura's income. Laura does not have to complete Form
2106; however, she must include the $4 in her gross income as wages (by reporting the total amount shown in box 1 of her Form W-2).
Example 2.
Joe also lives in Austin and works for the same employer as Laura. In May the employer sent Joe to San Diego for 4 days and paid the hotel directly
for Joe's hotel bill. The employer reimbursed Joe $50 a day for his meals and incidental expenses. The federal rate for San Diego is $46 a day.
Joe can prove that his actual meal expenses totaled $290. His employer's accountable plan will not pay more than $50 a day for travel to San Diego,
so Joe does not give his employer the records that prove that he actually spent $290. However, he does account for the time, place, and business
purpose of the trip. This is Joe's only business trip this year.
Joe was reimbursed $200 ($50 × 4 days), which is $16 more than the federal rate of $184 ($46 × 4 days). The employer includes the $16
as income on Joe's Form W-2 in box 1. The employer also enters $184 in box 12 of Joe's Form W-2.
Joe completes Form 2106 to figure his deductible expenses. He enters the total of his actual expenses for the year ($290) on Form 2106. He also
enters the reimbursements that were not included in his income ($184). His total deductible expense, before the 50% limit, is $106. After he figures
the 50% limit on his unreimbursed meals and entertainment, he will include the balance, $53, as an itemized deduction.
Example 3.
Debbie drives 10,000 miles for business. Under her employer's accountable plan, she gets reimbursed 37 cents a mile, which is 2 1/2
cents a mile more than the standard mileage rate.
Debbie's employer must include the reimbursement amount up to the standard mileage rate, $3,450 (10,000 miles × 34 1/2 cents), in
box 12 of her Form W-2. That amount is not taxable. Her employer must also include $250 (10,000 miles × 2 1/2 cents) in box 1
of her Form W-2. This is the reimbursement that is more than the standard mileage rate.
If Debbie's expenses are equal to or less than the standard mileage rate, she would not complete Form 2106. If her expenses are more than the
standard mileage rate, she would complete Form 2106 and report her total expenses and reimbursement (shown in box 12 of her Form W-2). She would
then claim the excess expenses as an itemized deduction.
Returning Excess Reimbursements
Under an accountable plan, you are required to return any excess reimbursement or other expense allowances for your business expenses to the person
paying the reimbursement or allowance. Excess reimbursement means any amount for which you did not adequately account within a reasonable
period of time. For example, if you received a travel advance and you did not spend all the money on business-related expenses, or you do not have
proof of all your expenses, you have an excess reimbursement.
"Adequate accounting" and "reasonable period of time" were discussed earlier in this chapter.
Travel advance.
You receive a travel advance if your employer provides you with an expense allowance before you actually have the expense, and the allowance is
reasonably expected to be no more than your expense. Under an accountable plan, you are required to adequately account to your employer for this
advance and to return any excess within a reasonable period of time.
If you do not adequately account for or do not return any excess advance within a reasonable period of time, the amount you do not account for or
return will be treated as having been paid under a nonaccountable plan (discussed later).
Unproved amounts.
If you do not prove that you actually traveled on each day for which you received a per diem or car allowance (proving the elements described in
Table 4), you must return this unproved amount of the travel advance within a reasonable period of time. If you do not do this, the
unproved amount will be considered paid under a nonaccountable plan (discussed later).
Per diem allowance MORE than federal rate.
If your employer's accountable plan pays you an allowance that is higher than the federal rate, you do not have to return the difference between
the two rates for the period you can prove business-related travel expenses. However, the difference will be reported as wages on your Form W-2.
This excess amount is considered paid under a nonaccountable plan (discussed later).
Example.
Your employer sends you on a 5-day business trip to Phoenix and gives you a $225 ($45 × 5 days) advance to cover your meals and incidental
expenses. The federal per diem for meals and incidental expenses for Phoenix is $42. Your trip lasts only 3 days. Under your employer's accountable
plan, you must return the $90 ($45 × 2 days) advance for the 2 days you did not travel. You do not have to return the $9 difference between the
allowance you received and the federal rate for Phoenix [($45 - $42) × 3 days]. However, the $9 will be reported on your Form W-2 as
wages.
Nonaccountable Plans
A nonaccountable plan is a reimbursement or expense allowance arrangement that does not meet one or more of the three rules listed earlier under
Accountable Plans.
In addition, even if your employer has an accountable plan, the following payments will be treated as being paid under a nonaccountable plan:
- Excess reimbursements you fail to return to your employer, and
- Reimbursement of nondeductible expenses related to your employer's business. See Reimbursement of nondeductible expenses,
earlier, under Accountable Plans.
An arrangement that repays you for business expenses by reducing the amount reported as your wages, salary, or other pay will be treated as a
nonaccountable plan. This is because you are entitled to receive the full amount of your pay whether or not you have any business expenses.
If you are not sure if the reimbursement or expense allowance arrangement is an accountable or nonaccountable plan, ask your employer.
Reporting your expenses under a nonaccountable plan.
Your employer will combine the amount of any reimbursement or other expense allowance paid to you under a nonaccountable plan with your wages,
salary, or other pay. Your employer will report the total in box 1 of your Form W-2.
You must complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ and itemize your deductions to deduct your expenses for travel, transportation, meals, or
entertainment. Your meal and entertainment expenses will be subject to the 50% limit discussed in chapter 2. Also, your total expenses will be subject
to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit that applies to most miscellaneous itemized deductions.
Example 1.
Kim's employer gives her $500 a month ($6,000 total for the year) for her business expenses. Kim does not have to provide any proof of her expenses
to her employer, and Kim can keep any funds that she does not spend.
Kim is being reimbursed under a nonaccountable plan. Her employer will include the $6,000 on Kim's Form W-2 as if it were wages. If Kim wants
to deduct her business expenses, she must complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ and itemize her deductions.
Example 2.
Kevin is paid $2,000 a month by his employer. On days that he travels away from home on business, his employer designates $50 a day of his salary
as paid to reimburse his travel expenses. Because his employer would pay Kevin his monthly salary whether or not he was traveling away from home, the
arrangement is a nonaccountable plan. No part of the $50 a day designated by his employer is treated as paid under an accountable plan.
Rules for Independent Contractors and Clients
This section provides rules for independent contractors who incur expenses on behalf of a client or customer. The rules cover the reporting and
substantiation of certain expenses discussed in this publication, and they affect both independent contractors and their clients or customers.
You are considered an independent contractor if you are self-employed and you perform services for a customer or client.
Accounting to Your Client
If you received a reimbursement or an allowance for travel, entertainment, or gift expenses that you incurred on behalf of a client, you should
provide an adequate accounting of these expenses to your client. If you do not account to your client for these expenses, you must include any
reimbursements or allowances in income. You must keep adequate records of these expenses whether or not you account to your client for these expenses.
If you do not separately account for and seek reimbursement for meals and entertainment in connection with providing services for a client, you are
subject to the 50% limit on those expenses. See 50% Limit in chapter 2.
Adequate accounting.
As a self-employed person, you adequately account by reporting your actual expenses. You should follow the recordkeeping rules in chapter 5.
How to report.
For information on how to report expenses on your tax return, see Self-employed at the beginning of this chapter.
Required Records for
Clients or Customers
If you are a client or customer, you generally do not have to keep records to prove the reimbursements or allowances you give, in the course of
your business, to an independent contractor for travel or gift expenses incurred on your behalf. However, you must keep records if:
- You reimburse the contractor for entertainment expenses incurred on your behalf, and
- The contractor adequately accounts to you for these expenses.
Contractor adequately accounts.
If the contractor adequately accounts to you for entertainment expenses, you (the client or customer) must keep records documenting each element of
the expense, as explained in chapter 5. Use your records as proof for a deduction on your tax return. If entertainment expenses are accounted for
separately, you are subject to the 50% limit on entertainment. If the contractor adequately accounts to you for reimbursed amounts, you do not have to
report the amounts on an information return.
Contractor does not adequately account.
If the contractor does not adequately account to you for allowances or reimbursements of entertainment expenses, you do not have to keep records of
these items. You are not subject to the 50% limit on entertainment in this case. You can deduct the reimbursements or allowances as payment for
services if they are ordinary and necessary business expenses. However, you must file Form 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income, to report
amounts paid to the independent contractor if the total of the reimbursements and any other fees is $600 or more during the calendar year.
Previous| First | Next
Publication Index | IRS-Forms Main | Home
|